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The purpose of this site

This is a bit of a unique / hybrid site that I created to serve multiple purposes:

  1. To serve as an online reference library and portal to my various studies and perspectives.
  2. To serve as an online reference library and portal to various studies and perspectives of some close and trusted friends.
  3. To serve as a venue for evangelizing and sharing the Gospel message.
  4. To serve as a venue for sharing various testimonials (my own as well as others)
  5. To serve as a limited forum to share perspectives:
    1. That (if pass the test of Scripture) might challenge, change or enhance my own.
    2. That (if pass the test of Scripture) might challenge, change or enhance the perspectives of others.
  6. To serve as a study tool for myself, if no one else.

The Bible contains at least 10 clear references to people who have ears but will not listen, or whose ears, eyes, and hearts are closed. These passages often describe spiritual deafness, blindness, and hardened hearts as a result. Isaiah 6:10, Jeremiah 5:21,  Ezekiel 12:2, Matthew 13:15, Acts 28:27, Romans 11:8, 2 Timothy 4:3-4, Proverbs 20:12, Deuteronomy 29:4,  Mark 8:18. There are more than 20 Biblical references – and variations of – the rhetorical question, “have you not heard”

Sometimes people close their minds in order to protect themselves from being influenced – led astray – by lies, but that can also close ones mind to the truth. The problem has never been with listening to others but instead the problem has always been with misplaced faith. We must treat God’s word as the only truth and to the point where all else is a lie. Therefore, what we listen to, what we hear, what we see, what we believe and what we accept into our hearts should always be tested to God’s word.

In Acts 17:1–15, the Apostle Paul preached in Thessalonica and then fled to Berea after facing opposition. The two cities’ responses to his message show important contrasts in how they received and tested the gospel.

Thessalonica’s response

For three days, Paul taught in Thessalonica’s synagogue, explaining that Jesus was the Messiah who had to suffer and rise again. Some Jews and many Greeks, including prominent women, believed. But many Jews (their ears closed, dogmatic and unwilling to hear and test) rejected this message because they expected a conquering king, not a crucified Messiah. Out of envy, they stirred up a mob and attacked Jason’s house, where Paul and Silas were staying. Because the danger was so great, the believers in Thessalonica sent them to Berea by night. Their reaction showed prejudice, hostility, and a willingness to use violence against the gospel.

Berea’s response

Berea was more than 45 miles away and known as a thriving farming center. When Paul and Silas arrived, they went to the synagogue and began preaching. The Bereans “received the word with all eagerness” and “examined the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so” (Acts 17:11).  After comparing Paul’s teaching with Scripture and finding it true, they embraced the full message, including newer aspects of the Christian faith such as baptism, the Eucharist, and the acceptance of Gentiles without circumcision. Their response reflects openness, humility, and a careful desire to seek the truth.

While I do not profess to be perfect at listening, I am aware of, and try hard to fight my human propensity to respond in immediate rejection of any opposing perspectives. Sometimes I have to remind myself or be gently reminded by others, that there is no threat in listening to or hearing different perspectives as long as they are thoroughly tested to God’s truth. If someone wishes to share a differing perspective, I will endeavor to try and listen but that does not mean that I will not scrutinize and challenge that perspective. I do that not for the sake of argument but instead for the sake of truth. I will not believe you just because you say it is so, or because you have strong conviction. Claiming to have studied something in-depth or choosing to speak louder than me, will not sway me. Neither do I expect anyone to blindly believe anything I say (PLEASE DO NOT) but instead test everything I say and or write, to Scripture. Only God’s word deserves our blind trust. So let us be like the Bereans, receive each others words with all eagerness and examine them to Scriptures daily (over and over again) to see if these things were so.

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