Imagination is not globally more important than knowledge. It is the missing component for motivation. This reliance on knowledge that you promote has lead to a bunch of one-talent servants.
Matthew 25:24-25 He also who had received the one talent came forward, saying, 'Master, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you scattered no seed, 25 so I was afraid, and I went and hid your talent in the ground. Here you have what is yours.'
This servant had some knowledge of his master, but he missed some key things. He was content in the knowledge that he already possessed. It takes a sparking of the imagination to get the one-talent servant to consider that there is more than what he has already been told.
Charlie is asking how to motivate a person who doesn't see life as it...as it truly is. These facts that you gloss over need to be fleshed out and described in terms that communicate the vibrancy and compelling nature of life with Christ. This is where the imagination comes into play - in the apprehension of spiritual truth -not the fanciful creation of truth.
We need to capture their imagination with spiritual life. We have tried to capture their minds, but...said "to hell with their imaginations." Now are we upset that people are following their condemned and polluted imaginations?
The mind cannot carry the load on its own. Yes. The imagination needs to be informed by knowledge that comes from Scripture. But it is in response to the imagination that a person makes their decisions. How often have we seen this in foolish decisions? It is just as true in wise decisions.
We make life-shaping decisions based on more than merely the facts on hand. We make such decisions according to what we want life to become-according to what we desire--according to how we imagine life could be. This is true of the decision to follow Christ at any point in our lives.
It is also true of the decision to go off and build your own tower.
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