”It
is easier to believe a lie that one has heard a thousand times than
to believe a fact that one has never heard before.” These words
of Robert Lynd are in no area more true than in the field of religion.
It
is amazing how many people believe the lie that death isn’t death,
not because it is reasonable or because there is scientific evidence
to support it (just the reverse is true in both cases), but merely
because they have heard it a thousand times.
The
principle which is now called brainwashing is not new, it has just
been given a new name.
Sometime
ago we had the opportunity to discuss the Doctrine of the Trinity
with a newly ordained minister who stoutly upheld the belief of
three Gods in one. It was a fruitless discussion so far as the participants
were concerned but the interesting fact was that later after we
had left, the young minister confessed to his father, who does not
believe in the Trinity, that he had not believed in the Trinity
either until he had attended Divinity School. He learned there that
he had to believe it in order to graduate, and now after having
heard it so often he was fully convinced of its truth.
Now
there are two points we want to make concerning this. First, we
want to be on our guard that we are not taken in by lies just because
we have heard them over and over again; and second, we want to be
sure that we ourselves are not guilty of trying to convince others
of something that is not true, by use of repetition. The truth of
God is certainly true but this does not necessarily mean that everything
we believe is true. We also can be guilty of holding an opinion
that is false, and we must not be so stubborn as to refuse to give
it up just because we have cherished it for so long. We deplore
this in others; let us be sure that we despise it in ourselves as
well.
Perhaps an example would help illustrate. We once knew a dear person
who had believed for many years that the half tribe of Manasseh
was called a half tribe because Joseph’s tribe was divided between
Manasseh and Ephraim.
Of
course if this were true, then Ephraim would also be a half tribe
but we look in vain for any scripture which describes Ephraim this
way. Manasseh had half tribes because one half of the tribe took
their inheritance on one side of the river Jordan and the other
half on the other side, but could this person be convinced of this
truth? Absolutely not, it was a belief that had been held so long
that they did not want to be confused with facts because their mind
was already made up.
This is the position we want to avoid. We want others to consider
the facts when we are trying to persuade them concerning the true
Bible teaching concerning God or the state of the dead, and we should
also be considerate enough to allow them to produce what they believe
to be evidence in support of their position. We need never fear
the truth. So long as we keep our heads, we can examine their proofs
and determine if they are valid. If they are not, perhaps we can
”in meekness instruct those that oppose themselves, if God peradventure
will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth.” If
their point has merit, let us be honest and acknowledge it.
Many
of the troubles we encounter not only in teaching the Truth but
also in our dealings with those within the brotherhood can be solved
if we will honestly examine the evidence and ourselves to be sure
that we are not being swayed just because we have heard it a thousand
times or have cherished it as a pet belief when all the evidence
should convince us that we need to re-evaluate our own position.
If it is a fact that we have never heard before but is none the
less a fact, let us then do as we would have others do, and accept
it for what it is, a fact.
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