There are some Scriptures that I find rather
intimidating and this is one of them:
“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind” (Romans 12:2, ESV).
How can a mind be renewed?
What is more complicated and intricate
than the human mind? The fact is that we cannot—through therapy or personal
discipline or thinking positive thoughts—renew the mind. We might slightly
change the way we think, but a complete overhaul, a full renewal of the mind? I
think not.
Renewing the mind is beyond the
capabilities of human endeavor—it is the work of the Creator. He made us in the
first place, He can fix whatever is broken, and He can renew our mind when it
gets bruised and battered by the waves
of worldliness that are constantly crashing on our beach. The word renew as used in Romans 12:2 means to
“reestablish in a like-new and often improved manner.”
God has given us the agent of renewal—the
Holy Spirit. He took up residence in us at salvation and He is with us throughout
our entire spiritual experience. In addition, God has given us the manual of
renewal—the Bible.
At salvation the
Holy Spirit comes to live in us (see 1 Corinthians 6:19). It is one thing for
the Holy Spirit to be a houseguest and it’s something else for Him to be active
in leading, guiding, and rebuilding our lives. For most Christians, the Holy
Spirit is a welcome houseguest; they are glad He has come, they are excited and
thrilled about salvation, and they understand that the Holy Spirit is the third
Person of the Trinity. The idea of activating the Holy Spirit in their life,
however, is not a concept they either understand or participate in. Because of
this, the welcome houseguest is confined to a small part of their life and
never allowed to do for them all that He can and would do.
When we cooperate
with the Holy Spirit and let Him flow through us, then according to 1 Corinthians
14:4, we “edify ourselves.” The word edify
means to restore, to strengthen, to build up. In this passage Paul is speaking
of activating the Holy Spirit through prayer and praise, through speaking in
tongues. I don’t think the issue here is tongues, but Paul is encouraging us to
allow the Holy Spirit to be free in us and to bring this tremendous benefit to
our lives as we pray in the Spirit.
The manual of
renewal, the Bible, is deeply underappreciated in large segments of today’s
church. Few believers in America today “take the time” to read and study the
Word for themselves. Is it any wonder that such a large portion of the church
is in disarray? Is it any wonder that so much of what is called church today
looks and acts so much like the world? The American church doesn’t know what’s
in the manual—the Bible!
“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for
training in righteousness” (2 Timothy 3:16, ESV). We tend to think of correction
as used in this sentence as being discipline, and while that is part of the
meaning, the fuller meaning is “to restore to an upright or right state”—literally
to lift up and put in place that which has been knocked down by life and
circumstances. A large part of the ministry of the Word of God to us is to set
in right order everything that makes up our lives. When we read and study Scripture,
we are giving the Holy Spirit an opportunity to bring our mind and spirit into
contact with the living Word—and that’s a potent and healing connection!
God’s Word brings
healing and renewal to us. Listen to what the Psalmist says:
“He sent out His word and healed them
and delivered them from their destruction” (Psalm 107:20, ESV). Healed, as
it is used here, means “to restore, to repair, to mend.”
In Psalm 119:93
David says, “I will never forget your
precepts, for by them you have given me
life.” The phrase “given me life” means “to recover, to revive, to
return to life.” The Psalmist was describing the power that is in the Word to
change us and that is why it is vital that we get the Word in us.
God’s renewal of
the mind happens from the inside out and that’s why it is important that we
honor and receive all that the Holy Spirit brings to us. It’s as we get the
Word of God in us that through the Spirit-empowered Word we are being conformed
not into the “fashion or style of the world” but into the man or woman that God
has destined us to be.
Can
our minds be so battered and bruised by the sick world we live in that nothing
can help? Absolutely not! To Timothy, Paul offers the hope and understanding of
allowing the Word of God to minister and bring His healing touch. To the
Corinthians, Paul brings a message of encouragement that the mind, the heart,
the spirit of the believer can be refreshed and restored by the power of the
indwelling Holy Spirit. Paul says to us through his message to the church at
Rome, “Your mind can be renewed by the power of the Holy Spirit and by His
word!”