This site is dedicated to presenting insightful and helpful Christian Bible-based devotionals that may help one to lead a Christian life to the glory of the Heavenly Father and His Son.
Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts

Friday, March 19, 2021

John 8:31,32 - If You Remain in My Word

John 8:31-32 -  Jesus therefore said to those Jews who had believed him, "If you remain in my word, then you are truly my disciples. [32]  You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free." -- World English.

The word "disciple"  refers to being a pupil, a student, of a person or a certain philosophy. In the broad sense of the world, one can be a student of the Bible without actually becoming a student, a disciple, of Jesus. Only if one -- as a student of the Bible -- has an active goal of making the words of Jesus their own philosophy as actually applied in life can it that the Bible student is also a disciple or student of the Lord Jesus. And then, it is not a matter of simply vocalizing an acceptance of those words, but to be a disciple of Jesus means to continue in those words, giving application of the words of the Lord Jesus in all affairs of life, and even beyond this life. It is a resolved commitment for eternity.

Having remained in his Word, our Lord promises that then we will know the truth, and the truth would set us free. In stating this, Jesus was referring to specific truth. He was not referring to knowing the truth about everything in the entire universe, although for those who become join-heirs with Christ, it is possible that when they are exalted along with Jesus to such a high position of glory, they will be enabled to understand almost everything about the universe. In the present age, however, we can only hope to understand certain truths as revealed in the Bible, and that understanding is relative to our growth in such understanding. (Colossians 1:10; 2 Peter 3:18) Sadly, it appears that many of the consecrated may remain as "babes in Christ" (1 Corinthians 3:1) all their lives in the present age, making very little progress in the way of the truth. May we always seek to grow in knowledge, and as understand truths as revealed in the Bible, we will be correspondingly be set free from errors related to that truth.

Related:

Daily Heavenly Manna for March 20

Bible Standard (comments and other aids)

Video

Expanded Comments

The Truth Shall Make You Free

How to Know the Truth

The Four Freedoms

Freedom in Christ

Prisoners of the Mind

Being Set Free


Sunday, March 2, 2014

Philippians 4:8 - Honoring True and Venerable Thoughts


Key Verse: Finally, brothers, whatever things are true, whatever things are venerable... think about these things. — Philippians 4:8, RLIV

1. Opening Thought: What We Dwell On Shapes Who We Become

"As he thinks in his heart, so is he." — Proverbs 23:7, RLIV

Paul doesn’t start with actions or words. He starts with thoughts. Why? Because thoughts are the root. What we let live in our minds will eventually shape our character, our words, and our walk with Jehovah.

We can’t always control which thoughts come to us. Like Jesus in the wilderness, Satan still tempts with ideas that appeal to our flesh — hunger, pride, doubt. Thoughts of exaggeration, suspicion, or division flood in daily. But we can choose which thoughts we keep. Having a thought is not the same as making it our own.

Reflection: Today, notice the difference between a thought that passes through and a thought you entertain. Which ones are you inviting to stay?


2. Think on What Is True

The Greek word Paul uses is alēthēs — not just “factually correct,” but truth that aligns with God’s character and Word. This is truth with weight. John said of the apostles’ testimony, “we know that his testimony is true.” — John 21:24

So what does “true” exclude?

  • Foolish fiction and time-wasting fantasies
  • Evil suspicions and idle gossip about others
  • Theologies and ideas of men that deny the Gospel
  • Exaggerations we use to justify ourselves

Satan’s oldest tool is planting untrue thoughts: about God, about ourselves, about our brothers. Conflicts often start not with what someone did, but with what we assumed they meant.

Jesus modeled this when Satan said, “Command these stones to become bread.” The thought registered, but Jesus didn’t own it. He answered with Scripture and rejected the lie.

Reflection: Is it true, or is it false? Ask this before you replay a conversation, form a judgment, or share a story. If it’s not true, no matter how appealing, let it go. “Buy the truth, and sell it not.” — Proverbs 23:23

When we love the truth: We gain reverence. We gain wisdom. As David said, “Oh how I love your law! It is my meditation all the day… your commandments have made me wiser than my enemies.” — Psalm 119:97-98


3. Think on What Is Venerable

Paul’s word here is semnos — grave, honorable, worthy of reverence. Ellicott notes it “claims a share of reverence due primarily to God.” It’s the kind of thought that belongs in worship.

This isn’t about being somber all the time. It’s about serious consideration of what honors Jehovah. It means weighing our thoughts with honesty and gravity:

Venerable thinking excludes:

  • Deceit and hypocrisy
  • Evil scheming or intrigue
  • Slander, plunder, or deliberate falsehood

Venerable thinking includes:

  • Honesty with ourselves before God
  • Thoughts that reflect Christ’s mind in every situation
  • Esteeming what Jehovah esteems — righteousness, mercy, purity

Jesus didn’t just avoid sin; His mind was set on the Father. “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You.” — Isaiah 26:3


4. The Heart Connection

Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life.” — Proverbs 4:23
“Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.” — Luke 6:45

We can’t cover ignoble thoughts with noble actions for long. If we sympathize with falsehood or dishonor, we defile ourselves from within. But when we purify our thoughts — choosing what is true and venerable — we purify our whole character.

Jehovah covers our fallen condition with Christ’s merit. Yet we’re not to be at peace with it. We’re to desire nobility. We’re to hunger for honor in our secret thoughts, in how we deal with God and others when no one sees.


5. Personal Application: Training the Mind

This week, practice Paul’s filter in real time:

  1. Test it: When a thought comes, ask: Is this true? Do I know it for a fact, or am I filling in gaps?
  2. Weigh it: Is this venerable? Would I think this if Jesus were sitting next to me? Does it merit the seriousness of worship?
  3. Replace it: If the thought fails the test, don’t just empty your mind — fill it. Replace it with Scripture, as Jesus did. Meditate on one promise of Jehovah today.

Watch especially during this harvest period. Paul warned the Thessalonians that some would “believe a lie” because they did not love the truth. 2 Thessalonians 2:11-12. With imperfect minds, we’re vulnerable. So we cling to what Jehovah has revealed and sell it not.

Holding fast to what is true will:

  • Increase reverence for Jehovah
  • Deepen devotion to our brothers
  • Create more hunger for study
  • Anchor the spirit of truth in our hearts


Closing Prayer

Heavenly Father, Jehovah, You see every thought before it becomes word or deed. Forgive me for the times I’ve entertained what is false or dishonorable. Train my mind to love what You love. Help me to test each thought by Your Word — to keep what is true and venerable, and to cast out what is not. Keep my mind stayed on You, that I may walk in peace and reflect Your Son today. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

For Further Meditation: Psalm 119:97-103; Matthew 4:1-11; 2 Timothy 3:16-17



Ronald R. Day, Sr. (ResLight)

See also:




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Thursday, January 23, 2014

* Proverbs 3:3 - Don't Let Kindness and Truth Forsake You

Do not let kindness and truth forsake you; fasten them around your neck. Inscribe them on the tablet of your heart. -- Proverbs 3:3, RLIV