Uprooting the Thorns: Pride, Relativism, and the Biblical Battle for Authentic Faith
Scripture Reading: Acts 17:1-4
Now when they had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a synagogue of the Jews. And Paul went in, as was his custom, and on three Sabbath days he reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead, and saying, "This Jesus, whom I proclaim to you, is the Christ." And some of them were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas, as did a great many of the devout Greeks and not a few of the leading women.
It no doubt took them several days to travel almost a hundred miles from Amphipolis to Thessalonica. And Paul reasoned with them from the scriptures for three Sabbath days. He doesn’t rely on emotional appeals or personal anecdotes alone. Instead, he explains and proves from the Old Testament prophecies that the Messiah, the Christ, had to suffer and rise from the dead. This wasn’t a popular message; the idea of a suffering Savior challenged many Jewish expectations of a conquering king. Yet Paul boldly proclaims, "This Jesus, whom I proclaim to you, is the Christ." No doubt he was pulling this information from Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22 and others as his text. The result? Persuasion and transformation. Some Jews believe and join Paul and Silas, along with a large number of God-fearing Greeks and prominent women. This diverse group, crossing ethnic, social, and gender lines, highlights the universal appeal of the Gospel. It’s a reminder that God’s truth isn’t confined to one group but is meant for all who seek Him.
If you read the epistles, specifically 1st and 2nd Thessalonians, in conjunction with these verses in Acts, you can begin to understand the dynamics more completely. In our fast-paced world, where opinions fly at the speed of social media, Paul’s approach challenges us to ground our faith-sharing in Scripture. Are we reasoning with others from God’s Word, or are we quick to argue from emotion or tradition? Paul’s persistence over three Sabbaths shows that transformation often takes time, patient explanation, not instant conversion.
Opposition quickly escalates (Acts 17:5-9), forcing Paul and Silas to flee by night to Berea. This sets the stage for the epistles, written shortly after from Corinth, where Paul expresses his deep concern for this fledgling church and provides pastoral guidance amid ongoing trials. Written soon after Paul’s departure (possibly within months), 1 Thessalonians reflects back on these events with gratitude and encouragement. Paul commends the Thessalonians for receiving the word "in much affliction, with the joy of the Holy Spirit" (1 Thess. 1:6), becoming an example to believers throughout Macedonia and Achaia (1 Thess. 1:7-8). Paul recounts his own conduct among them, bold despite opposition, gentle like a nursing mother, and hardworking to avoid burdening anyone (1 Thess. 2:1-12), which aligns with the "tentmaking" ministry implied in Acts.
2 Thessalonians, likely written shortly after the first letter, continues the thread by addressing ongoing persecution and clarifying misunderstandings about the day of the Lord. Paul encourages them to stand firm, assuring that God will repay their afflictors and grant relief to the faithful (2 Thess. 1:3-10). This echoes the opposition in Acts 17, where the church’s proclamation of Jesus as king clashed with Roman loyalties.
A key dynamic here is exhortation, and correction: Some had misinterpreted Paul’s earlier teachings, thinking the end times had already arrived, leading to idleness (2 Thess. 2:1-3; 3:6-15). Paul reminds them of what he taught while with them, possibly during those synagogue sessions in Acts, and urges diligence, modeling his own example of working for his keep. Paul was provoked, stirred up inside, at the idleness and the city absolutely given over to idolatry.
The depths of these Epicurean people's stoic spirits and absolute devotion to depravity was profound. They literally had places called "vomitoriums" where they could go and purge themselves of everything in their gut after binging on everything and anything they desired. They did this so they could return to gorging themselves in their depravity even more.
So, continuing our exploration of Acts 17:1-4 and the Thessalonian epistles, let’s embody the Berean spirit from Acts 17:11, those noble searchers who "examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true."
Something struck me in these passages. I saw a common thread and a parallel with Paul's personal testimony about his "thorn in the flesh", Jesus' thorns where the seed fell and was choked, and the thorn of idolatry seen throughout all the scriptures. The thorny ground represents those who hear the word, but the worries of this life and the lure of wealth choke out the message, leaving it unfruitful. This imagery of thorns as obstacles to genuine faith resonates deeply, especially when viewed through the lens of cultural biases, human traditions, and idolatrous systems that substitute for true conversion to Christ. These “thorns” aren’t just literal plants; they symbolize the entanglements that arise from the curse of sin, leading to spiritual idleness, depravity, and false securities.
Let’s search the Scriptures together, starting in the Old Testament where thorns first emerge as a consequence of rebellion against God, then moving to the New Testament where they illustrate internal and external hindrances to the Gospel. These aren’t mere traditions of men we're talking about, (as Jesus warns against in Mark 7:8), but adaptations that accommodate worldly systems, much like the idolatry Paul encountered in Thessalonica and Athens.
The foundation begins in Genesis, where thorns enter as part of the curse on a fallen world, representing the toil and frustration that stem from humanity’s desires overriding God’s design.
Genesis 3:18
"It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field."
Here, after Adam and Eve’s sin, driven by the lure of forbidden knowledge and self-exaltation, the ground is cursed. Thorns symbolize the painful, unproductive labor that results from prioritizing human desires over God’s word. In our worldly and spiritual cultures, this manifests as idolatrous pursuits of wealth or status, choking integrity and leading to a faith that’s barren, much like the Epicurean excess. Just as the ground yields thorns naturally post-Fall, societies produce biases and traditions that protect self-indulgence, substituting genuine reliance on Christ with superficial adaptations.
Thorns also depict the dangers of incomplete obedience, where remaining influences from pagan cultures become snares, fostering idolatry and compromising Israel’s covenant faithfulness.
