Seven Progressions of Truth
By Chip
Brogden
There are
seven stages of awareness through which we must pass through in order to bring
ourselves out of bondage towards the fullness of Truth and into the life of an
Overcomer. This describes the spiritual growth of the Christian from sinner, to
seeker, to believer, to disciple, and to overcomer.
I. Hungry
For Truth
II. Seeking For Truth
III. Choosing The Truth
IV. Accepting The Truth
V. Knowing The Truth
VI. Believing The Truth
VII. Living The Truth
II. Seeking For Truth
III. Choosing The Truth
IV. Accepting The Truth
V. Knowing The Truth
VI. Believing The Truth
VII. Living The Truth
I. Hungry For Truth
Theologians
describe it as a God-shaped vacuum in our heart. However you choose to describe
it, there is a capacity for God within every man and woman. Some seek to fill
the void with other things, but man is never truly satisfied until he finds
communion with His Creator. Jesus says, “Blessed are they which do hunger and
thirst after righteousness, for they will be filled.” The most amoral people in
the world are the ones who have no hunger for Truth. They are the ones who love
Darkness more than Light.
It is
better to give food to a hungry man than to force-feed people who are not
hungry. This is one of the failures of evangelicalism. People have not been
taught to tell the difference between a hungry person and a person who is full,
so they indiscriminately cast their pearls before swine. Jesus did not reveal
Himself to everyone, nor did He minister to everyone He encountered. He
qualified them on the basis of their spiritual appetite.
Who am I?
Where did I come from? Where am I going? What does it all mean? It is not so
much our seeking the Truth as the Truth drawing us to Himself. That drawing us
to Himself is interpreted by our soul as spiritual hunger. Without this we
cannot come to Truth.
Christ
has come to seek and to save the Lost. He tells His disciples that they have
not chosen Him, but He has chosen them. The ones who seek Him discover that
they are sought out by Him. The paradox of the situation is that the Lord will
only reveal Himself to those who seek Him, but when they begin to seek Him, He
searches for them in order to make Himself known.
There are
those who are hungry for Truth, and then there are those who do something to
satisfy their hunger. They know something is not right, something is lacking,
and they set out to find answers to their questions. Unfortunately for some,
the quest for Truth becomes more important than Truth itself. People who do not
pass through this stage, but remain too long here, are those who are “ever
learning, but never coming to the full-knowledge (epignosis) of Truth.” They
can quote the sayings of Jesus, Mohammed, or Buddha, but they can never get
beyond a mental apprehension of what they say they believe. Either they have
never been forced to make a decision for Truth, or they have decided the cost
is too great, and they are content to settle back into meaningless
philosophical exercises.
III. Choosing The Truth
There is
always a moment of decision in which we can choose to remain where we are or we
can go deeper. We cannot understand all the implications of the decision, but
we know it will cost us something. “There is no turning back.” We will be held
accountable for the Truth we have. To whom much is given, much is required.
Some are unwilling to pay the price. But the ones who do are given no
guarantees except one: they will know the Truth.
Most
people will say, “My mind is made up, so don’t confuse me with the Truth.” To
choose the Truth is to want the Truth at all costs, even if it means
sacrificing everything I have believed up until now, challenging all my
paradigms, questioning all my teachers, examining everything I have ever
experienced.
Of course
our first decision about Truth is based upon Who Jesus is. With that question
settled many Christians are content, but Truth is living. Truth will continue
to reveal Himself to us and around us for as long as we will allow it. What,
after all, is Wisdom? Wisdom is the ability to see things from heaven’s, and
thus God’s, perspective. Daily we must choose between ignorant bliss or seeing
things as God sees them. It is a daily choice. You cannot be told, you have to
see it for yourself.
IV. Accepting The Truth
We are
often unprepared for Truth, which is why Truth is revealed to us progressively.
We must “grow up into Him” – we could not handle it otherwise. Even the little
bit of Truth which is revealed to us often upsets us at our deepest
foundations. We must be willing to live with the uncertainty and pain which
Truth brings. Here again is another point in which many people turn back.
People prefer ignorant bliss to uncomfortable Truth. Now that they have been
given the Truth, it is too painful or inconvenient to deal with. They either
fall back into their former ignorance or they rationalize or dilute the Truth
until it is no longer Truth. They turn it into something which is more
palatable and easily digested.
But if we
accept the Truth, and totally give ourselves to it, it will begin to change us.
We will begin to be conformed to it, and it will become less painful. I am convinced
that if we refuse to accept the Truth we have been given then we will
eventually lose it. Jesus concludes His parable of the talents by saying, “The
one that has will have more added to him, and the one who does not have will
have what little he has taken away.” The one who buries the Truth in the ground
for safekeeping will lose it, while the one who does something with the Truth
will receive more Truth. This is why some grow spiritually and some do not.
Even though they may acknowledge the same Truth, they may not be willing to
accept the consequences of being transformed by that Truth, thus what little
they have soon becomes dead manna.
