Reading Time 3 mins 19 secs –
We’ve all heard stories about people making questionable decisions. What makes a person have an affair? Why would someone who was created as a man decide he wants to be a woman? Why are people putting their Bibles down and walking away from church? What causes any person to be willing to do something they know could destroy their reputation, their family, or their business?
The answer is deception.
To be deceived means to believe what is false to be true, to be misled, or to be ensnared. We’ve all heard more than a few stories of deception—the woman who found out her husband had another family, the politician who got caught in a web of lies, or the older neighbor couple who was cheated out of thousands of dollars by a contractor.
But did you know that the Bible says that we can deceive ourselves?
I bet you don’t know of anyone sharing those stories.
We can easily deceive ourselves.
It just takes a thought.
See, thoughts are not innocent.
They’re seeds.
They’re pictures.
What you listen to, what you look at, the things you do, and the friends you hang around all produce thoughts—pictures—in your mind, whether you realize it or not.
When you begin to concentrate on those pictures, they produce desire, and desire can get you into trouble. The Bible says that desire drags us. It produces a plan to get what it wants, and that plan can take you to a place you never thought you’d be.
Don’t get me wrong—that’s a good thing if you’re thinking about good things. Your good desires can drag you to succeed and to win.
The problem is that your heart can’t tell the difference between a good desire and an evil desire.
That’s where you have to get a handle on things because this is nothing to play with.
It’s life and death.
So, what do you do? How can you figure out if you’re deceiving yourself when deceived people don’t usually even know they’re deceived?
You start by being careful about what you look at, what you listen to, and who you talk to. This is what the Bible calls “guarding your heart.” Then you decide to choose what you’re thinking about.
Yes, you can choose what you think about.
No matter what pops into your head, the Bible says that we must take every thought captive to make it obedient to Christ. Plain and simple, your brain does not have the authority to think anything it wants. You can choose what you think about.
So, test every thought you have against God’s will for you. How do you know His will? Read your Bible. Measure everything against what God says. Umpire your thoughts. If they don’t align with what God says, get them out—replace them with the right thoughts.
How do you know what the right thought is to think? Read your Bible.
This is why I say that memory verses aren’t just for kids; they’re for everyone. If you memorize some Scriptures, you’ll have them ready and waiting to replace those negative thoughts.
When you analyze what happens in stories of real change in people’s lives, you’ll almost always find the same scenarios. They decided to change their thoughts. They took the time to make a change. They turned the TV off. They started reading their Bibles. They elevated God’s Word above the other voices in their lives and set their hearts on it.
Are you ready for real change in your life?
Then, make a decision to change your thoughts, to change your pictures. Ask yourself: What have I been looking at? What have I been watching? How much time have I spent in the Word of God this week? Who am I listening to? Who is giving me advice? Is it someone who has failed or someone who has walked it out and can show me which way to go? What am I focusing on? What am I thinking?
Ask yourself these questions, and you’ll see your future.
© 2024 All Rights Reserved | Gary Keesee Ministries | Privacy Policy