To Speak or Not to Speak #NK #NormanKissinger #RTTBROS #Nightlight
"Open thy mouth for the dumb in the cause of all such as are appointed to destruction. Open thy mouth, judge righteously, and plead the cause of the poor and needy." — Proverbs 31:8-9
You know, I've been wrestling with something lately, and I bet some of you have too. It's this question that keeps coming up in my mind: when do we speak up, and when do we stay silent? In this age of the internet where you can post that you love apples and somebody's going to insult you for it, that's become a real dilemma for followers of Christ. There's so much noise out there, so many voices, and the stakes feel higher than they've ever been because thousands of people can see what we say in an instant.
For years, I pretty much stayed quiet online except for official ministry work, wishing people happy birthday, or thanking folks from my past. I'd see posts that were way off biblically, things that grieved my spirit, but I'd just assume somebody else would address it. I'd think to myself, "It's a slippery slope. You can hurt the kingdom by saying the wrong thing or saying the right thing the wrong way." And that's true, it is a slippery slope. But lately, the Holy Spirit's been convicting me that silence has its own cost.
Here's what I've been learning, and I'm too soon old and too late smart on this one: when we stay silent in the face of error, especially doctrinal error that's being spread by people who claim Christ, we're not just being careful, we're letting people slip into beliefs that aren't even close to biblical. Weak Christians, and let's be honest, even mature Christians sometimes, will hear stuff and believe it without questioning whether it lines up with what God actually says in His Word.
The problem isn't that Christians disagree on things, there's always been healthy debate about secondary issues. Arminian or Calvinist, charismatic gifts or not, end times views, all of that, good godly people can land in different places and still love Jesus and hold to the fundamentals. But when somebody starts building entire theologies on conjecture, making heroes out of people the Scripture doesn't even clearly vindicate, or worse, when they start chipping away at the virgin birth, the inerrancy of Scripture, the deity of Christ, the necessity of holy living, that's when we've got to find our voice.
I think about the Apostle Paul. That man didn't stay quiet when error crept into the church. He wrote whole letters confronting false teaching. He stood up to Peter's face when Peter was being a hypocrite in Galatians. He warned Timothy, "Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine" (2 Timothy 4:2). Paul understood that truth doesn't defend itself, it needs voices willing to speak it clearly and boldly.
But here's the balance, and this is where we need the Holy Spirit's wisdom. Jesus himself stayed silent sometimes. He didn't answer every accusation, didn't engage every critic. There were moments when silence was the most powerful thing He could do. So we've got to be Spirit-led in this. We can't just respond to everything, we'd consume ourselves with arguing on the internet and accomplish nothing for the kingdom. But we also can't be so silent that error goes unchallenged and people drift into heresy.
What I'm finding is that we've lost something critical in our culture, we've lost the ability to think critically. People don't question what they read anymore. They see a post, it sounds good, it feels right, and they accept it without ever opening their Bibles to see if it's actually true. That's dangerous ground, because that's exactly how you slip from minor doctrinal error into full-blown heresy, one unchallenged assumption at a time.
So I've decided I'm going to speak up a little more. Not to every fool on the internet who just wants to argue, but when I see something that needs a biblical response, when I see teaching that could lead people astray, I'm planning to write something solid, something thought out, something that points people back to what Scripture actually says. Not because I'm right about everything, I'm certainly not, but because the gospel needs to stay clear and the foundations need to stay solid.
The question isn't really whether we should speak, it's when and how. When do we let something go because engaging would do no good? When do we speak up because silence would be being ashamed of Christ? These have always been questions for believers, but now with the internet, the whole world is watching. We need to be lighthouses in the ocean of this world, pointing people to solid ground. We need to stand on the inerrancy of Scripture and the traditional, conservative teaching of God's Word, and we need to communicate it effectively.
Let me ask you today: is the Holy Spirit nudging you to speak up about something? Or is He telling you to be silent and pray? Either way, let's not be people who just drift along accepting everything we hear. Let's be thinkers. Let's open our Bibles. Let's stand for truth with grace and boldness, knowing that history is just HIS story, and we're honored to be a part of it.
Let's pray: Father, give us wisdom to know when to speak and when to be silent. Help us stand for truth without being unloving, and help us love people without compromising Your Word. Make us bold when we need to be bold, and humble when we need to be humble. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#Faith #Truth #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #StandForTruth #BiblicalWisdom #SpiritualGrowth #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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