The first battle between faith and reason took place in the Garden of Eden. Spurred on by the serpent’s lies, Eve began to look at her situation from a purely logical perspective and decided that God was cheating her out of something good. Her faith faltered as “reasonable” thoughts of self-interest filled her mind (Gen. 3:4-6).
I am not saying that the way of faith is never logical, but if we operate only on the basis of reason, a conflict with the Lord is inevitable. That is because His instructions and actions don’t always appear reasonable from a human perspective. Although Isaiah 55:8-9 describes God’s thoughts and ways as higher than man’s, some people believe they know better than He does.
Paul emphasizes this by pointing out that God’s choices can come across as illogical by the world’s standards-His message of salvation seems foolish, and His messengers appear weak and unimpressive (1 Corin. 1:20-21). In an age that thrives on recognition, admiration, and importance, a person who believes the Bible is considered a weakling in need of a religious crutch to cope with life. But God’s Word explains the paradox: Recognizing their helplessness, believers lean on Christ so He can raise them to stand with Him in righteousness.
That day in Eden, sin and self-importance entered the human heart. But all the worldly wisdom that fuels our pride is nullified by God. He is looking not for great and impressive people but for weak, humble servants who can boast only in Christ. The Savior alone is their strength and wisdom.
That is a believer’s great treasure.
Commentary from Charles Stanley’s In Touch Devotional, December 3, 2016.
John 3:16
LikeLiked by 1 person
I was intrigued by your opening statement. I have found that a major weakness with good logic is that it can be based on bad information.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Everything is flawed after that! Just from personal experience, discussing various topics with people face-to-face, that indeed have had wrong information. Not that your asking, but when I read this commentary, just today, I thought it a rare discussion and well-written, and I really wanted to post it asap. I like how the information unfolds, but I especially like that they added ‘the paradox’, because it’s exactly what so many don’t understand about this faith, and also it highlights the subject of the devotional, which is ‘Faith versus Reason’. I changed the topic/title, because the ultimate point is that Christ is much more superior to man’s reasoning.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hey my man. Can. You contact me at tjpetri16@gmail.com
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sure!
LikeLike