The Mind is a Battlefield. It truly is. I’m surprised there’s never been a successful Christian book with that title. Okay, maybe there was one.
Earlier today in an online discussion, I had reason to look something up and rediscovered this summary of some things that have appeared here at Thinking Out Loud between 2011 and 2017 with the blog tag “thought life.”
Each one of the headers below is a link to a larger article. You need to click each to unpack each topic in full.
Over-Consumption of Internet Media
5 General Principles to Guide Potential Online Addiction
(again, click the individual headers to see great discussion on each of these…)
- Self Control
- Mind, Thoughts and Heart
- Shifting Values
- The Stewardship of Our Time
- Misdirected Worship
Media to Fill Your Home
(you need to click the title to see these spelled out)
- Bible teaching
- Christian books
- Christian movies
- Christian music
- Hearing God’s voice
Phillips – Col. 3: 16-17 Let Christ’s teaching live in your hearts, making you rich in the true wisdom. Teach and help one another along the right road with your psalms and hymns and Christian songs, singing God’s praises with joyful hearts.
What will control your thought life this week?
A Day Lived Entirely for God
Several years back, a phrase from Charles Sheldon’s In His Steps became part of popular Christian culture through the acronym WWJD?. It appeared on wristbands, bumper stickers and a host of novelties and trinkets and in the crush of popularity, a few people actually bought and read the book.
Facing everyday challenges with the question ‘What Would Jesus Do?’ is a great idea, but I wonder if it’s too focused on doing; in other words, I’m concerned that it only measures action.
I’ve written much here about temptation here with respect to our thought life. For myself, a person who doesn’t commit great transgressions of moral or spiritual law, a better question might be WWJT? or What Would Jesus Think? In a review of David Murray’s The Happy Christian, I noted the following chapter outline based on Phil. 4:8… [the link takes you to an overview of David’s media diet and ministry diet.]
The Fruit of Your Thoughts
…If your mind is saturated with unhealthy thoughts and ideas, it will manifest itself in several ways:
In your conversation: We all have heard the Biblical principle that out of the overflow of the heart, the mouth speaks. Even the most guarded, careful, filtered person will let something slip that betrays where their heart is wandering. Or they may lose interest in topics that would normally engage them.
Stresses: For the Christian, having made poor choices in the area of inputs and influences will result in an inner conflict that may come to the surface in being short or snappy with the people we love or people we’re close to. The inner turmoil may simply result from a feeling of personal failure.
Distractions: A mind focused on things below instead of things above will inevitably be un-ordered, resulting in forgetting to return a phone call, missing a payment deadline, forgetting the directions to an appointment. Time allocation to responsibilities may slip noticeably.
Acting Out: Experts say that people dealing with online addictions often end up taking some action as a result of the content they have been viewing, but we tend to think of that as more overt. In fact, acting out often takes places in subtle ways that are more tangential to the addiction than direct. It’s possible that only the person themselves knows that the behavior trigger.
Reticence: Other people whose mind is otherwise preoccupied will simply become withdrawn. An unhealthy mind condition will manifest itself similar to worry and anxiety. For the Christian who senses that they are moving away from The Cross instead of moving toward The Cross, they may opt to retreat from their fellowship group or simply be less animated than is typical.
What Goes into a Mind Comes Out in a Life
We are all fighting a battle within ourselves…
An illustration goes like this: There is a old Indian chief telling a story about how each of us have two rival dogs, a good dog and a bad dog. Both are always fighting each other. Sometimes it seems like the good dog is winning other times it appears like the bad dog is winning.
One of the tribal members asks, “So, how do you know which one will win?”
To which the chief replies, “It depends which dog you feed.”
Relationships and the Internet’s Dark Side
(the article contains two stories of the manifestation of over-consumption of the worst the net has to offer)
…Someone once compared the things that enter our thought life to what happens when farmers sow seeds and later reap the harvest. The little verse goes:
Sow a thought, reap an action;
Sow an action, reap a habit;
Sow a habit; reap a lifestyle.
One thing is certain, whether there’s aversion or attraction, interpersonal dynamics are changed. Someone has said, “You are what you eat.” You certainly are what you read or view on television or your computer screen…
Paul, Blessings to you and Ruth. I love this, thank you. I have “known” these things… but last week I woke up one morning with a sense of marvel that I “think” at all… a gift not to be squandered. That was followed by amazement that with 7.5 billion people “thinking” their own thoughts it is only God’s grace that we don’t have complete anarchy and destruction. I was deeply convicted about my responsibility to control what I take in, what I focus my thinking, meditating and joy seeking on. I hope it lasts. Thank you for this encouragement. The mind is indeed a battlefield… so thankful we follow the Victor.
Deborah
Comment by Deborah peel — April 26, 2020 @ 2:01 pm
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