It’s a name that we’ve been given, not because we earned it, but because we were adopted into a family. It’s a name that defines who we are. And it’s a name we already have, not one we are trying to earn. It’s the name that is above every name, and the name at which every knee will bow and every tongue will confess. We are Christians.
Throughout the ages, philosophers have considered knowledge to be valuable and important, but they have disagreed on the purpose of knowledge. Socrates said that knowledge was the only true good. To him, virtue IS knowledge, and the purpose of knowledge was moral education and the pursuit of a virtuous life. Plato thought that knowledge was the key to finding meaning and ordering the soul. Through knowledge, a person could transcend the physical world of shadows to reach the stable, universal truths of the universe. Aristotle stated that “all men by nature desire to know.” He categorized knowledge into three purposes: some knowledge is theoretical, and its purpose is for its own sake. Some knowledge is practical, and you gained it for the sake of action and ethical living. Some knowledge is productive, and you gain it for the purpose of making or creating things.
Though they all had slightly different variations, they all agreed on this—that knowledge DOES have a purpose, even if they didn’t agree on what that purpose precisely was. Paul the apostle would also agree. He wasn’t against the pursuit of knowledge or a well-informed faith. In fact, that’s one of the things he prayed for the Colossian believers:
For this reason also, since the day we heard this, we haven’t stopped praying for you. We are asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding, so that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him…
—Colossians 1:9-10
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