V. Knowing The Truth
Once we
have accepted the Truth we must brace ourselves to explore and deal with the
consequences of the Truth. For instance, if I am one day confronted with the facts
that X is true, and Y contradicts X, then Y is no longer true, even if I have
believed in Y my whole life. If my whole life is based on Y being true, then my
whole life is going to change. The more I experience X, the more things about Y
I discover to be wrong.
We should
use the word “know” in its original sense: intimate experience and oneness.
“Adam knew his wife Eve”, meaning they had intercourse with one another. It is
not a mental assent or head knowledge, i.e. “Oh I know that.” It is a coming
into union with Truth experientially and existentially. The Truth is there for
us to know, but we cannot know the Truth until we accept it. The prophet does
not (or should not) just bring a message, the prophet IS the message. If the
message has not changed the messenger then it is nothing but empty words. Once
we accept it we will be changed by it. Truth is not Truth if it has not changed
you. If it is an ethereal thing out in space that you can just pontificate
about then it is not Truth.
When we
know the Truth, that is, when we are one with Truth so that it is ours
experientially and not just theoretically, then the Truth will make us free.
Talking about Truth will not make us free, but knowing it will. How do we know
it? Through experience. I daresay we do not know the Truth through study. Oh,
we can learn about it through study, but we cannot know it through study. To
know it is to live it. To live it is to know it. What are you doing with it?
Has it changed you? That is what makes it Truth.
Not once
have I talked about understanding the Truth, and there is a reason. We cannot
seek understanding as a thing in itself. If we know the Truth then
understanding will follow, but knowing is never the result of understanding.
Indeed, we often mistake understanding for knowing, at our peril. If our
understanding does not flow out of our knowing, then our understanding will
eventually be revealed as misunderstanding.
VI. Believing The Truth
I doubt
there are any Christians who do not know that Jesus is the Way. But translating
what you know into an actual belief is two different things. We can know
Christ, know the Church, know God’s plan for us, know His Will, but that does
not necessarily mean that we will walk in what we know. There is a straight
gate as well as a narrow path. Those who favour the straight gate believe once
you pass through the gate that’s all there is to it. But beyond the gate is a
narrow path which leads to Life and only a few find it. There is a gate and a
path, and we cannot have one without the other.
Believing
is the transition between Knowing and Living. Some confuse the two and treat
them as one and the same, but they are not. For instance, a lot of Christians
know that Jesus has defeated the devil, but most of them do not believe it,
because if they did they would live their lives differently. They would pray
differently, they would talk differently, they would be different. Many people
are mistakenly called “Believers” when they do not believe at all. We might
call them “Assenters”.
Do you
know that we are seated with Christ in the heavenly places? You should know it,
for it is found in Ephesians 2. But do you believe it? You may say you believe
it, but if that is the case, you will live differently than you did before. If
you believe you are seated with Christ in the heavenlies then you cannot
continue living as an earthly person. In a thousand such examples we can see
evidence of knowing and not believing.
If I have
already seen the last five minutes of a football game and I know my team wins,
I don’t have to be concerned with anything else that may happen during the
course of the game. Only people who have not seen the end will be worried,
afraid, upset, or nervous. If I say, “I know my team will win” because I have
already seen the end, then my knowing is translated into believing and I begin
to live in what I know. I should behave differently than the ones around me who
are still concerned as to the outcome. The slightest bit of hesitation or
anxiety on my part only demonstrates that I do not in fact believe in what I
say I know.
Why do so
many know the Truth but do not live according to what they know? Because they
mistake knowing for believing. It seems hard to describe the difference in
words, but in real life experience the difference is easily demonstratable. Do
you know the battle is already won and that Jesus is Lord? Oh yes, we know
that. But do you believe it? You say you believe it, but if you aren’t living
it, then you don’t believe it, whether you know it or not.
VII. Living The Truth
When we
truly believe what we say we know then we cannot but live according to the
Truth of it. This is the goal of growth, to demonstrate Truth. We can hunger
for it, seek it, choose it, accept it, know it, and believe it, but until we
demonstrate it we have fallen short. Everything is geared towards this end.
Why does
God save sinners, call disciples, establish the Church, and raise up
overcomers? To demonstrate the pre-eminence of Christ over all, beginning with
each disciple, then the Church corporately, and all creation collectively. We
see this happening with the early Church in the Book of Acts. Gradually the
Church was brought to such a low state that the Lord had to call upon
Overcomers to stand on behalf of the Church. Even so, God is steadily and
progressively working all things together for good, bringing us to the
full-knowledge of Truth (Christ). What is the purpose of this fullness? It is
not so we can be a walking spiritual encyclopaedia. His desire is to
demonstrate the Truth in us. What Truth? That He overcomes sin, self, and
satan. That in Him is Life, and Life abundant. That He is All in All, and we
are complete in Him. That we, in Him, overcome just as He overcame.
His
Kingdom, His Reality, transcends the earthly realm in which we live. It is more
real than this world. We need vision in order see beyond the earthly and into
the heavenly – beyond the natural and into the supernatural. When we see as He
sees, we will see how finite this world is, how limited, how temporal. We will
see ourselves in Him, and we will begin to demonstrate His pre-eminence here
and now: “as in heaven, so in earth.”
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