The deceit, the lie of the Devil consists of this, that he wishes to make man believe that he can live without God’s Word.” ~ Dietrich Bonhoeffer
“Jesus answered, ‘You say that I am a king. In fact, the reason I was born and came into the world is to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me.’ ‘What is truth?’ retorted Pilate.” John 18:37,38 NIV
I started this blog post four weeks ago, unaware I was on the precipice of sitting in a waiting room while my husband would be receiving life-saving treatment for a massive heart attack. That day, I learned another layer of abiding in all things. In those moments, I knew why God, through the Holy Spirit, gave me John 14 over two years ago. The peace that the world can not give, which Jesus promised, I received— a Holy gift. Beautiful memories now to hold onto and rest in.
Resume
Today, I want to pick back up on the message burning in my heart. In a world that seems to worship the god of confusion, we are left asking, much like Pilate, “What is truth?”. A question that has an answer.
The morning I began writing this, I had listened to the Glorify devotional. The narrator’s words, “It has been said the best lies are 99% truth,” gave me thoughts for contemplation. I began by thinking about what I know about truth. The question Pilate asked Jesus came to my mind, “What is truth?” and I reflected on Jesus’ words to His disciples, “I am the way, the truth, and the life”(John 14:6).
Reflect
In a time of fact-checking (or the lack thereof), AI, and biased media, we ask the same question as Pilate, “What is truth”? This isn’t a new problem, substituting falsehood for fact; even our indifference to it isn’t new. Isaiah warned about this 700 years before the birth of Jesus. In a time, much like ours, when truth seemed to have fallen in the streets (Is 59:12-15). During the same period, the prophet Hosea spoke to a society, sowing the wind and reaping the whirlwind (Hosea 8:7)—sound familiar?
One hundred years later, 600 years before Jesus, Jeremiah warned of the same: “Everyone will deceive his neighbor, And will not speak the truth; They have taught their tongue to speak lies; They weary themselves to commit iniquity. Your dwelling place is in the midst of deceit; Through deceit, they refuse to know Me,” says the Lord. (Jeremiah 9:5,6 and look up Jeremiah 7:8-10).
So, how does this pattern of accepting falsehood as truth apply to us? I think it means we have to admit its reality. We must accept that truth is often set aside completely or manipulated just enough to change its course. Whether it is distorted to gain control, omitted for convenience, fitting in, the desire to unite, or divide—lack of truth is still a lie. But, often, we would instead look for and accept as truth what our “itching ears want to hear” (2 Tim 4:3,4) and thus “distort the words of the living God” (Jer 23:36).
Refocus
The only way to know the truth in a society raging with lies is to get back to the words of Jesus, to the truth of God. Jesus told us the Holy Spirit will teach us all things (John 14:26). But we must be willing to learn from Him. We must acknowledge if we don’t know the truth from the Word of God, we don’t know the truth.
I have learned, according to Jesus, that truth isn’t relative. We have to look at the events around us through the lens of the Bible; otherwise, we will get off track so quickly. “Tossed to and fro by winds of doctrine” (Eph 4:14). We have to dissect everything as we look through this Biblical lens. Considering things happening within our culture and the world around us, and our own beliefs. It goes back to the question: Why do you believe what you believe? We have to ask this about everything.
If we follow the trajectory of accepting the one percent lie of the enemy within a truth, it will, over time, take us far off course. If we don’t know the Word of God, we won’t recognize the lies that Satan has built into beliefs and doctrines (Is 29:13). God’s Word has to be our only compass (2 Tim 3:15,16). We must return to the simplicity of this Truth (John 17:17).
Reconsider
Accepting the doctrine you’ve been handed, the words from your favorite devotional book, or biblical commentary as biblical truth is not enough. It’s not enough to accept as truth the words of your favorite influencer over knowing the words of Jesus. It is not enough to align with a political party just because that’s the way you’ve consistently voted. Or belong to a particular religion because it’s generational.
To sit in silence, failing to take a stand for or against some issues while clinging to others, because that’s how you’ve always believed, never willing to dig deeper to discover what is behind the issue, is not enough. We fool ourselves when we take anything for face value and refuse to do our research. (1 Thess 5:21 ). In John 8:44, Jesus warns us the Devil is the father of lies, but He promises to tell us the truth even if we don’t believe Him (verse 45). We must make a choice.
Renewed Commitment
Jesus says we can know the truth, the truth that will set us free (John 8:32, 36 and Ps 119:45-48), and it is possible to walk in that freedom (2 Timothy 1:7). Jesus also told us that we show our love for Him when we keep His commandments (John 14: 21,23). How will we know His commandments if we don’t spend time alone with Him (John 14:25)? Just as we have to discipline our bodies to function appropriately, we also have to discipline our spirit to become sensitized to the voice of God’s Spirit through stillness and time alone with Him. Many good things help us keep our minds on Him, but the Bible is the ultimate avenue through which He speaks to us, teaching us His Truth (Ps 119:105).
I want to share the following sermon with you. It is a timely message for those of us who consider ourselves followers of Christ. And for those who don’t know Jesus yet, I want to introduce you to Him; it is possible to know the Truth (John 14:6). Please take the time to listen to this message. It will help your relationship with Jesus as you seek to honor God.
If we claim to love Jesus and be Christians, learning His commandments and committing to applying them to all aspects of our lives is non-negotiable. We must be determined to walk in and act upon the truth we know. And if you don’t have a personal relationship with Jesus, He is inviting you into a new life now (Rev 3:20, Hebrews 3:7, 8, and 4:7). We must choose; there are only two options.
...but I gave them this command: Obey me, and I will be your God and you will be my people. Walk in obedience to all I command you, that it may go well with you. But they did not listen or pay attention; instead, they followed the stubborn inclinations of their evil hearts. They went backward and not forward... Jeremiah 7:23,24