Nobility Challenge

In an earlier post (Nobility – Imago Dei) I introduced you to the notion of our true nobility being anchored in our unique created status. Since we are made in the image of God, imago dei, we have remarkable nobility built in to who and what we are.

Our nobility is challenged, however, by our tendency to live below our created status. Instead of living as God’s children, made in God’s image, we are tempted to live like animals, bent on the indulgence of animal instincts.

This post on our nobility challenge seeks to focus your attention on the choices you make the impact those choices have on your nobility.

As humans we have two dimensions. We have a spiritual dimension based on our being made in God’s image, as moral beings accountable to a moral God in a moral universe. We also have a natural dimension. Our natural dimension is based on our natural environment and the physiological make-up which enables us to engage with that world. Our five senses enable us to enjoy this life, but can be elevated to the place of our main purpose for life. When we choose to live out of our natural senses we effectively abandon our spiritual dimension, in order to indulge our natural dimension.

The measure of our nobility is the degree to which we live for spiritual realities versus our fleshly interests. This does not mean that people become dead to their five senses, but they put to death the self-serving lusts that spring from those senses. The body has bodily appetites but is not synonymous with bodily appetites. It is more than the sum of our bodily appetites. It is possible to be dead to human appetites and to simply enjoy the pleasures of taste, touch, sight, etc, without being sold out to those things. It is also possible to be highly disciplined and to deny bodily pleasure yet to be internally preoccupied and distracted with gratification. An absence of sensual engagement does not mean that a person is living out of their spiritual dimension. They may simply be highly disciplined in their flesh.

The nobility challenge is to live as the image of God, imago dei, rather than as a craven animal distracted by natural experiences. When you step away from your divine origins and calling you trash your nobility. Every addiction to your senses and sensual experience is evidence of your lost nobility. True nobility involves freedom from the demands of your natural, flesh self.

I pray that God give you the grace to walk into the glorious liberty of the sons of God, out of the quagmire of darkness, slavery and oppression that devours your nobility and mocks your existence.

The Bible – The Resilient Book

The Bible is the most Enduring, Authoritative, Profound, Resilient, Enlightening, Impactful, Endorsed and Significant book in all of human history.

The Bible is the basis of my life. And one of the reasons I find this book so amazing and valuable is its Resilience. This is one of those qualities which makes the Bible a Profound book. The Bible has endured vigorous attack, down through the centuries.

For all of its authority and profundity the Bible has been the most vigorously opposed book in all of human history. Kings and philosophers and opposing religions have waged long and bitter war against the Bible, and yet never with success. Roman Emperors opposed the Bible. In modern times Communist governments banned the Bible. Yet neither could frustrate its resilience.

An example of one who opposed the Bible is the noted French infidel, Voltaire, who died in 1778. He predicted that in one hundred years from his time Christianity would be swept from existence and passed into history. Sidney Collett notes, in All About The Bible, that “Voltaire has passed into history, while the circulation of the Bible continues to increase”.

Note too that when opposition to the Bible is removed and it is allowed to be disseminated among a people, the positive results are measurable. And the Bible not only outlived its opponents, in many instances it has converted them.