Psychosomatic wellness Tony Payne

Tony Payne

I'm getting the hang of this blog business. When it's the weekend and you want a rest, apparently what you do is drag out some ancient or obscure quote, and let that suffice for a post. The Pyromaniacs do this with Spurgeon, and it works a treat.

However, given how fast the world is moving, and how short our attention spans are, I don't think it's necessary to go nearly so far back for our classic quotes. The late 1980s or early 90s should do. And anyone can quote Spurgeon or Ryle or Luther, but who out there in blog-land (I ask you) is quoting classic snippets from those early edgy editions of The Briefing?

Well, as of now, we are. Here's Phillip Jensen, from Briefing #39, December 1989:

In my job I keep meeting people who suffer from psychosomatic wellness. Or perhaps, to be more accurate, psychosomatic goodness.

I understand that some doctors spend a lot of their time telling their patients that they are not sick at all; it is all in their minds.

I have the opposite problem. People keep coming to me telling me that they are spiritually well, that they are good people. Since I know there are no good people, I instantly realize that they are suffering from psychosomatic virtue.

The dream dies hard. The evidence mounts on all sides, but people continue to believe. They are seemingly reasonable, rational people. One event after another belies their blind faith, but they stick to it.

The whole purpose of faith is to trust what's trustworthy—not what is unreliable. How many times does your hypothesis of life have to be shown to be wrong before you discard it?

Western liberalism has a blind faith in the good and perfect nature of man. It is an unreasoned faith. It relies on vague desires for personal freedom. It exists against all the evidence of this century and others: against the evidence of two world wars, of the Holocaust, of Vietnam, Afghanistan, Korea, Chile, South Africa, racism, sexism, and so on, and so on.

We know we cannot trust the words of anybody. Our locks, our legal safeguards, our property insurance, our weaponry, our police, all testify to our working faith in human immorality. That humans are basically immoral is demonstrated daily in the media, in society and in our own actions.

How can we worship a (human) being who is so seriously flawed? We must pretend. It is better, in our minds, to worship the lie than the truth.

(From ‘Bad Dreams in Good Faith’, Briefing #39, December, 1989, pp. 4-5.)

2 Comments »

Hi Tony,
Thanks for this Blog.
Solid Gold. Those words are still so true.
But, isn’t it ironic that in 2008 Dr. Phil, on Tuesday, sells 2 million copies of “Self Matters” detailing how stuffed up most people are; and then on Wednesday someone who bought the book tells their neighbour, “I am the master of my fate, I am the Captain of my soul!” Its a weird world.
I remember playing the same spiritual chameleon game before Christ saved me.
Ben

Thank you for this quote.  I think that this keeps most people from seeking a Saviour.  Our tendency is to not see ourselves for who we truly are, that indeed our hearts are “deceitful and wicked above all things” and our only hope is the cross of Christ.

Commenting rules

If you would like your comment to be considered for publication, please observe the following rules:

  1. Please use your FULL NAME (your real name, not an alias).
  2. Stay on topic.
  3. Be godly.

Failure to adhere to these rules will result in your comment being quietly deleted.

If you want to give us feedback but don't want your comments to appear on the blog, DON'T use the form below. Instead, please send us an email or click on the button below.

Your Comment

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.
By God’s Word Volumes 1 and 2

Sponsors

Placeholder

Recent comments

RSS logo

Stephen Jackson on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!

Sam Freney on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!

Marty Foord on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!

Dianne Howard on The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel!

Mike Bull on Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia

Current discussions

RSS logo

Recent posts

RSS logo RSS logo

The Sola Panel is dead; long live the Sola Panel! by Tony Payne (4 comments). Regular Sola Panel readers will no doubt have detected a little slowness and quietness over the past six weeks or so. … more

Kids’ culture watch spot: Facing fear by Gordon Cheng (3 comments). By popular demand (two people asked), here is my next script for a culture watch spot I did with the kids … more

Daniel 2-7, Harry Potter and Narnia by Gordon Cheng (1 comment). It's a Sunday as I write this, and I'm speaking on Daniel 2 and 7 later this morning at a friend's … more

A constituent on same-sex marriage by Sandy Grant (34 comments). Last year, the Australian Parliament agreed that its Members of Parliament (MPs) should seek the … more

A tribute to John Stott by Sandy Grant (2 comments). Friends, I'm not ashamed to say I shed a tear when I opened up my computer on Thursday morning to read … more

Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 3): On giants’ shoulders by Scott Newling (26 comments). This is the third post in this series; you can read part one, and more

Bible reading with kids by Sandy Grant (0 comments). I was asked for recommendations for resources that would encourage parents to read the Bible with their kids, especially … more

Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 2): Stepping aside (not out) so others can step up (not in) by Scott Newling (3 comments). This is the second post in this series; you can read the first post, Unassuming … more

One more sip of the coffee by Tony Payne (8 comments). Sandy Grant is a man of integrity. Back in the early days of Sola Panel, I wrote a post … more

Talkin’ ’bout my generation (part 1): Unassuming generations by Scott Newling (30 comments). There is a model of ‘intergenerational theological decline’ that has been doing the rounds of late, and perhaps you … more

Tony Payne

Tony Payne

Paul is one of the Staff Editors at Matthias Media. He is married to Cathy and has three fantastic kids. He loves student ministry, reading, writing music and playing the saxophone, and is looking forward to meeting Jesus face to face.

Sola Panellists



Some other sites
we like  (Why these?)

Ministry partners