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Carl...
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 12:28 pm
Guest
This following sermon from David Dykes is part of his series entitled "No,
that's NOT in the Bible" and centers around the cliché "let your conscience
be your guide." Personally I never even remotely thought this came from the
Bible but apparently some do mistakenly believe it did. I knew it came from
a Disney movie many years ago but David Dykes points out that the phrase is
much older than that which is something I did not know.

Anyway, David Dykes shows that we do have a conscience which God gave us but
is not a reliable guide since it can be made defective via sin. However with
God as our guide, we are led along a proper and holy path.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

Let Your Conscience Be Your Guide
by David O. Dykes

Titus 1:15-16
15 To the pure, all things are pure, but to those who are corrupted and do
not believe, nothing is pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are
corrupted. 16 They claim to know God, but by their actions they deny him.
They are detestable, disobedient and unfit for doing anything good.

This is the penultimate message in this series on spurious Bible verses.
Next week, we'll consider the final adage, "To Thine Own Self Be True." I
encourage you to investigate this week and see if you can find the true
source of that saying.

A helicopter pilot flying over Seattle got lost in the dense fog. The pilot
emerged from the fog and had no idea where he was. He saw a tall building
nearby with people working, so he hovered the helicopter near one of the
windows and held up a sign asking "Where am I?" One of the workers wrote a
response and held up a sign that said, "You are in a helicopter." The pilot
nodded his thanks and flew straight to the airport. One of the passengers
was curious and asked, "How could that sign 'you are in a helicopter' help
you know where you were?" The pilot said, "Simple. The answer that guy gave
me was technically correct, but completely useless, so I figured that must
be the Microsoft Customer Relations Building, so I knew where I was!"

Many Americans are circling around in a moral fog, with no idea which
direction to go. Most of the moral advice you find in magazines or hear on
talk-shows only creates more confusion. How can you know right from wrong?
How about this advice: "Let your conscience be your guide." No, that's NOT
in the Bible. Do you know the original source the saying? Most people think
it comes from the 1940 Disney movie "Pinocchio." In it, Jiminy Cricket sang
a song to Pinocchio in which he said, "Take the strait and narrow path; and
if you start to slide-give a little whistle, give a little whistle and
always let your conscience be your guide."

That's where many of us heard it first, but that saying had been around a
long time when Jiminy Cricket sang it in 1940. Actually, it originated as an
Islamic saying 1,300 years ago. Caliph Umar Ibn Al-khattab was the father of
one of Mohammed's wives and was the third Muslim Caliph. After conquering
Jerusalem he was returning to Medina and he prayed and gave a message at
Jabiah. One of the things Al-Khattab said was: "And speak the truth. Do not
hesitate to say what you consider to be the truth. Say what you feel. Let
your conscience be your guide."

Can you let your conscience be your guide? Yes and no. Yes, when you are
very young, you should pay attention to your conscience, but as you grow
older, we're going to see that it is actually a very dangerous thing to let
your conscience be your guide. Consider three important spiritual principles
concerning conscience:

1. YOUR CONSCIENCE WAS FORMED BY GOD

Each person is born with a conscience. It's like a candle burning in the
inner depths of your heart telling you the difference between right and
wrong. Your conscience is described as a candle or lamp in Proverbs 20:27.
The Bible says, "The spirit of a man is the lamp of the Lord, searching all
the inner depths of his heart." This moral searchlight is given by God to
every person on the planet. Almost all societies have rules against killing
and stealing. Where did they get that idea? It came from our God-given
conscience.

Our English word "conscience" comes from two Latin words, con, which means
"with" and science which means "to know." The New Testament word is
suneidesis which means "to know together." Both words have the idea of
"knowing with ourselves" or "knowing within ourselves." When it comes to
moral decisions, it means to "understand internally."

When Adam and Eve sinned, they felt guilty about what they had done. They
suddenly realized they were naked, and the first thing they wanted to do was
to cover their nakedness. How did they know that? Their consciences were
operating. Not only did they try to hide their nakedness, when God came to
talk with them, they tried to hide from God. Why? Because their conscience
made them feel guilty. In Genesis 4, Cain was so angry at his brother Abel
that he killed him. Although this was long before the Ten Commandments ever
stated, "You shall not murder," Cain knew instinctively what he had done was
wrong. Your conscience is to your soul what your nerves are to your body.
When your finger touches something hot, the nerves send a warning message to
the brain: THAT'S HOT! REMOVE THE FINGER! The brain sends a message to the
muscles in the arm to withdraw the finger. Past experiences also allow us
warn others. Because parents know that fire can burn, they can say,
"Children, stay away from the fire or you'll get burned."

The same is true of the conscience. Your conscience is like a warning light
telling you what you are contemplating doing is wrong-and if you do it, your
conscience says, "See I told you not to do that."

