THOUGHT PATTERN AND THE RELIGIOUS MINDSET
Jesus Christ said of the Pharisees: "You Make the word of God of no effect through your tradition which you have handed down. And many such things you do." Mark 7:13
This exploration of transformative thinking would be incomplete without addressing one of the most insidious obstacles to spiritual growth and maturity: the religious mindset. Far from being a minor theological error or concern, the religious mindset represents one of the most dangerous frameworks of thinking, plaguing a larger part of today’s church.
It’s devastating impact extends beyond just an individual pattern of thinking; This is a well-organized systematic operation of the forces of darkness by using what sounds biblical and spiritual to do damage by dividing the Body of Christ. Its main object is to cripple the advancement of God’s purpose within a society or region. May believers are living below God’s divine provision and plan due to this powerful mindset.
The apostle Paul's instruction to "take every thought captive and bring it into obedience to Christ" (2 Corinthians 10:5) cannot be fully implemented if we ignore or casually dismiss this powerful religious system. This system operates as a demonic arsenal specifically designed to limit the advancement of God's purposes within communities, regions, and nations. "Having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people." 2 Timothy 3:5
The apostle Paul's warning about those who maintain "the form of godliness but deny its power" describes one of the most challenging and deceptive positions any believer can encounter when confronting religious mindsets. This condition represents the very essence of what makes religious thinking so insidious, it provides all the external forms and displays that appear righteous and sound doctrinally correct, while systematically denying the power, values, principles, and standards that allow the authentic life of God to flow through such systems.
This particular manifestation of religious mindset finds its most perfect historical expression in the system established by the Pharisees, a system whose influence extends far beyond first-century Judaism and continues to operate within contemporary Christianity and broader society.
The Pharisaic model demonstrates how religious structure can become the very mechanism that prevents genuine spiritual transformation while maintaining an appearance of spiritual authority.