
Captivated and Captured [2Cor 10:3-5]
Recently, I shared how God allows, and at times, even prompts us to become emptied of ourselves so that He may fill us up with His Spirit. The apostle Paul, in revealing how God accomplishes this, wants us to understand how we each play a part in this process. Personally, we are to choose to take captive all
of our thoughts and subdue them under Christ’s sovereign control. This is a choice; and when we choose not to, we prevent this emptying of ourselves so that God can fill us up. It is in our allowing ungodly thoughts to subdue our minds, that we are choosing to allow ourselves to be taken captive by them.
The great Puritan preacher and author, Matthew Henry, wrote this about Christ:
He was to be a Deliverer. Christ lets us know that He has conquered Satan. He destroyed him that had the power of death and his works, and provided for us grace sufficient to enable us to shake off the yoke of sin…
Now, let’s consider what Paul says about being captured by our thoughts or choosing to capture them.
For though we walk in the flesh, we do not war according to the flesh, for the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh, but divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses. We are destroying [tearing down] speculations and every lofty thing [fortress; stronghold] raised up against the knowledge of God. We are taking every thought captive [military term – taking prisoner; gaining control over; subduing] to the obedience of Christ. [2Cor 10:3-5]
In allowing God’s Word to become both our source of authority and of power, we become the aggressor by tearing down any speculations and lofty oppositions that seek to capture and consume our thoughts. Paul makes it very clear that we have only two options in this battle – take captive our thoughts OR be taken captive by them! To the obedience of Christ means – to capture, to submit, to surrender. Taking captive means - to captivate, to subdue, to overpower. Here’s another way to sum it all up -- When we allow Christ to capture and then captivate our thoughts, we are choosing to subdue them under His full submission.
The Greek word for ‘fortress’ is used twice in this passage. Fortress is a word that David chose to use many times in the Psalms when describing who God is and who He wants to be in our lives. In Ps 18:1-2, David uses this word in how he personally describes “his” Great God.
I love You, O Lord, my Strength. The Lord is my Rock and my Fortress and my Deliverer, my God, my Rock, in whom I take refuge – my Shield and the horn of my Salvation, my Stronghold.
What will you personally choose this day? What choice will you make when it comes to the thoughts that you will allow to camp out in your mind? Will you allow “God’s” thoughts to become and to remain your thoughts? Will you do all that you can in order to prevent ungodly thoughts from camping out in your mind and taking over those thoughts that the God of Scripture wants you to have and to dwell on? Will you personally choose to allow The Lord to be “your” Rock and your Fortress? Today and in the days that follow, let’s be very careful with what (and who) we allow to captivate our thoughts and to capture our minds.
A Shepherd's Muse