Even secular experts recognize the existence of a human conscience. Dr.
Marvin W. Berkowitz, an expert on moral development writes: "Kids have an
internal conscience. It starts developing in the first few years of life and
really kicks into high gear around 3 or 4 years of age. Our consciences tell
us when we are about to violate (or have violated) our moral code. You can
see this even in pre-schoolers who cry at their own selfishness and who try
to soothe those they have hurt." (Sanford N. McDonnell Professor of
Character Education; University of Missouri-St. Louis)

Even without being taught a moral law, people are born with a sense of what
is right and wrong. The Bible teaches that God provided two solid proofs
that point to His existence. The first is an external witness-creation. When
you understand the amazing complexity and order of the Universe in which we
live, you are driven to admit there is a higher intelligence that designed
all this and created it.

The other witness to the existence of God is an internal witness-conscience.
The fact that we are born with this moral equipment called conscience should
prove there is Someone who determines the rightness and wrongness of
actions. You don't have to read a written law to know that stealing,
killing, and lying are wrong; that's something everyone instinctively knows.

Romans 2:14-15 says, "Indeed, when Gentiles, who do not have the law, do by
nature things required by the law, they are a law for themselves, even
though they do not have the law, since they show that the requirements of
the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness,
and their thoughts now accusing, now even defending them."

Just as a compass points to magnetic north, we are born with a moral
conscience that points to right and wrong. Your conscience doesn't make you
do right, or wrong, it just lets you know when you are about to do wrong,
and it makes you suffer when you have done wrong. Conscience is like the
yellow line on a two lane highway. When there is a yellow line, you know
that it's not safe to pass the car in front of you. The yellow line doesn't
keep you from passing that car; it just tells you that you shouldn't.

2. YOUR CONSCIENCE CAN BE DEFORMED BY SIN

When a person continually ignores the dictates of his conscience, the
conscience can become faulty. You can take a perfectly good compass that is
pointing north, and you can hold a magnet next to the compass, and the
needle will rotate and no longer be a reliable guide. The same thing happens
to your conscience when you expose it to repeated sin-it no longer is
reliable guide. Your conscience doesn't become ruined instantly, it happens
gradually.

Step One: Moral guidance is distorted

The first thing that happens is your sense of right and wrong becomes
distorted. Your conscience is like a triangle that operates within your
soul. It has three sharp corners, and when you are considering doing
something wrong, the three corners stab you on the inside. However, every
time you ignore or deny your conscience it's like filing down the sharp
edges of that triangle. The next time you are confronted with the same
opportunity to do wrong, your conscience stabs you again, but this time the
jab is not as sharp. Over time, as you continually resist the dictates of
your conscience the sharp edges are worn down until you seldom feel them.
Instead of being a triangle, it's as if your conscience has become a moral
beach ball bouncing around inside your soul.

The Bible says, "To those who are corrupted and do not believe, nothing is
pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are corrupted. They claim to
know God, but by their actions, they deny him." (Titus 1:15-16)

Have you ever told a lie? The first time you told a lie, you felt badly
about it. But the next time you told it, the lie came a little easier. We
have all known people who were so good at lying, they could look you right
in the eye and lie without any sign of moral compunction or remorse. They
have convinced themselves that telling a little lie is actually not so bad.

In 2001, George O'Leary was hired as head football coach for Notre Dame, the
job he had always dreamed about having. Five days later, he was fired when
it was discovered he lied about his background. He claimed to have received
a Masters degree and to have lettered in football three years at New
Hampshire. He had neither. Early in his coaching career he fabricated these
lies and as the years passed he found it easier and easier to repeat the
claims, until someone at Notre Dame checked!

Step Two: Moral guidance is deadened

The reason you can't just let your conscience be your guide is because not
only can your conscience become distorted and dull, it can actually become
deadened. A person can commit sin so often over a period of time, his
conscience can basically die. The Bible makes this possibility clear in I
Timothy 4:1-2, "The Spirit clearly says that in later times some will
abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things taught by demons.
Such teachings come through hypocritical liars, whose consciences have been
seared (Greek: kauteriazo) as with a hot iron."

When I was teenager, I had a friend who suffered a terrible burn on his arm
as a child. There was a terrible scar there, and he used to brag about how
tough he was by sticking the end of his pocketknife into the scar, or even
putting a lit cigarette against it without burning. Of course, he could do
that because all the nerve endings were cauterized-burned. He didn't have
any sensitivity there. The Bible says the same thing can happen to a person
morally. Someone can ignore their conscience so long until it becomes
completely desensitized to conviction. That's a terrible place to be.
Someone once said the worst sin is consciousness of no sin!

