Spirit versus Spirit: Receiving the Word as It Really Is
1 Thessalonians 2:13
"And we also thank God constantly for this, that when you received the word of God, which you heard from us, you accepted it not as the word of men but as what it really is, the word of God, which is at work in you believers."
No wonder "the Church" is so weak, anemic, unable to sustain itself without being worldly minded and corrupted in its ways. They've rejected the word of God for foreign notions. Treating the Bible as outdated moral advice, a springboard for personal or political agendas, and something to be reinterpreted through the lens of psychology, sociology, critical theory, or modern sensibilities. It started even as far back as the first century, chasing relevance on the world’s terms instead of power on God’s terms. They've become institutions that look religious but lack the transformative, sustaining life of the Word at work in believers.
Jesus Himself warned about this.
Luke 6:46
"Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and not do what I tell you?"
When that Word (the Bible) is no longer welcomed as authoritative and supernatural, the "two-edged sword" gets sheathed, and the Christian community is left trying to fight it's spiritual battles with human ideas, emotionalism, pragmatism, or marketing. And all of that is an exercise in futility. It can’t sustain itself because the true source of its life has been sidelined.
The Thessalonians stood out because they accepted it as the word of God. That single humble posture, a reverent reception of conviction, holiness, mission, and perseverance was their salvation.
The remedy today isn’t more clever programs, better branding, or cultural accommodation. It’s a return to the same posture the Thessalonians had:
• Hearing the Word not as men’s opinions but as God’s own voice.
• Letting it do its work. Get out of its way with all your concerns and conditions.
• Obey it, even when it’s uncomfortable or counter-cultural.
⚠️ Warning
Doing this will make you and your church look increasingly strange to the world. But you'll be alive in Christ.
The Word of God is still at work wherever it’s received in that way.
The question for every generation, including ours, remains; will we accept it for what it really is?
It's unfortunate that even today many treat Scripture as ambiguous or insufficient without their own traditions and interpretations. Too often ministers introduce destructive heresies. The pattern is both modern and ancient. They're exchanging the authority of God’s Word for something that feels more enlightened, relevant, or palatable. They treat the word of God like a dull tool that needs to be reshaped into something more psychological, or sociologically relevant. It’s the same ancient pattern, just wearing different clothes.
In the early church, heresies arose when believers imported philosophies, cultural pressures, or “deeper knowledge” that reshaped or replaced the apostolic testimony. The result is always the same, weakened, anemic faith. The apostles’ plain teaching wasn’t enough and for many still isn't. Then, you needed special enlightenment the ordinary believer didn’t have, and today you need special programming. Then, Scripture was reinterpreted through pagan philosophy and dualism, now you need a Magisterium. Then, there was this idea that there was "hidden knowledge". Now, for those with special knowledge, they see systemic oppression, and privilege; so they call for the gospel to be reinterpreted by critical thinking through a social justice lens.
Some liberal theological circles and some progressive idealists deny, or spiritualize away the virgin birth, miracles, bodily resurrection, or real atonement; just as the ancient Greek philosophers did, that viewed the physical world was beneath the divine. For them, then and now, Jesus becomes a symbolic "Christ consciousness" or ethical example. The Word that became flesh (John 1:14) is rejected in favor of a sanitized, non-offensive spiritual idea.
Others stripped Christ of His full deity to make Him more reasonable and palatable. Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormonism, and large swaths of liberal/progressive Christianity, called Jesus a "great moral teacher" while denying He is the eternal Son, co-equal with the Father. Meanwhile, Seventh-Day Adventist, and certain Hebrew Roots movements blended Jewish legalism with the gospel, insisting the apostles’ message needed Old Covenant additions to be complete.
And almost as if there cannot be one thing without there being another corresponding thing, some churches functionally ignore the Old Testament, treating it as not relevant, or reinterpreting Scripture through modern sensibilities only. The idea is the God of the Bible was a product of ancient culture. And so they reject the whole counsel of God in favor of a more user-friendly, culturally palatable version.
And still others denied the depth of human depravity and the necessity of grace. Instead they leaned hard on decisionism and the prosperity gospel. It's all imported from an optimistic pagan philosophy. Just make a decision for Jesus, and incorporate self-help/therapeutic Christianity (quasi-witchcraft). "You have the power within you, God helps those who help themselves." It’s trying to live on self-help instead of the living Word.
These aren’t ancient curiosities; they’re alive and well today, and every one of them are repackaged with their own unique academic degrees.
The common thread?
Every one of them refuses to receive the apostolic message (the Word of God) as it is.
They filter, supplement, or reshape it with foreign notions to make it less offensive, more relevant, or more aligned with the spirit of the age. And therein lies the rub, "the spirit of the age."
It's a Spirit verses spirit problem.
The Holy Spirit works through the Word of God received as it truly is; authoritative, supernatural, living, and active. The spirit of the age, by contrast, whispers that Scripture is ambiguous, insufficient, or in need of updating through human traditions, philosophies, critical lenses, or enlightened reinterpretations. The result is always the same; a faith that looks religious but lacks power, just as Paul warned and as the Thessalonians avoided.
The question remains urgent for our generation, just as it was in Thessalonica:
Will we accept it for what it really is?