We live in a day and age where, if we so choose, we can be
bombarded with information.
You are probably reading my blog for one of two reasons.
Either you subscribe and it comes in your email, or it showed up on your
Facebook feed and you followed the link. Whichever way it was, you are online
and so likely as you read this that there are other links being suggested to
you. Being that I am a pastor and generally writing in a theological and devotional
line those links may be similarly inclined. But I don’t have any influence over
what is being suggested to you and I know through my own experience that some
of those suggestions are good and others can be most charitably described as “theologically
suspect.” The simple act of being online invites all kinds of information into
our lives, in virtually limitless amounts. Such is life in 2020.
It is one thing to take in some information, such as a news
story, or my blog post. But then what are we to make of it? Imagine a
particular news story. One commentator says that it is the greatest news ever.
And another commentator looks at the same story and says that it is the worst news,
ever. Same story, but completely opposite conclusions. I can virtually guarantee
that you can go online for yourself and within 30 seconds find an example of
what I’m talking about.
How do we separate truth from what is not true? What do we
stand on as we decide what to believe? In John
18 Jesus is on trial before Pilate and in verses 37-38 they have this exchange:
“For this purpose I was born and
for this purpose I have come into the world—to bear witness to the
truth. Everyone who is of the truth listens to my voice.” Pilate said to
him, “What is truth?””
We live in world where it seems as if Pilate’s point-of-view
has prevailed. We live in a world where it would seem that truth is ultimately
unknowable. We live in a world where at day’s end we each decide for ourselves
what is true.
In contrast to the view of Pilate, and our world, yesterday I
read this definition of truth from Julius D. Twongyeirwe, a pastor in Uganda.
Asking if Christians are giving up on truth he went on to say that:
“Truth is that which is consistent with the mind, will,
character, glory and being of God. It is the self-expression of God. And because
the definition of truth flows from God, truth is theological. Therefore, God is
the author, source, determiner, governor, arbiter, ultimate standard, and final
judge of all truth.”
Rather than truth being something nebulous and slippery, that
truth is whatever I, or you, might decide at any particular point in time, Twongyeirwe
points us back to God to ground truth. He points us to God’s mind. His will.
His character. His glory. His very being. He grounds all truth in all of God.
His definition excludes the possibility of any exceptions.
Are there truths in science? Yes, and they are grounded in
God. Are there moral truths? Things that are right, and things that are wrong?
Yes, and they are grounded in God. Are there truths that we should seek to understand
and shape our culture? Yes, and they are grounded in God. Can we know truth?
Yes, as we listen to God speak through His word, which, to carry us back to John
18, is done most clearly as we listen to Jesus, who only, and always, speaks God’s
truth.
In our day we are bombarded by information and completing
claims about what it all means. But as we turn to God we can discern what is
true, and then live according to His truth, and for His glory. Amen.
Scripture quotations
are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by
Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All
rights reserved.
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