You wonder how the Nazi prison guards could participate in the wholesale
slaughter of Jewish prisoners during WWII? Their consciences had become so
deadened some of them thought they were doing the world a favor by killing
Jews.

You wonder how a serial killer like Ted Bundy could smile and carry on a
life that seemed outwardly normal when he brutally killed at least 36 women?
Psychiatrists have a term for them: psychopaths. Basically, their moral
restraint has disappeared. Their consciences have been seared with a hot
iron. Sigmund Freud described this as "an iron curtain that is constructed
between the ego and the id...and 'repression' is said to be in force.
Neurosis occurs when the id breaks through the wall and overwhelms the ego."
(John Drakeford, Integrity Therapy, p. 29)

But you don't have to be a criminal psychopath to have your conscience
deadened. I've known men who claimed to be Christians who could carry on an
adulterous relationship and say they didn't feel any guilt about it. Some
people have cheated on their income tax for so long they have convinced
themselves there is nothing wrong with it. The main reason you should never
live by your feelings is because, like your conscience, your feelings can be
dead wrong.

3. YOUR CONSCIENCE MUST BE TRANSFORMED BY JESUS

If you could spend your entire life listening to and obeying your God-given
conscience, you could live a perfect life.

But the Bible says we have ALL sinned and we fall short of the glory of God.
Have you ever told a lie? Have you ever cheated or stolen? Have you ever
deliberately hurt someone? That's why all of us end up with a messed-up
conscience.

Samuel Langhorne Clemens was best known by his pen-name, Mark Twain. He
struggled personally with his own guilty conscience, and he addressed the
topic in many of his writings. He wrote: "An uneasy conscience is a hair in
the mouth. I would trade mine for the small-pox and seven kinds of
consumption, and be glad of the chance." (Samuel Clemens, Notebook, 1904) In
the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, this struggle with conscience was
expressed by Huck: "If I had a yaller dog that didn't know no more than a
person's conscience does I would pison him. It takes up more room than all
the rest of a person's insides, and yet ain't no good, nohow." (The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, chapter 33) Notice he said the conscience
"takes up more room that all the rest of a person's insides." When you have
a guilty conscience, it seems as if it is hard to ignore, but that's a good
sign. It shows your conscience hasn't been completely deadened.

What do you do when you have a guilty conscience? The Bible answers that
question in Hebrews
10:22: "Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of
faith, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience."

The Bible teaches a guilty conscience is a dirty conscience. It's like moral
filth that you allow to accumulate that pollutes your soul. And when your
conscience becomes dirty, it affects the way you look at others. Once there
was an old woman who sat in her home and watched her neighbors with a
critical eye. She commented to her family who visited that her neighbor's
car was always dirty. She complained that the neighbor's children wore dirty
clothes, and that the neighbor's house was so dirty it needed a new coat of
paint. One day she was repeating her criticism to her daughter of how dirty
her neighbors were. The daughter got up and walked over to her mother's
window and discovered the window itself was filthy. When she cleaned one of
the windows for her mother, it was clear the neighbor's house, car, and
clothes were clean-the problem was her mother's dirty windows. That's what a
dirty conscience can do; it not only affects the way we look at ourselves,
it affects the way we look at others. Jesus can do two important things for
a deformed, dirty conscience:

(1) Your conscience must be cleansed by His blood

When people have a guilty conscience they do all kinds of things to get rid
of their guilt. In certain areas around the world people crawl on their
hands and knees up steep mountains to reach a church or altar. They think
these painful acts of penitence will absolve them of their guilt. Other
people throw themselves into religious activity trying to get rid of their
guilt. But the Bible teaches that there is only one thing that can clean a
dirty conscience-the Blood of Jesus Christ. The Bible says, "How much more,
then, will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered
himself unblemished to God, cleanse our consciences from acts that lead to
death, so that we may serve the living God. (Hebrews 9:14)

In Hebrews 9, the writer emphasizes that the blood of all the goats and
bulls sacrificed over the years was not able to forgive a guilty conscience.
But when Jesus, the perfect Lamb of God died on the cross, His blood alone
can cleanse our dirty consciences. The reason we need a clean conscience is
because we are all guilty of acts that lead to death, not merely physical
death, but eternal separation from God. Salvation consists of coming to God
and admitting you are guilty, you have a dirty conscience. It is asking God
to cleanse you of your sinfulness. It is accepting by faith that you have
been cleansed by His blood.

We all need to ask ourselves the question posed by the hymn writer Elisha
Hoffman: "Have you been to Jesus for the cleansing power? Are you washed in
the blood of the Lamb? Are you fully trusting in His grace this hour? Are
you washed in the blood of the Lamb? Are you washed in the blood? In the
soul-cleansing blood of the Lamb? Are your garments spotless, are they white
as snow? Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?"

