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Saturday, October 16, 2010

What Avoiding Scripture Does To A Reader

What Avoiding Scripture Does To A Reader

A sober post warning readers that delay, distraction, and avoidance weaken hunger for the Word of God.

Introduction

Avoidance rarely announces itself as rebellion at first.

It often looks like delay, busyness, or a vague promise to get serious later, but over time it weakens the reader's hunger and dulls the conscience.

How Avoidance Starts

A reader may avoid Scripture because the passage feels hard, the schedule feels crowded, or the heart is unwilling to be corrected.

Whatever the excuse, the result is often the same: the Word gets pushed out of its rightful place.

What Avoidance Does

When Scripture is repeatedly avoided, the reader becomes more comfortable with distance than with obedience.

That kind of distance can make a person more dependent on impressions, habits, and outside voices than on the clear speech of God.

What The Word Gives Instead

The Word of God gives correction, clarity, comfort, and direction.

It does not merely supply information. It trains a reader to think before God and to return when the first response is resistance.

A Guardrail to Consider

This warning is not meant to crush a weak reader.

The point is to call avoidance what it is so that repentance can replace delay and the reader can begin again with humility and hope.

What To Do Instead

Open the Bible before opening the excuses.

Read a little if needed, pray before reading, and keep coming back until the Word is no longer treated like an unwanted class but like the place where God is speaking for your good.

Read the full teaching on the canonical site

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Pastor Aamir Din serves in teaching and preaching ministry through the Word of God, pastoral shepherding, and gospel-centered discipleship. Additional content can be viewed via https://pastordin.us