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2,000 years ago Pontius Pilate, the Roman
Governor who sentenced Jesus Christ to die on a Roman Cross, asked Jesus:
"What is truth?" (John 18:38) Jesus had previously claimed of
himself: "I am…the truth." (John 14:6) Speaking about truth
on another occasion, Jesus emphasized that when people embrace truth, they
become genuinely, wonderfully free! (John 8:32)
Let’s consider Pilate’s question, "What
is truth," and attempt to answer it—at least in part.
We can begin with a simple dictionary
definition: "truth (trooth) n. the quality of
corresponding to, or being in accordance with, experience, actual existence,
facts, or reality." That’s an acceptable working definition for most
purposes but it doesn’t go far enough for what we need to understand about
truth for this article.
By means of God’s gift of faith to us,
we who are followers of Jesus Christ believe he is truth. We do not magically
convince ourselves he is the truth; we do not self-hypnotize ourselves into
believing he is the truth; we do not grit our teeth and somehow force ourselves
to believe he is the truth—thus causing him to become the truth because we
want very much to believe it; No, God gives us a gift of faith so that we
experience Jesus as truth. Outside of God’s giving a person a gift of faith to
believe Jesus is the truth, that person cannot simply decide of his or her own
will that Jesus is the truth. It doesn’t happen that way. Yes, because Jesus
Christ resides permanently in me I believe he is the truth, the entirety
of truth, and nothing may be found in him which is not truth, but I cannot
convince you of that; only God can do that. Jesus is "the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth." In Jesus, there are no half truths, no
partial truths, and no "false" truths.
A person first believes by faith that all
truth "resides" in Jesus—that all truth is embodied and personified
in him (Ephesians 4:21)—and having first believed it to be so, then one experiences
it to be so. After a person initially encounters the Living
Lord Jesus Christ and comprehends by faith that he is the truth, then all
genuine truth a person subsequently encounters will merely substantiate Jesus’
sweeping claim to be the truth.
In addition, the Bible claims of itself
that it is truth (for example, Psalm 119:142; John 17:17). The Bible claims that
as it "enters" our minds and spirits (by hearing or reading) it
enlightens us for our journey through this life. (Psalm 119:105) Furthermore,
the Bible claims the Author of the Bible, the Holy Spirit, guides us into all
truth (John 16:13). The Bible is the written Word of God; Jesus Christ is the
Living Word of God. (Revelation 19:13); the two can never contradict one another
because they are one.
We see a great circularity
in these matters. When we receive Jesus Christ (the Living Word) into our lives
by faith, we begin to experience truth; we experience truth by means of the Holy
Spirit (Jesus’ unbodied "other self") enlightening us with the truth
contained in the book of which he is the author. As we incorporate into our
lives more of the truth found in the Bible, the written Word of God, we come to
experience more of Jesus Christ, the Living Word of God. And so the circle of
our growth and development—and our comprehension of truth—continues…
Since Jesus Christ is the truth (which we
believe by faith), it logically follows then that any "portion" or
"type" of truth must ultimately find its source, substance, and
consummation in him and be an integral, intrinsic, and inherent part of his
person, character, and nature.
He is the whole of truth. Any truth, no
matter where or in what guise or under what "label" it is found,
whether it be major or minor, secular or religious—that truth is but part of
the whole and must ultimately point to Jesus Christ in all aspects and in all
respects.
Whether it be religious truth, political,
medical, scientific, historical, business, industrial, astronomical,
educational, psychological…whatever—if it is "true" truth, somehow
the discoverer of that truth will find a way in which it points to
Jesus…always.
If it cannot be found to point to him
directly—or perhaps in some inexplicable indirect way that only God’s Spirit
of Truth can make happen—then it is not authentic truth, no matter how good it
may sound, no matter how "true" it may look, or how plausible it may
seem to be.
But if it is authentic truth, it will
ultimately point to Jesus Christ—and glorify him. And…it will serve to truly
emancipate the person who has found the truth!
There is one major challenge to this
matter of knowing the truth. I can best illustrate it in the following manner.
Let’s say, for example, that all truth in existence "weighed"
1,000,000,000 tons and could be gathered together and placed in a single,
gigantic box. In such a case, at best any individual human or group of humans
could know only an infinitesimally small "portion" of the whole; for
illustration, let’s say one person could know perhaps a quarter pound of that
entire 1,000,000,000 tons of truth.
Challenges occur when one person (or group
of persons) takes their small portion of the entirety of truth and claims that
minute portion constitutes the entire 1,000,000,000 tons of truth. That can
never be—simply because we humans are finite and limited in our capacity to
understand and comprehend infinite truth. 1,000,000,000 tons of truth simply
cannot be "fitted" into a "container" designed to hold only
a quarter pound.
I realize this is a faulty illustration
and could be challenged in many ways; I use it merely to point out the folly of
any one person or group of persons claiming the have a "corner" on the
truth or claiming they somehow possess all the truth. No, only Jesus Christ
embodies the entirety of truth in his own infinite person, nature, character,
and being.
Let us never be afraid of "new"
truth simply because it does not seem to "fit" into our current
"truth container"; if the new truth is "true" truth, it will
find it’s own way to become clear to us and "fit" into the person of
Jesus Christ. If it is untrue, it will dissipate before the enlightenment of
truth. We must not feel we are "God’s guardians" to protect and
preserve truth; truth has inherent power and strength which will always prevail
over that which is untrue. In the end, truth wins!
While it is true we can know Jesus
personally and intimately, we can never know all there is to know about him
because he is infinite and limitless—whereas we are finite and limited in our
comprehension and understanding of the truth. He is—and always will be—the
unlimited Creator. We are—and always will be—limited created beings. The
unlimited truth found in Jesus Christ will always be beyond our limited
comprehension and understanding.
Let us never judge one another in matters
of the limited truth about God each of us understands and comprehends; we each
possess only an infinitesimally small portion of the whole. Rather, let us
listen to one another, share with one another, and accept one another—letting
our shared and pooled truth lead us to Jesus Christ, and through him, to God the
Father.
I encourage you always to seek out and
find truth wherever it may be found; the more you discover, the more you will
come to know Jesus Christ whom to know is Life—true LIFE—and the more
emancipated you will become in your journey toward being all God created you to
be!
Your life is a journey. Embrace Jesus
Christ who is the truth and you will discover that God has wonderful plans and
purposes in store for you as you walk hand in hand with him from truth to truth
toward your bright, golden future.
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