Neglecting the serious questions for cheap thrills, one way some televangelists have settled for less is by depreciating the mind, centering almost entirely on feelings. Sometimes the impression is given that faith and intellect are in a state of war. "The mind," says Hagin, "is something that might trip you and cause you to fall." Yet, in truth, though our minds are fallen, they are the door to our heart, our conscience, our feelings, and our actions. What we believe determines how we feel and act.
The call Jesus gave to love God "with all of your heart, soul, strength, and mind" is not at all foreign to Christianity. Some of the greatest intellects of all time have found no contradiction between faith and reason. Since God is the author of both, faith and reason can (indeed should) be as compatible as a left and a right hand.
Many argue that it is more spiritual and faithful to believe without any intellectual reasons. "Just love Jesus," they say, apart from any serious knowledge of who this Jesus is or what He accomplished. Their argument, of course, is wrong. Paul wrote, "We are destroying speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God, and we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ." (2 Cor. 10:5). In other words, it is a profoundly spiritual task to critique the philosophies that hold us back from knowing God and His Son, Jesus Christ. It is actually a sign of a lack of spiritually that makes one fail to provide a well argued alternative to secularism in our universities and in our culture.
Christians often object to studying philosophy (and even theology!) on the basis that in Colossians 2:8, Paul warns us to beware that no-one takes us captive to such deceptive principles of the world. Although Paul did issue such a warning, the only way for one to beware of the negative influence of some philosophy is to study and understand it thoroughly. In order to beware of philosophy we need to be aware of it. If we understand the competing ideologies well, we will know when they are affecting us. For instance, because the preachers under criticism in this book apparently do not know church history, they are unaware that they are repeating the errors of past ages. Because they do not understand Greek philosophy or Oriental mysticism or 19th theosophy, they do not know how seriously they have been affected by such thinking. To take thoughts captive we have to think.
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