The Mind of Christ

“But we have the mind of Christ.” (1 Corinthians 2:16)

That is not a throwaway line at the end of Paul’s argument; it is the conclusion. It is the great contrast he has been building toward. There are, in the end, only two ways of thinking: the way of the world, and the way of Christ.

And they are not merely different. They are opposed.

The Way of the World

Worldly thinking is not always loud or obviously rebellious. Often, it is subtle, respectable, even admired. It plans carefully, calculates outcomes, and prizes control. It seeks strength, influence, and self-preservation. It measures success by what can be seen: results, recognition, security.

It asks questions like:

  • What will work?
  • What will advance me?
  • What will protect me?
  • What makes the most sense?

There is a certain wisdom to it, at least on the surface. It can build impressive structures, achieve measurable success, and even appear moral. But Paul reminds us that this wisdom is ultimately “of this age,” and therefore passing away (1 Cor. 2:6).

At its root, worldly thinking assumes that we are competent judges of reality. That we can, by our own reasoning, chart the right course. That the cross (weakness, sacrifice, dependence) is unnecessary or, at best, inefficient.

In other words, it is wisdom without the Spirit.

The Mind of Christ

Then Paul says something astonishing: “But we have the mind of Christ.”

Not will have. Not might have. Have.

As Richard Pratt notes, this is not because believers are naturally wiser, but because the Spirit of God dwells within them, revealing the mind of God through the apostolic word. The Spirit does not improve our old way of thinking; He replaces it. He teaches us to see reality as Christ sees it; to evaluate life according to a different standard altogether.

And what does that look like?

It looks like the cross.

The wisdom of God is revealed precisely where the world would never look: in weakness, in suffering, in what appears to be defeat. The cross is not merely the means of our salvation; it is the pattern of our thinking.

The mind of Christ:

  • Sees strength in weakness
  • Sees gain in loss
  • Sees life through death
  • Sees glory in humility

Where the world says, “Protect yourself,” Christ says, “Deny yourself.”

Where the world says, “Assert yourself,” Christ says, “Humble yourself.”

Where the world says, “Win at all costs,” Christ says, “Take up your cross.”

This is not natural. It is learned… taught by the Spirit through the Word.

A Necessary Surrender

But here is where it presses in on us.

To have the mind of Christ is not simply to think differently in theory; it is to relinquish our confidence in our own reasoning. It is to admit, often painfully, that God’s ways are right and ours are not.

That is what makes this so difficult.

We prefer strategies we can control. We gravitate toward outcomes we can predict. We trust what feels effective. But the Spirit leads us again and again back to the same place: the cross.

And the cross dismantles our pride.

It tells us that our wisdom could not save us.

It tells us that our strength was not enough.

It tells us that God’s power is made perfect in weakness.

And then, by the Spirit, it begins to reshape how we think.

Living with the Mind of Christ

What would it look like to live this out?

It means we begin to evaluate our lives not by worldly success but by faithfulness.

It means we are willing to look weak, if that is where Christ is honored.

It means we trust God’s Word over our instincts, even when it cuts across everything we would naturally choose.

It means, quite simply, that we begin to think like Christ.

Not perfectly. Not consistently. But truly.

And that is Paul’s encouragement: those taught by the Spirit are no longer bound to the judgments of human wisdom. They are being conformed to something better… to Someone better.

So when you find yourself wrestling between what seems right and what Christ has said, do not be surprised. That tension is not a sign of failure; it is evidence of a new mind at work.

Stay there. Sit under the Word. Ask the Spirit to teach you.

And remember: the goal is not sharper thinking by worldly standards, but deeper conformity to Christ.

After all, we have His mind.

SDG

Death by Assimilation

I’m preaching on Daniel 1:8-21 tomorrow, the story of how Daniel and his friends refused to eat the food from the King’s table. It never occured to me until my study this week what was really going on here.
Daniel and the rest of the exiles were being completely assimilated into Babylonian Culture – wiping away any distinctive cultural, religious, moral character that so defined them as the people of God. When Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah were brought into the King’s service, they were given new names, mocking their God and erasing their identity. They were taught the language and morals of the Babylonians, so they would either forget or blend their faith with that of their new surroundings. They were even fed directly from the King, so they would come to see that they depended on him, not God, for their daily bread. It was death by assimilation.
I see the same thing happening in the church today. We are bombarded with the demands to be “relevant” that we reduce the life-saving power of the gospel to moral insights and tips to better living. Our faith gets blended, by default or design, with our pluralistic, politically correct culture until we forget the one name that has been given to us by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12). We have become so successful and so self-sufficient that we rarely depend on God for our daily bread – let alone for success in mission and evangelism (how many church growth models begin with broken, heartfelt supplication before the throne of God?).
I’m praying that we can catch a glimpse of Daniel’s undefiled spirit in the church today – casting off the worldliness that clings to us like filthy rags, and taking up the new life given to us in Christ Jesus our Lord. Only that kind of distinctive, Spirit-led life is what will draw others to know and love the Lord.
May God be glorified as I proclaim His Word tomorrow!