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Four Lies My Teachers Told
Four Lies My Teachers Told
Told Me
Article by
Kaitlin Miller
Guest Contributor
I attended a secular college that, by and large, did not believe what I did — and I am
thankful for the experience. The ideas and people informed, challenged, and refined
me in ways I still daily recognize and appreciate today.
Yet for all the knowledgeable instruction I received, year by year, I also felt the
increasingly strong but subtle persuasions of human doctrine, cunning, and craftiness
(Ephesians 4:14). The winds of arguments and opinions raised against the knowledge
of God (2 Corinthians 10:5) blew through classrooms, campus demonstrations, school
publications, student organizations, and hallway conversations.
Even for us who follow Christ, these persuasive lies can be disorienting if we’re not
prepared for them. If we keep up our guard and ready our minds, however, steadfastly
oriented to the truth, even their lies can refine our faith and position us to be the salt of
the earth and the light of the world (Matthew 5:13–14).
Among a host of other faith-based claims, nearly everyone we meet will also propose
belief in forces we cannot see physically. I never had a professor deny the existence of
the invisible. Each one embraced the reality of atoms, wind, magnetism, gravity, and
the expanses of the galaxy, all of which are imperceptible to the human eye. We
believe in these forces by perceiving their effects and searching for the cause — just
as God is now invisible to us, but we believe in him by his works (Romans 1:19–20).
Furthermore, each professor trusted in historical accounts of all kinds of people and
events for which we have far less corroborating early witnesses than the Bible.
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The question, therefore, is not whether we will have faith, but in what we will put our
faith. The question is not even whether we will place our faith in evidence, but rather,
on what evidence we will place our faith — empirical evidence alone, or the
intersection of historical, logical, moral, and philosophical evidence on which
Christianity has always been based.
Ultimately, when it comes to faith in Christ, the issue is not a lack of credible
evidence, but an inclination to suppress, by our own unrighteousness, what God has
already made plain to us (Romans 1:18–19).
Others suggest our inclinations towards certain views automatically rule them
unreliable. They may accuse the influence of family, culture, and experiences of
encouraging us towards our beliefs — and they may be right. But if these influences
compelled us to believe the earth was round, would that make it any less true? And
would it make us bigoted and narrow-minded to share the reasons for our belief with
classmates taught from childhood that the earth is flat?
This crusade veils the underlying temptation our enemy has baited for centuries: to
give ourselves up to sensuality, lust, and impurity that we might become callously
hardened in heart (Ephesians 4:18–19; Romans 1:24–25). Deceived into seeing God’s
boundaries as stifling joy rather than lavishing it in abundance, we are continually
encouraged to seek the world’s enticements apart from him to satisfy us instead.
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And yet, at the bottom of every bank account, with despair over unattainable
standards of beauty, in the lonely halls of fame, and at sunrise after each destructive
party remains the stomach-sinking bleakness of discovering this world cannot satisfy
us after all. When we are more anchored in and governed by the shifting sands of
what we feel than by the rock of what is true, the enemy corners us into the emptiness
of sin, the anxiety of helplessness, and the exhaustion of discontent.
Scripture warns that governing life by the inward gaze, far from enlightening us,
actually darkens our understanding and alienates us from the life of God (Ephesians
4:17–18). It is in our creator that we live and move and have our being (Acts 17:28),
and it is his desires, not our own contradicting ones, that are good, trustworthy, and
enduring to the end.
In my own college days, I was ignited for adventure by the open horizon of
possibilities — particularly those that beckoned me to lay down my life for the
world’s eternal good. But I also saw many drawn into the cultural current of popular
opinion in ways that contradicted God’s word. Masked as “the way of progress” and
“the right side of history” this is actually the wide, broad path that leads to destruction
(Matthew 7:13). As C.S. Lewis warned decades ago,
If you are on the wrong road, progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to
the right road; and in that case, the man who turns back soonest is the most
progressive man. . . . It is pretty plain that humanity has been making some big
mistake. We are on the wrong road. And if that is so, we must go back. Going back is
the quickest way on.
“The classroom and college environment can be a
dangerous place for young Christians.”
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In every phase of life, we should be courageous to fight the good fight of the faith (1
Timothy 6:12) — not ultimately against the people we’re called to love, but against
the spiritual forces of evil over this present darkness (Ephesians 6:12). And in
response to any mocking or belligerent opposition, we can take heart remembering we
seek the reward not of human praise in this life, but of God’s good pleasure in the one
to come (Galatians 1:10).