Your Key is Still in the Ignition
"The Spirit clearly says that in later  times some will abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things  taught by demons. Such teachings come through hypocritical liars, whose  consciences have been seared as with a hot iron."1
    Some time ago I read the following story in Focus on the Family magazine about a man  who bought a car that had replaced warning lights with spoken instructions from  a woman. 
    
    In a soft voice, his little woman, as he  called her, would say, "Your door isn't closed properly." "Your  key is still in the ignition." "Your seatbelt isn't fastened  properly." 
    
    On one occasion, he recalled how the voice  of his little woman said, "Your fuel level is getting low." 
    
    The driver thanked her and, figuring he had  sufficient fuel to take him fifty more miles, ignored the voice and kept  driving. Soon his little woman repeated, "Your fuel level is low."  The longer he drove, the more his little woman repeated her warning. 
    
    Getting frustrated, he stopped his car,  searched under the dashboard, and found the appropriate wires. One quick jerk  and his little woman was silenced. 
    
    Imagine the look on his face when, a few  minutes later, his car sputtered and jerked to a standstill—out of fuel! One  could almost imagine a grin on his little woman's face! 
    
    We all have a little voice within. It's  called conscience. It can get very annoying at times, too. Sometimes we  "pull its wires" and, too late, we discover we are "out of  fuel." 
    
    One danger, when we ignore the voice of our  conscience and don't live according to our convictions, is that our mind  experiences what counselors call "cognitive dissonance." That is,  mental disharmony. Because this is too uncomfortable to live with, we switch  off our conscience. 
    
    When we do this often enough, our mind not  only switches off the voice of conscience but turns up the volume on the voice  of rationalization and justification. 
    
    The sad fact is that if we don't live the  life we believe, we end up unhappily believing the life we live. The Bible  calls this having a seared conscience. It is a dangerous and self-destructive  path to follow. 
    
    Suggested prayer: "Dear God, please  help me to realize the danger of switching off the voice of conscience and  justifying what I want to do. Please help me to live the life I believe—a life  that is lived in harmony with your will and your Word. Thank you for hearing  and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus' name, amen." 
    
    1. 1 Timothy 4:1-2 (NIV). 
    
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.