Have you ever had the experience that something caught your attention, and then for days afterwards you see the same thing showing up practically everywhere you turn?  And the strange thing is that, before that item caught your original attention, you rarely noticed it anywhere.  Perhaps you bought a car, and then you begin to notice how many of that model car are on the roads today.  Or maybe you bought some new piece of clothing, and then you notice a similar item on many people at church or at work.  

 

This is known as the Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon.  It is simply a recognition that our brains have a tendency to try to find patterns in the massive amounts of sensory data that we encounter each day.  When something catches our attention, then our brain raises that observation to a higher priority in its pattern recognition algorithm.  It is therefore not surprising at all that our brain begins to find matches to this new observation.

 

Well, I am experiencing a similar phenomenon in my quiet times lately.  Upon recently noticing that several biblical principles are coupled together in Scripture, I am now seeing other coupled principles in MANY places and themes throughout the Bible.  

 

Why does God include coupled principles in the Bible?  Because He loves us, and wants to provide these “spiritual guardrails” that keep us on the road, and in balance.  They are balancing principles that keep us from developing an unhealthy focus on one side or the other.  Balancing principles are both true – but only when our perspective includes both.  They can lead to error if we focus on only one.

 

Here are a few of my observations:

 

Grace and obedience:

 

Strength and love:

 

“Nothing good” and “wonderfully made”:

 

“Desperately sick” and “image of God”:

 

“Sinful” and “righteous”:

 

“We can’t have God’s thoughts” and “we have the mind of Christ”:

 

Balancing principles are both true – but only when our perspective includes both.  They can lead to error if we focus on only one.

 

It is becoming more and more apparent to me that God wants us to feast on all of His wonderful banquet of wisdom in the Bible, and not limit ourselves to the one portion of the feast (such as just the appetizers, or meats, or desserts, etc.) – that is, we must search out the Scriptures (“the whole counsel of God”) to ensure that we understand the mind of God in matters.  

 

Today, I encourage you to “Reflect on This.”