Numbers 33:55
"But if you do not drive out the inhabitants of the land, those you allow to remain will become barbs in your eyes and thorns in your sides. They will give you trouble in the land where you will live."
These "thorns" are the people and their gods, whose cultural practices (idolatry, immorality) prick and irritate, leading to spiritual compromise. Today, this echoes our cultural biases, and the traditions of men like consumerism or relativism, that we tolerate, allowing them to "accommodate" the Gospel rather than letting it transform us. They become substitutes for conversion, blinding us ("thorns in your eyes" ) to Christ’s kingship, much like the Roman loyalties clashing with the Thessalonian church’s proclamation.
Joshua 23:13
"Then you may be sure that the Lord your God will no longer drive out these nations before you. Instead, they will become snares and traps for you, whips on your backs and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from this good land…"
Echoing Numbers, this emphasizes how unexpelled enemies (and their idolatrous ways) will ensnare and blind you. The "thorns in your eyes" vividly illustrates cultural adaptations that obscure our vision, protecting belief systems rooted in human desires rather than God’s truth. In Thessalonica, Paul’s message challenged Jewish expectations and Greek philosophies; similarly, our modern "thorns" might be societal norms that we prioritize, like comfort over the suffering Christ he proclaimed.
Judges 2:3
"Now therefore I tell you that I will not drive them out before you; they will become thorns in your sides and their gods will be a snare to you."
Explicitly linked to idolatry ("their gods will be a snare" ), this shows how cultural remnants foster false worship. It’s a warning against adaptations that blend the Gospel with worldly systems, think of how idleness in 2 Thessalonians stemmed from misinterpreted eschatology, mirroring how traditions choke diligence and faith.
In the prophets, thorns signify judgment on idolatry and moral decay, often growing over forsaken altars or blocking paths to sin.
Hosea 2:6
"Therefore I will block her path with thornbushes; I will wall her in so that she cannot find her way."
Hosea 10:8
"The high places of wickedness will be destroyed, it is the sin of Israel. Thorns and thistles will grow up and cover their altars."
Judgment on idolatrous high places results in thorns overtaking them, symbolizing desolation from false worship. This ties to our discovery that cultural creep is producing thorns that enable idolatry, choking faith as desires override God’s call.
And the New Testament builds on this, applying thorns to personal and communal faith battles.
Hebrews 6:8
"But land that produces thorns and thistles is worthless and is in danger of being cursed. In the end it will be burned."
Echoing Genesis, this warns of unfruitful lives under judgment, urging diligence. Like the Thessalonians’ trials, it calls us to uproot cultural thorns for genuine growth. These scriptures challenge us, as Paul did in Thessalonica. Let us reason from God’s Word, not emotion or tradition. In our fast-paced, idol-saturated world, full of digital distractions and material gorging, thorns like biases and desires choke the seed which is the Word of God. Yet, as Bereans, we search and uproot them, allowing the Gospel to transform our minds across all lines.
What specific "thorn" in modern culture do you see most hindering faith today?
Many would answer pornography, and they'd be more right than wrong. But I see relativism as the chief cause, pride and relativism.
While pornography ensnares many as a visible thorn of unchecked desire (echoing the Epicurean depravity we discussed earlier, where self-indulgence chokes spiritual fruitfulness), relativism and pride often lurk as the root system, nourishing a host of idolatrous weeds. Relativism, the notion that truth is subjective and "what’s right for me is right," erodes the absolute authority of God’s Word, allowing cultural biases to flourish unchecked. Pride, meanwhile, elevates self above the Creator, turning humans into their own idols and blinding them to the need for humble submission. Together, they form a thorny hedge (Hosea 2:6) that blocks the path to genuine conversion, substituting personal "truths" and self-sufficiency for Christ’s lordship. As in the Parable of the Sower, these thorns grow from the soil of worldly worries and deceitful riches, leaving faith unfruitful (Matthew 13:22).
Proverbs 16:18-19
"Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. Better to be lowly in spirit along with the oppressed than to share plunder with the proud."
In cultures today, this manifests as relativism justifying prideful choices, like dismissing biblical ethics as "outdated," allowing desires to override integrity. Pride’s end is humiliation, as it idolatrously exalts humanity above God. Relativism amplifies this by perverting truth, making "perverse speech" (subjective morals) seem wise, much like the Athenian idols born from proud philosophies. It’s a blueprint for how cultural "thorns" like subjective truth lead to moral decay, desires eroding integrity, and faith substituted with man-made gods.
Proverbs 14:12 reinforces this:
"There is a way that appears to be right, but in the end it leads to death."
Pride invites divine resistance, often fueling relativism by making self the measure of truth' an idolatrous thorn that chokes submission, as seen in the Pharisees’ traditions overriding God’s commands (Mark 7:8). And also seen in many was in modern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism. Their pride in self-exaltation is idolatry, and relativism is its enabler, leading to unfruitful lives like thorny ground. Paul describes relativism’s fruit, self-love and pride, as end-times thorns, producing idolatrous facades of faith without transformation.
2 Timothy 3:1-5
"But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves…proud, abusive…having a form of godliness but denying its power."
In our corrupt end times era, relativism and pride adapt the Gospel to our own "personal truths," protecting desires that lead to pornography or idleness, but Scripture calls us to uproot them through humble reasoning from the Word.
Let's pray:
Dear Heavenly Father,
We thank You for Your Word that exposes the thorns of pride and relativism choking our faith. Help us, like the Bereans, to search Scriptures humbly, uprooting cultural idols and desires that compromise our integrity. Stir our spirits against idolatry, grant us joy in affliction, and transform us through Christ Jesus, our risen Savior.
Amen.