Renewal of the Mind

The Main Idea of the Lecture
The lecture discusses the concept of the renewal of the mind according to the apostolic commandment: “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” It clarifies that renewal is not a momentary event linked only to baptism, but a continuous journey that includes thought, perspective, behavior, and life’s purpose. A person has received the new nature in baptism, yet is called to live this renewal daily in mind and conduct.
Renewing the View of the Body
The teaching affirms that the cause of sin is the thought that leads to it. When a person’s perspective changes, his behavior changes. Instead of viewing the body as a means of pleasure and enjoyment, it should be seen as a temple of God and a dwelling place of the Holy Spirit. Thus, the struggle between body and spirit becomes spiritual elevation, and fasting becomes asceticism and transcendence rather than mere suppression of the body.
Renewing the View of Others
Renewal of the mind makes a person look at others with a holy perspective, seeing them as children of God and temples of the Holy Spirit. In this way, lustful looks and judgment disappear, replaced by respect, reverence, and love. The fault does not come from outside but from an unrenewed heart.
Renewing Concepts of Success and Greatness
The teaching calls for revising the concept of success and dignity. True success is not to please oneself or people, but to please God. Greatness is not in positions and titles, but in being great before God, filled with the Holy Spirit, and striving toward the image and likeness of God.
The View Toward Eternity
One fruit of renewing the mind is shifting focus from the temporal to the eternal. Visible things are temporary, but invisible things are eternal. Whoever focuses on earthly matters is troubled by loss and pain, but whoever looks to eternity counts tribulation as a blessing and considers trials a path to the crown.
Renewal of Spiritual Life
Renewal of the mind also includes our view of prayer, repentance, confession, communion, and reading the Holy Bible. These are not mere duties, but a relationship of love and living fellowship with God. Prayer is an encounter, confession is true repentance, communion is holy preparation, and the Bible is a personal message from God to the person.
Continuous Striving Toward Perfection
The person whose mind is renewed does not think he has reached perfection, but continually strives toward the divine goal, forgetting what is behind and reaching forward to what is ahead, seeking to be filled to all the fullness of God. He always feels he is at the beginning of the road, asking for new grace for spiritual growth and ascent.
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