by jimwalton » Sun Jun 18, 2023 2:04 am
"Divided motives" are certainly not doubt, questioning, or wondering. Everyone has those, and they motivate us to read, pray, study, ask, and learn. What it means instead is that you love the world as you love God, and you are perpetually torn between the two, compromising yourself time after time. In other words, your allegiance to God has never been cemented and "signed on the line," so to speak. You never really seized on the "new creation" (2 Cor. 5.17). You're like the 2nd and 3rd types of seed in Jesus's parable of the Sower (Mt. 13.1-23 and its parallels in Mark and Luke). When values and lifestyle decisions arise, you are just as likely to choose against God and godliness as you are to choose for Him. You want to play both sides of the fence, and you do great damage to your Christian walk and your testimony in the world as a result. As Barry Cooper wrote, you worship the god of open options, and your heart isn't totally in God's domain. Instead, be wise, but then rest in God’s total sovereignty and goodness, and choose. Commit. Make a decision. Be wholehearted and single-mindedly for God. Die to the things of the world.
Ethel Barrett gives four strategies to unspilt your mind:
1. Talk to God about your problem. Ask Him to help you get the right perspective on it.
2. Get rid of any self-pity and resentment, and certainly get rid of any determination to do things your way.
3. Read God’s Word and meditate on it. Jn. 7.17.
4. Do all this with the determination that you are going to obey what God leads you to think and do.
"Divided motives" are certainly not doubt, questioning, or wondering. Everyone has those, and they motivate us to read, pray, study, ask, and learn. What it means instead is that you love the world as you love God, and you are perpetually torn between the two, compromising yourself time after time. In other words, your allegiance to God has never been cemented and "signed on the line," so to speak. You never really seized on the "new creation" (2 Cor. 5.17). You're like the 2nd and 3rd types of seed in Jesus's parable of the Sower (Mt. 13.1-23 and its parallels in Mark and Luke). When values and lifestyle decisions arise, you are just as likely to choose against God and godliness as you are to choose for Him. You want to play both sides of the fence, and you do great damage to your Christian walk and your testimony in the world as a result. As Barry Cooper wrote, you worship the god of open options, and your heart isn't totally in God's domain. Instead, be wise, but then rest in God’s total sovereignty and goodness, and choose. Commit. Make a decision. Be wholehearted and single-mindedly for God. Die to the things of the world.
Ethel Barrett gives four strategies to unspilt your mind:
[list]1. Talk to God about your problem. Ask Him to help you get the right perspective on it.
2. Get rid of any self-pity and resentment, and certainly get rid of any determination to do things your way.
3. Read God’s Word and meditate on it. Jn. 7.17.
4. Do all this with the determination that you are going to obey what God leads you to think and do.[/list]