HomeAdventist IssuesCalled Out of a Babyonian Mindset Into a Christ-Centered Mindset    

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Called Out of a Babyonian Mindset Into a Christ-Centered Mindset — 8 Comments

  1. We live in a culture that is surely sliding away and further from God and we have to make a decision which way we are going to go. A mindset is a way of thinking that can be developed and shaped by our experiences, but overall experience shapes how we view our world and how we shape our lives. The worldly culture does not encourage faith in Jesus Christ, but rather faith in our own "inner power", qualifications, and achievements. Paul prays that let this mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus .... the right mindset for a believer is what was in Christ Jesus Philippians 2:5-8

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  2. Though the fire at Our Lady of Angels Catholic school happened before my birth, I started attending Catholic elementary school in Chicago, ten miles away from, and eight years after this horrible fire. As students we frequently had school fire drills. I remember as a child, reading about that terrible day and how the firefighters were weeping carrying the dead children out of the school. Just reading about it traumatized me and made me hypervigilant about fire. My Dad was a firefighter and taught us well of what to do in case of a fire. I remember asking him if it could happen again. To calm my fears, he told me that many things were done wrong, and many changes were made as a result of that tragedy to prevent it from happening again.

    It is tragic that people are conditioned to delegate their critical thinking skills to higher authority. Indeed this mentality will result in the eternal loss of many.

    I believe that the call to come out of Babylon includes letting Babylonian ways and beliefs come out of us.

    Thank you for this interesting and salient article.

    (15)
  3. As I am reading today’s SS study guide section, I am relating to the death and future selection of a replacement for Pope Francis. How very timely, this strikes me knowing the worldliness and evil will only grow stronger just prior to the coming of our Savior. May our preparedness be directed with the greater power of the Holy Spirit.

    (10)
  4. Dangerously hierarchical thinking can even occur within our Bible-backed, theologically correct, remnant church of Revelation 12 when members wrongly assume that their pastor is the only person responsible for studying doctrines and prophecies in depth. Every remnant-church member needs to be a role model of deep Bible study and of rigorous, critical thinking, rather than a role model of the same knee-jerk conformity found in other denominations, or a role model of the fanatical submission to human ideas found among radical Islamists. Our individual members are accountable to God to know the Bible for ourselves and to individually share it with others. All of us have the responsibility to be watchmen and watch-women on the walls of spiritual Israel. (See the Bible, Ezekiel 3:17 and 33:1-9.) Thus, members who hear a pastor preach error have a responsibility to respectfully take him or her aside to point out what the Bible says differently. This must be done with love, respect and tact, and with an open mind to potentially overlooked nuances in doctrines that a pastor is trying to bring out. Likewise, pastors must show that same love, respect, tact and open-mindedness to members who point out potentially overlooked nuances in doctrines. But, unfortunately, there is too often a tendency to condemn and censor people who think "differently" without hearing them out, and without stopping to investigate whether the Bible actually supports what they are saying. That happened in 1888 with the doctrine of righteousness by faith, and it happens too often today when individual members of the church hierarchy automatically censor and block discussion of certain books they have never read, or ideas they have never studied, and when church members appoint themselves vigilantes and Inquisitors to block any discussion of such topics. As someone who has read the Bible from cover to cover, I feel no insecurity about Adventist doctrines, and I feel no need to squelch discussion of them from "different" viewpoints, because I know that God and the Bile are infallible. Thus, I find myself open to discussing the Bible with people whose thoughts differ from mine, because that is the only way to win those folks' souls, hearts and minds. So, I have found that people with "different" ideas (whether they are inside or outside of our faith) are not always "rebels" or "heretics." Sometimes they are people who have made honest mistakes, people whom you can persuade to correct theology once you point out Bible verses that they overlooked, or once you point out the original meaning of some ancient Greek or Hebrew word, and/or when you just show them enough love and respect to listen to them objectively. And sometimes, the person who thinks "differently" may be more correct in some of their views than some of us are in ours; the "nonconformist" may be the one who needs to point *us* to overlooked Bible verses, to overlooked etymology, and to more Christ-like attitudes, but we will never know this if we automatically shut down people the moment they open their mouths or the moment that they post something from an unfamiliar book or website that we haven't read yet. Such censorship is nothing like how Jesus treated the Samaritan Woman at the Well, and is more like an expression of insecurity by people who have never read the whole Bible for themselves, who have not thought about it from multiple angles, and who are too invested in certain, self-serving political ideas to consider alternatives. Such automatic wall-building is the sort of behavior that a bigoted, Sunday-keeping friend of mine engages in whenever anyone quotes her Bible verses that she doesn't want to know about. She claims that she "already knows" correct theology and therefore has no need to study the Bible any deeper. Too many of our church members can unwittingly fall into that same trap, when we are supposed to be constantly improving our Biblical knowledge, so that we can be "changed into the same image [of Christ] from glory to glory [or 'with ever-increasing glory'], even as by the Spirit of the Lord." The Bible, 2 Corinthians 3:18.

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  5. Well said Bro Maverick. You should copy your response on a wider platform. May we allow the Holy Spirit to guide our studies our desires to love the Lord.

    (4)
  6. This story, though tragic is a lesson for us today. I have seen healthy pastors and their family served before the elderly and sick at church fellowship meals.

    “Let us abandon (within reason) the hierarchical systems that are organizationally-mandated (or self imposed) and often too rigid and self-aggrandizing to be of service to God, church or community.”

    (3)
  7. Thanks for this explanation. We put so much focus on the papacy whenever speaking about Babylon to the point we forget that we have her stain in our hearts and mind. We are full of pride and self. We keep off friends who've turned and are smoking because we want to remain pure and we don't want them to influence us into smoking. How about we influencing them into quitting smoking?
    Many a times we've lied to ourselves that God's time is the best. Well, according to this post and Moses' request in the wilderness, Exodus 33:13, God's way is the best. I am very faithful in keeping God's commandments, but only according to to letter. Time to do an inward journey and see what we really are.

    (3)

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