(2) Your conscience must be corrected by His Word

I once read a story of man who worked in a small town factory. One of his
jobs was to blow the factory whistle every day at 7, 12 and 4. Every morning
on the way to work, he stopped and set his pocket watch by a large clock
sitting in the window of a local jewelry store. Then he would know when to
blow the whistle. After doing this for years, he happened to visit the
jewelry store on the weekend. He asked the owner how the clock in the shop
window kept such perfect time. The owner said, "Oh, I set that clock every
day by the factory whistle."

Your conscience is like a clock: If you set it to the wrong time, it will
keep the wrong time, and it will be unreliable. But if you set it to the
right time, it should be dependable. When you become a Christian, you "set"
your conscience to the Bible-Word of God. We read in II Timothy 3:16-17:
"All scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking,
correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be
thoroughly equipped for every good work." God's Word always points you to
Jesus and He becomes your standard for right and wrong.

When you become a follower of Jesus Christ, your determination of right and
wrong is no longer dependent on your conscience because you know you can't
let your conscience be your guide. You don't decide what is right or wrong
by how you feel, because you have learned feelings can be unreliable. Your
standard for morality is NOT what the majority of other people think,
because most people think it's okay to tell a lie every now and then.

I've been flying airplanes since 1975, and every airplane has a magnetic
compass. You can't depend on the magnetic compass unless you are flying
straight and level because whenever you are climbing, descending, or
turning, the compass doesn't work properly. So every airplane has a
gyroscopic compass called a "directional gyro" or a DG for short. This
instrument is driven by a small gyroscope which maintains equilibrium even
when the airplane is turning or climbing. But the DG is not a real compass,
it must be set to match the magnetic compass, and it has to be reset
frequently or it will not reflect the correct heading. Even so, as followers
of Jesus, we must be constantly and continually recalibrating our
consciences to the Word of God.

CONCLUSION

The Bible will guide you into an understanding of what is right and wrong,
and it can also guide you into heaven. I recently read a true story about a
teenage girl in Columbia who was given a Spanish New Testament. She read the
New Testament until one day her father caught her reading it. and told her
not to read it any more because it was full of lies and fantasy. But the
girl kept on reading until one day her father came home unexpectedly found
her with the New Testament grabbed it from her hands and shoved it into his
briefcase. The father went off to work where he was a mining engineer.
Several hours later there was a muffled explosion then the sound of sirens.
There had been a cave-in at the mine. The father was trapped in the mine
along with 30 other workers. The rescue workers took 5 days to finally reach
the men, but it was too late. All 31 men died including the father of this
little girl. Curiously, workers found the man clutching the New Testament
between his praying hands. When they opened the front cover they found a
note: "To my daughter Keep reading this New Testament, it is true and right,
and I will see you one day in heaven." Then they turned to the back page
where the father had signed the commitment card after having said the sinner's
prayer. But that was not the end of the story. Turning the page there were
signed the names of the other 30 workers. Let your conscience be your guide?
Heaven forbid! Let God's Word illuminated by God's Spirit be your guide!
Dixe Hollins...
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 3:05 pm
Guest
To go bass fishing, beautiful.Dixie
...
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 4:47 pm
Guest
On May 5, 1:05 pm, Dixe Hollins <mikeakl... at (no spam) yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote:
To go bass fishing, beautiful.Dixie


Good on you.
You know, Elijah skipped church for a few months to recover from
burnout given to him by the people of God.

God took him to a Brook where he "pigged out" - ate and slept for days/
weeks on end. Because that is what he needed.

What he didn't need was fellowship that demanded emotional output.
What he didn't need was "opportunity for ministry".
What he didn't need was critical believers telling him he was
backsliding if he didn't go to church.

What he needed was time - by himself - not even God bothered him. He
didn't do devotions, and as far as we know didn't pray - the whole
time he was there.

He just slept and ate. slept and ate, slept and ate.
Until he had recharged enough to take on the must difficult task of
his ministry.

Hope you caught some good fish.

John B.
Carl...
Posted: Sun May 04, 2008 10:29 pm
Guest
Luke 17:5-10
5 The apostles said to the Lord, "Increase our faith!"

6 He replied, "If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to
this mulberry tree, 'Be uprooted and planted in the sea,' and it will obey
you.

7 "Suppose one of you had a servant plowing or looking after the sheep.
Would he say to the servant when he comes in from the field, 'Come along now
and sit down to eat'? 8 Would he not rather say, 'Prepare my supper, get
yourself ready and wait on me while I eat and drink; after that you may eat
and drink'? 9 Would he thank the servant because he did what he was told to
do? 10 So you also, when you have done everything you were told to do,
should say, 'We are unworthy servants; we have only done our duty.'"

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/
 
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