Don’t Beat Dead Horses; Only the Father Reveals Truth

In Matthew 15, Jewish leaders blasphemed the Holy Spirit by saying Jesus cast out demons by Beelzebub. In Matthew 16, Jesus started speaking in parables, so that only those with revelation from the Father would be able to understand him. The same is true in Mark 3 and 4.

Someone told me this early in my Christian life. It helps us understand the purpose of the parables and even how God wants us as Christians to learn. Our human confidence in knowledge leads to division, but there is a wisdom that descends from above, and it is “first pure, then peaceful, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy” (James 3:17).

Trusting our Father the way Jesus did can be hard without constant reminders. Jesus “kept committing himself to the one who judges righteously” (1 Pet. 2:23). You can be mistreated with peace when your insides are full of the truth that God always makes all things right eventually.

When Simon became Peter, the Rock, the first of the living stones that God is building his temple with, it was because the Father revealed to him that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God (Matt. 16:16-18). Jesus knew that our Father loves all his children, and he will reveal the truths that we need in order to live, even if they are brought to us in parables.

Over the years, in application to myself, I have learned that revivals and greatly-used men of God trusted God the way Jesus did. They knew their teaching could never be empowered by their own fleshly charisma, so they gave God a lot of prayer and a lot of faith.

I don’t claim to always live up to that standard because I would be lying if I said I did. When I do, though, it stops me from being in stupid arguments. We only see because God gives us light. We must be patient and correct with gentleness, because it is only God who can give repentance leading to a full knowledge of the truth (2 Tim. 2:26).

We have a saying about beating a dead horse, as though we expect a dead horse to get up and give us a ride. Often, we are beating a blind and deaf person with our words as though we expect them to see or hear because of our frustration and volume, when in fact only God can open deaf ears and blind eyes.

When patience has its perfect work, you will be perfect and complete, lacking nothing (James 1:4). Patience is not a human strong suit; neither is trust.

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About Paul Pavao

I am married, the father of six, and currently the grandfather of five. I teach, and I am always trying to learn to disciple others better than I have before. I believe God has gifted me to restore proper theological foundations to the Christian faith. In order to ensure that I do not become a heretic, I read the early church fathers from the second and third centuries. They were around when all the churches founded by the apostles were in unity. My philosophy for Bible reading is to understand each verse for exactly what it says in its local context. Only after accepting the verse for what it says do I compare it with other verses to develop my theology. If other verses seem to contradict a verse I just read, I will wait to say anything about those verses until I have an explanation that allows me to accept all the verses for what they say. This takes time, sometimes years, but eventually I have always been able to find something that does not require explaining verses away. The early church fathers have helped a lot with this. I argue and discuss these foundational doctrines with others to make sure my teaching really lines up with Scripture. I am encouraged by the fact that the several missionaries and pastors that I know well and admire as holy men love the things I teach. I hope you will be encouraged too. I am indeed tearing up old foundations created by tradition in order to re-establish the foundations found in Scripture and lived on by the churches during their 300 years of unity.
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2 Responses to Don’t Beat Dead Horses; Only the Father Reveals Truth

  1. Nathan Lesmeister's avatar Nathan Lesmeister says:

    Thank you for this Paul. I needed to hear this right now. It can be exceedingly difficult to follow Christ in faith. For me, it is far easier to follow Him with my head and my hands, but not my heart. I can study the Word of God and serve in my church, but personally having a deep-seated peace, knowing that God will solve everything—that’s a different story. Thank your for this reminder to trust God.

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