If It Feels Good
"There is a way that seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to  death."1
  
    In considerable thinking today among college students and others, so-called  truth is based much too often on one's personal experience and how one feels  about it. 
    
    As Mark Early wrote in Breakpoint, "Take, for example, the  argument for sexual experimentation. It goes like this: 'In order to make  wise choices about sex, you have to experience it.' This isn't just a 'line'  a guy might use with a girl; it's a false theory of knowledge. It says that  personal experience is the only way to know anything, and the test of  experience is, of course, how you feel."2
    
    Some also reason that  because they can't see, experience, or feel God, he therefore doesn't exist. 
    
    In other words I make my  experience and how I feel the final voice of authority on what is true and what  is false, which of course is a way to justify what I want and choose to believe  and do. 
    
    Certain drugs are  addictive. That is true regardless of what I think or feel about them. If I  experiment with these drugs to seek to prove my point, I can no longer think  clearly or rationally. Furthermore, is fornication, adultery, abortion, homosexual  behavior, gay marriage or any other actions that God condemns right or wrong  based on my experience and feelings? No. These actions are wrong because God's  Word says they are. And God says they are wrong because they are ultimately  harmful to those who indulge in them. 
    
    To make my experience and  feelings the test of truth is to raise myself above God, implying that I know  better than he knows. Rather egotistical to put it mildly, and ultimately  self-destructive to put it realistically. 
    
    God's Word is the final  voice of authority and the standard by which we measure all truths. If a  behavior is in harmony with God's Word, we know that it is right.3  If it is out of harmony with God's Word, we know that it is wrong and harmful.  We also need to remember that "there is a way that seems right to a man,  but in the end it leads to death." It is much, much wiser to go God's way  than my own. 
    
    Suggested prayer:  "Dear God, thank you for the principles for healthy living you have given  to us in your Word, the Holy Bible that, if we follow, will lead to eternal  life. And that, if we reject and go our own way, will lead to eternal death.  Thank you for this warning, and thank you for hearing and answering my prayer.  Gratefully, in Jesus' name, amen." 
    
    1. Proverbs  14:12 (NIV).
    2. Breakpoint, 8-15-2005, http://www.breakpoint.org/bp-home.
    3. See Psalm  19:8. 
  
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.