Prospering in the Life of the Mind
What If the Stories Are True?
It was a crisp September evening in Oxford, 1931. Three men strolled through the twilight mist along a quiet path called Addison’s Walk. The moonlight shimmered off the streams of the River Cherwell, and the sound of rustling leaves whispered through the stillness.
The three men were C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Hugo Dyson.
That night, their conversation would change Lewis’s life—and shape the spiritual imagination of the modern world.
The Myth That Was True
C.S. Lewis loved myths. From Norse legends to Greek epics, the stories moved him. But to Lewis, they were just that: stories. Beautiful, yes. Inspiring, even. But ultimately, untrue.
He once described myths as “lies breathed through silver.”
Tolkien disagreed. Firmly.
“They are not lies,” he said.
In fact, Tolkien argued, the greatest stories—the tales of a dying and rising god—pointed toward a deeper, truer Story. In Christianity, the myth became fact. God, the master poet, told a true story. And the images He used weren’t imaginary heroes—they were real men and women in real history.
At that very moment, Lewis recalled, a sudden wind swept through the grove and shook the trees. The silence fell. They held their breath.
Something holy was happening.
Twelve days later, Lewis wrote,
“I have just passed on from believing in God to definitively believing in Christ…”
The Story had become real.
The Word had become flesh.
Love the Lord Your God… With All Your Mind
Jesus said the greatest commandment is to love God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind.
The Greek word for mind in Mark 12:30 is dianoia—it means understanding, reasoning, intellect, and intentional thought.
To love God with your mind is to engage truth—not just emotionally or spiritually, but intellectually.
A Generation Hungry for Meaning
We live in a world drowning in information but starving for meaning. You can Google facts. But you can’t Google truth.
Like the Bereans in Acts 17, we must be both:
- EAGER (prothumia) – hungry and passionate to hear the Word
- EXAMINING (anakrinó) – digging, investigating, seeking understanding
“Now the Bereans were of more noble character… they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily…” —Acts 17:11
The Difference Between a Critic and a Researcher
There’s a big difference between someone who’s picky and someone who’s hungry.
- The picky eater analyzes but never enjoys.
- The hungry heart tastes and then says, “Now I need the recipe.”
You can be ready and a researcher.
You can be eager and an examiner.
That’s how you prosper in your mind.
The Battle for the Bible
There’s a dangerous trend today: theologians and influencers trying to perform exegetical gymnastics to make Scripture say what culture wants it to say.
Litmus test:
If someone has to do 8 paragraphs of explanation to tell you why the Bible doesn’t mean what it clearly says—be careful.
Satan knows Scripture. He quoted it to Jesus.
The real test is not just knowing the Word. It’s believing it, living it, and surrendering to its authority.
Take Back the Mind for Christ
For too long, we've handed over academia, science, and culture to secular ideologies.
We send our sons and daughters to universities that ridicule faith, only to be surprised when they come home disillusioned and deconstructed.
That’s not education. That’s indoctrination.
Would you send your child to Iran to “find themselves”? Then why do we send them to systems hostile to Christ and expect a different outcome?
It’s time to raise up intellectual missionaries—lovers of wisdom, lovers of the Word.
Faith Is Not Opposed to Reason
In fact, modern science was born out of a biblical worldview.
- Kepler searched for God’s design in the stars
- Newton sought to understand God’s mechanics
- Mendel, Pascal, Maxwell—all believers
- Today, the “Return to God Hypothesis” is growing in strength
The origin of the universe
The fine-tuning of life
The digital code of DNA
Each of these discoveries points not to nothing, but to a Mind behind it all.
“The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible.” —Albert Einstein
Move from Information to Revelation
Study. Examine. Read. Question.
But don’t stop there.
Ask the Holy Spirit to turn it into revelation.
“What no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart imagined, God has prepared… and these things God has revealed to us by His Spirit.” —2 Corinthians 2:9–10
There’s wisdom not of this world… and it’s waiting for you.
Final Thought: Are You at the End of Your Understanding?
Maybe you're saying:
“God, I don’t understand.”
That’s okay. But don’t settle for wandering. Step into wonder.
When your intellect reaches its limit, don’t stop.
That’s where revelation begins.
Because what if the stories are true?
What if the story of the dying and rising God is history?
What if the story of redemption isn’t just meaningful—it’s factual?
Then the only thing left is this:
👉 Believe it.
👉 Live it.
👉 Tell it


