Unlearning

March 27, 2020

 

Mark Batterson Weekly Devo

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Half of spiritual growth is learning what we don’t know. The other half is unlearning what we do know. And it is the failure to unlearn irrational fears and misconceptions that keeps us from becoming who God wants us to be.

The invalid in John 5 is a great example of the importance of unlearning. He had been crippled for thirty eight years when Jesus asked him if he wanted to get well. But the man believed there was only one way to be healed:

“I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.” (John 5:7)

This man made an assumption that may have cost him thirty-eight years! He only had one category for healing. He assumed, based on ancient superstition, that he had to be the first one into the pool of Bethesda when the water was stirred in order to be healed. In a sense, he was imprisoned by what he knew. But Jesus uninstalled that mistaken belief with one sentence: “Stand up, pick up your sleeping mat, and walk!”

Now, here is what you need to see. Jesus didn’t just set this man free physically. He set him free cognitively. Faith is unlearning the senseless worries and misguided beliefs that keep us captive. It is far more complex than simply modifying behavior. Faith involves synaptogenesis. Faith is rewiring the human brain.

Neurologically speaking, that is what we do when we study Scripture. We are literally upgrading our minds by downloading the mind of Christ.

“Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12:2)

Just as a computer hard drive needs to be defragmented to optimize performance, our minds need to be defragmented. So how do we defragment our faith? How do we renew our minds? How do we get ourselves out of the mental pit we’ve gotten ourselves into? The way to upgrade your mind is to download Scripture.

Let me put Paul’s instructions in neurological context.

Doctors Avi Karni and Leslie Ungerleider of the National Institute of Mental Health did a fascinating study asking subjects to perform a simple motor task—a finger-tapping exercise. As subjects tapped, the doctors conducted an MRI to identify what part of the brain was being activated. The subjects then practiced the finger-tapping exercise daily for four weeks. At the end of the four-week period, the brain scan was repeated. In each instance, it revealed that the area of the brain involved in the task had expanded. That simple task—a finger-tapping exercise—literally recruited new nerve cells and rewired neuronal connections.

When we read Scripture, we are recruiting new nerve cells and rewiring neuronal connections. In a sense, we are downloading a new operating system that reconfigures the mind. We stop thinking human thoughts and start thinking God thoughts.

Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus.

How do we accomplish that command?

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly.

When we read Scripture, we engage in spiritual tapping. Our brains are rewired in alignment with the Word, and we develop the mind of Christ.

In short, we think His thoughts.

Mark Batterson

Mark Batterson

Mark Batterson serves as lead pastor of National Community Church in Washington, DC. NCC also owns and operates Ebenezers Coffeehouse, The Miracle Theatre, and the DC Dream Center. Mark holds a doctor of ministry degree from Regent University and is the New York Times bestselling author of 17 books, including The Circle Maker, Chase the Lion, and Whisper. Mark and his wife, Lora, have three children and live on Capitol Hill.

9 Comments

  1. Susan Charlock on March 30, 2020 at 6:07 am

    Thank you.🙏🙏

  2. Gracie M Johnson on March 30, 2020 at 2:37 pm

    Looking forward to getting this devotional for my growth in the word.

  3. Steve Schaick, Ch, Maj Gen, USAF on March 31, 2020 at 4:56 am

    Thanks Mark. Simple, profound, life changing!

  4. Maria on April 1, 2020 at 4:36 am

    I am grateful that you love God deeply and help us to love him also much deeper through your ministry.

  5. Jonathan Brownson on April 1, 2020 at 5:35 am

    Mark, I am wondering if there might be a way to make “Draw the Circle” available online for use for forty day prayer walks around the country starting on Easter and ending on Ascension Day. I am a pastor in Holland, MI who has gone through the book several times and done #runandpraytoday circles around our local neighborhood and bike circles around our city.

  6. Janine Olkowski on April 1, 2020 at 12:26 pm

    Excellent! THANK YOU! 🙌

  7. Ms.Thomas on April 1, 2020 at 9:48 pm

    We just finished reading the 40 day challenge Draw the Circle with my church. This book has restored my prayer life and started a prayer life in my 24 year old daughter. I just wanted to Thank you 🙏🏾

  8. Wilma Atkinson on April 7, 2020 at 6:49 am

    Mark, I love your book Chase The Lion, it was so inspiring and gut wrenching. To think I have let my dreams go because I didn’t persue them. Now I the opportunity is there in a different way and still I can’t pull the trigger and jump in. God has been putting people in my path to help, I keep going to meet them and yet here I am. Thank You for your books.

  9. Amy Wallis Hood on April 17, 2020 at 5:36 pm

    Unlearned…I love this term! When we look back from where we came from, and renew our minds and hearts, ‘unlearning’ takes place. Bc over the years we accumulate so much junk, store it and it drives us in becoming a person the Lord never intended. Suffering from things that we weren’t born to do. Wow it’s a process but unlearning has so worked for me Pastor Batterson. I’ve thought about this for years, so your devotional hit home. God shouldered me all the way through the light of seeing baby steps and making progress with Him. The darkness was left behind. Loved your book The Circle Maker!!!

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