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Discerning Unsound Doctrine: The Battle For Sound Minds

Discerning Unsound Doctrine: The Battle For Sound Minds Introduction When we speak of sound doctrine it is useful in discernment, to review scripture as to what is unsound doctrine or teachings. The apostle Paul treats doctrine not as an abstract system, but as a force that either stabilizes or destabilizes the mind. Sound doctrine produces maturity, coherence, and freedom in Christ; unsound doctrine produces captivity, confusion, and perpetual immaturity. For this reason, Scripture does not merely commend right teaching—it commands discernment, exposure, and rebuke of what is false. The battle for faithfulness is therefore a battle for how believers think, reason, interpret truth, and reality in Christ. I. Sound Doctrine and the Warfare of the Mind Paul does speak of spiritual warfare and even names the presence of “doctrines of demons,” yet he is careful to distinguish between the spiritual sources of deception and the human means through which they operate. The New Testament consist...

Sound Doctrine, Sound Minds, and the Word of Life

Sound Doctrine, Sound Minds, and the Word of Life The New Testament consistently links doctrine with the condition of the mind . Doctrine is never treated as a mere collection of correct statements to be affirmed, but as something formative—shaping how believers reason, how faith matures, and whether communities are built up or quietly destabilized. When doctrine is unsound—loosely grounded, selectively quoted, or driven by human agendas—it does not simply introduce error. It produces instability. Scripture describes this instability not as ignorance, but as a condition of being divided , tossed , and unsettled . The danger is not thinking too much, but thinking without a stable center . Murmuring, Confused Reasoning, and the Loss of Orientation Paul names this danger directly in Philippians: “Do all things without murmuring (γογγυσμός) and confused reasoning (διαλογισμός)… holding fast to the word of life.” — Philippians 2:14–16 The terms Paul uses are precise. The word mur...

The Promise of the Gospel Without Cost

The Promise of the Gospel Without Cost Conversion, Gift, Priesthood, and the Stumbling Block of Money I. The Gospel Announced as Without Cost in Scripture The gospel is revealed in Scripture as without cost , without price , and without exchange . This is not rhetorical flourish, nor merely ethical exhortation, but a declaration about the nature of divine life and the way it is received. Isaiah proclaims to covenant-breaking Israel: “Ho! Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and he who has no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.” Isaiah 55:1 The command to “buy” while explicitly possessing “no money” abolishes transactional logic. What is offered is life from God, not a commodity. The absence of price is essential to the nature of what is given. If payment were possible, the gift would cease to be what it is. This prophetic declaration stands prior to any later ecclesial practice. It defines the category of the gospel before questions ...

The Promises of God — The Free Gift of Salvation

 The Promises of God —  The Free Gift of Salvation What God Promised He Paid For Scripture does not present free access to God as an emergency measure, a loophole, or one that can be bought with money. F ree access to God  is not temporary suspension of normal rules. It presents it as promise —spoken beforehand, publicly proclaimed, and guaranteed by a new covenant in the blood of Jesus. Salvation as a free gift stands as the clearest articulation of this promise, that prophesied of in Isaiah 55, access without price, reception without currency, life without transaction. “Lo! Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and he who has no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.” (Isaiah 55:1) The language is deliberately paradoxical: buy without money, eat without cost. The contradiction is not rhetorical flourish—it is theological precision. The promise redefines what “cost” means in relation to God. Cost is not removed by loweri...

The Promises of God — The Promise of Salvation

 The Promises of God — The Promise of Salvation This chapter stands at the heart of The Promises of God Series . Salvation is not merely one promise among many; it is the central, unifying promise through which all other promises are given, secured, and fulfilled in Christ. “For all the promises of God find their Yes in Him.” — 2 Corinthians 1:20 Accordingly, this chapter is integrative and distilled —anchored in the covenantal storyline of Scripture—while a fuller theological treatment is preserved as a stand‑alone article. Salvation as Promise, Not Transaction Scripture consistently presents salvation as God’s pledged action , rooted in divine promise rather than human negotiation or exchange. Long before commands are given or responses elicited, God binds Himself by oath and word. Old Testament Foundations Genesis 3:15 — The first gospel promise: deliverance pledged by God Himself after the Fall, prior to any human response. Genesis 12:1–3 — God promises blessing, life, and r...

The Promises of God Series

The Promises of God Series Series Introduction From the beginning, God has been telling one story . Scripture does not present multiple paths to God, nor separate plans for different peoples. Instead, it unfolds a single redemptive promise—spoken to Abraham, fulfilled in Christ, and now extended so the blessings come to people of all nations by faith .  Why The Promises of God Matter  explains why they are important to believers. The Promises of God Series Introduction The promises of God are not isolated statements scattered through Scripture. They are the unfolding expressions of one eternal purpose , conceived in God before the foundation of the world, revealed through covenant, and fulfilled in Jesus Christ.  Why The Promises of God Matter  explains why they are important to believers. This series functions as a theological hub —a unified framework that weaves together distinct promises without collapsing them into a single category. Each promise stands on its ow...

The Promises of God — To People of All Nations

A Theological Reflection of God's Promise and Blessing To All People This is part of the  The Promises of God Series . The promises of God are not a collection of disconnected doctrines, but the unfolding of a single redemptive purpose. From the beginning, God declared His intention to bless  people of all nations  so he gave a promise, through which God forms a covenant people in Christ. "because of this, the promise is from faith, so that it is according to grace, to the extent it exists certain to all the descendants, not only the ones from the law, but also the ones from the faith of Abraham, who exists the father of us all" (Romans 4:16).  The promises of God exists certain to all the descendants of Abraham, a diverse family based not on ethnicity but from faith,  “Therefore know that those who are of faith are sons of Abraham.” (Galatians 3:7) Long before the Law was given, long before circumcision became a covenant sign, God spoke to Abraham: “I will...