The Gospel According To SatanНамуна
If God has said something is true, it is true. He doesn’t change his mind (Numbers 23:19). We are to pass on what we’ve received (1 Corinthians 11:23; 15:3). We are not permitted to change it, twist it, spin it, or even misapply it.
On one level, this is hugely helpful, because we are not at a loss for what God has said and what we’re to do with it. The Bible may be a difficult book, but it is mostly difficult in that hard hearts and inverted minds find it difficult to believe and obey. On the things that matter most, it is not difficult to understand.
When we begin to fudge with the Bible’s absolute truth claims, we find that we have succumbed to the devil’s weighing of our feelings and appetites as greater than God’s unchanging standards. But walking by faith in the God who does not change (James 1:17) means, in part, trusting that what is true is ultimately best, even for us, even if we cannot imagine how. . . .
I find the Sermon on the Mount to be the most frightening portion of Scripture, mainly because as I read it, I begin thinking of all the ways it doesn’t apply to me. I immediately start coming up with all the situations where “turn the other cheek” doesn’t apply. I think of the circumstances in which “going the second mile” might not be the right thing to do, where “giving to those who ask of you” doesn’t mean what it actually says. I want Jesus’ kingdom commands to suit my comfortable assumptions and convenient interpretations. And the minute we start doing this is the minute we begin echoing the serpent’s “Did God really say . . . ?”
About this Plan
Not every lie sounds untrue. Some just sound right. And some are repeated so often that they virtually become "common knowledge." This is what makes lies about God so dangerous. So we have to ask, what might God's enemy want us to believe to lead us astray? And would we even see it happening?
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