A. Lincoln said all creation is the mine, and we (humanity) are the miners. We extract of creation what we seek. Not just fruit growing on trees, but we dig into the earth, remove ore and refine it such that we obtain Iron, or gold or copper.
We do not just find useful things on the surface, but must repetitively try diverse methods, clinging to what is of utility, such as going to school on our past efforts.
We "mine" God's word for "truth." Many times our efforts to refine what we see results not in truth, but in our misapprehension of truth. Some find in the ambiguous phrase "cannot understand the things of the Spirit of God" the unwarranted expansion of "cannot understand all the things of the Spirit of God.
A. Lincoln strove to mine God's creation for truth, but many of his insights did not mesh with the cultural norms thought to be truth. All men were created equal, yet not all men were equal, was culturally accepted, but did not meet with Mr. Lincoln's Euclidean view that equals were equal.
When we mine God's word, we must not accept ambiguity, but test everything to demonstrate truth with clarity.
See Job 28.
We do not just find useful things on the surface, but must repetitively try diverse methods, clinging to what is of utility, such as going to school on our past efforts.
We "mine" God's word for "truth." Many times our efforts to refine what we see results not in truth, but in our misapprehension of truth. Some find in the ambiguous phrase "cannot understand the things of the Spirit of God" the unwarranted expansion of "cannot understand all the things of the Spirit of God.
A. Lincoln strove to mine God's creation for truth, but many of his insights did not mesh with the cultural norms thought to be truth. All men were created equal, yet not all men were equal, was culturally accepted, but did not meet with Mr. Lincoln's Euclidean view that equals were equal.
When we mine God's word, we must not accept ambiguity, but test everything to demonstrate truth with clarity.
See Job 28.