One of
the most important attitudes one can
have in striving to go to heaven is that
of intense zeal for the truth of God.
Too often, people settle on something
far less than the truth. Remember, a
counterfeit, though it may look
relatively genuine, is nevertheless
worthless. Likewise, we cannot enjoy the
benefits of truth just by getting pretty
close. We must take our position firmly
and foursquare on the truth. “Ye shall
know the truth and the truth shall make
you free” (John
8:32).
There are
many among us who, like Pilate, would
ask, “What is truth?” (John
18:38). Many do not believe in
absolute truth. The Bible, however, is
absolute, unchanging truth. “Forever, O
Lord, thy word is settled in heaven” (Psalms
119:89). The belief that there is
absolute truth is fundamental to one who
desires to “buy the truth and sell it
not” (Proverbs
23:23).
One
Can Be Wrong
It is a
fact that anyone can mistakenly be
wrong. Paul, when speaking of his past
manner of life, before his conversion,
said, “I have lived before God in all
good conscience until this day” (Acts
23:1). Yet he was before a
“persecutor, and a blasphemer, and
injurious” (1
Timothy 1:13). How could he have
lived in all good conscience when he had
been so wrong? The answer is simple. He
thought he was right. “There is a way
which seemeth right unto a man, but the
end thereof are the ways of death” (Proverbs
16:25). The fact that we can be
wrong means that it does not behoove us
to close our minds to further
investigation. Jeremiah said, “Stand ye
in the ways, and see, and ask for the
old paths, where is the good way, and
walk therein, and ye shall find rest
unto your souls” (Jeremiah
6:16).
Faith
vs. Opinion
Naturally, study brings us to certain
conclusions. All of us live by certain
principles. But upon what do our
conclusions rest? All too often they
rest upon mere opinion. Realize that if
something is a matter of faith, then God
must have said something about it. We
cannot know the words of eternal life by
opinions. One man’s opinion is just as
good as another man’s; but no man’s
opinion is worthy to be compared to
God’s.
You would
not want to risk crossing the ice over a
river merely because somebody thinks you
can. Neither should we risk trying to go
to heaven by the opinions of men. The
difference between an opinion and
conviction is that an opinion is usually
a spur-of-the-moment conclusion someone
comes up with based upon skimpy
premises, if any. A conviction is a
conclusion based upon evidence which has
been thoroughly studied and meditated
upon. God has given us a wonderful book.
It furnishes man with doctrine, reproof,
correction, instruction in
righteousness, that he may be complete,
furnished completely unto every good
work (2
Timothy 3:16-17).
The Bible
is our evidence. It is the truth. When
believed, it becomes subjective faith.
The Bible did not come from men, so
there need be no question about its
reliability. It was given unto men
though, and designed so they could
understand it when they read it (Ephesians
3:3-5). This is not to say that all
the Bible is simple to understand. There
are difficult portions of it that demand
much study. The matters of conversion to
God and everyday living are simple and
easy to understand. What many find
difficult about such matters is the
application of that which may be so
simple to understand.
Feelings — A Poor Standard
Do not
base your conviction upon some peculiar
feeling you might have. Feelings are a
poor standard of truth. We have already
mentioned Paul. We might mention Jacob
also who believed with all his heart
that his son Joseph was dead, but that
did not make it true. Remember, God has
given us revelation, facts. Our
convictions must rest upon these facts
or else we will find ourselves upon
shifting sand.
Conscience — Not a Reliable Guide
Neither
is conscience a reliable guide in
determining whether your convictions are
sound or not. The conscience is very
pliable to begin with. Our conscience is
usually formed at a tender age. At that
time it may be trained to approve good
or evil. When we reach maturity our
conscience alters and becomes almost
unchangeable. From then on it tells us
only whether we have done as we learned
to do or not.
Changing
the conscience then is a slow, difficult
project. If your conscience were trained
correctly, well and good. If it were
trained incorrectly, then it will
approve even when you do things that are
really wrong, because it was taught that
which was wrong. “Let your conscience be
your guide” is therefore poor advice.
This
brings us back again to the fact that we
must ultimately make our stand upon the
word of God. Everything is to be judged
by it.