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Good morning, my friend. I hope you're doing well.
It's Dr. Lee Warren here with another episode of Tuesdays with Tata.
I'm so excited for this talk.
We had an incredible talk about the importance of being ready, preparing your mind for what's
coming. Tata's got some great words for us.
And I just want to give you this one disclaimer.
I quoted what I thought was St. Francis of Assisi. Actually Lisa came into the rescue.
I thought it was R.C. Sproul or Spurgeon that said, he said, always preach the gospel
and if necessary, use words.
This old famous quote. I thought it was Sproul or Spurgeon.
It turns out to be attributed to St. Francis of Assisi.
But after we recorded this, we discovered that that quote may actually not have been said by anybody.
It may just be urban legend. So if I misquoted something that's not really real,
I'm sorry about that.
Maybe it was St. Francis of Assisi or maybe not. But nevertheless, it's a good quote.
You'll hear it in the context of the episode.
We all have colds. There's some coughing. There's some sneezing.
There's some background noise. We did our best, but this episode is worth it.
So endeavor to persevere through it.
We have a great talk about being ready, getting your mind ready for the things that are to come.
Friend, there's some big stuff happening in the world and you need to be ready for the traumas and tragedies
and massive things, the cultural shifts, the massive things that are coming.
And we can be ready to change our minds and change our lives, and there's good news.
But before we get to Tuesdays with Tata, I just have one question for you.
Hey, are you ready to change your life? If the answer is yes, there's only one rule.
You have to change your mind first.
And my friend, there's a place for the neuroscience of how your mind works, smashes together with faith,
and everything starts to make sense. Are you ready to change your life?
Well, this is the place, Self-Brain Surgery School.
I'm Dr. Lee Warren, and this is where we go deep into how we're wired, take control of our thinking, and find real hope.
This is where we learn to become healthier, feel better, and be happier.
This is where we leave the past behind and transform our minds.
This is where we start today. Are you ready?
This is your podcast. This is your place. This is your time, my friend.
Let's get after it.
Music.
Well friend, we're back we're here on the riverside on a Sunday afternoon We had the first snowfall of the year didn't we talk we did it was kind of crazy,
A lot of it's gone from the driveway of the sidewalk already. That's right. That's kind of that's encouraging,
We got the tractor out this morning and did the whole snow shoveling thing and then it warmed up and melt it off all by itself,
We kind of made an operation out of it. We did We put in a lot of energy.
Yeah, we did.
Well, I guess if it's Sunday afternoon, that can only mean one thing.
It's Tuesdays with Tata.
Yes, thank you. You're ready to get after it. Yes, I am. I apologize, my voice is not back.
Lisa and I have had some sort of horrible virus and somehow Tata managed to be spared from it.
Yeah, I'm blessed and highly favored.
We had the stomach issues prior to that, but so we took turns with that, I think.
It's been a few months of somebody being sick almost all the time in our house,
but we're getting through it. It's gonna be okay.
So apologize for any creakiness in my voice. Maybe a sneeze here and there.
We'll edit that out and we'll go from there.
So what are we gonna talk about today, Tata? 1 Peter 1.13. 1 Peter 1.13.
And which is a very, very thought-provoking verse, but in the King James Version,
It says, gird up your loins of your mind.
Gird up the loins of your mind, that's right.
And apparently, I said out loud, what does that mean?
I've always wondered what that meant. I had some vague knowledge of it and some vague understanding of it.
And then Lisa sent me a screenshot of the Hebrew definition of the word. It's girdle.
Yeah. I mean, it's a gird, a gird up, and an interesting part of it is,
and understanding this, is that when you're, when you have the girdle tightened,
that means you're ready. Yeah.
You're ready to serve or you're ready for action.
But if it's loose or you're resting or you're lazy. Yeah.
So one of the things that Peter was stressing here is don't let your, don't be lazy or don't be at rest.
That's right. That's right. I brought it to your attention because I love the, I love the
idea that it's not just Paul.
Jesus that are telling us about being ready with our minds and preparing our
minds for action, but Peter gets in on the action as well, and he says this
this curious phrase about girding up the loins of your mind. I thought that was
an interesting play on the metaphor of preparing yourself. So there's an interesting passage back in 1 Kings 1846, because as you said when we
talked about this the other day, that phrase, gird up your loins, shows,
throughout the Bible, and almost comedically in 1 Kings 18, 46.
When Elijah has to run to go outrun the prophet to get to Jezreel, he girds up his loin. In the days back when you had
the flowing robes, you couldn't really run. And so if you wanted to run, you had to gather your robes up and tuck,
everything in and kind of tighten it up.
That's right. It was unlawful to expose your legs.
That's right. So he had to prepare himself for action by by getting his clothes, and he had to defeat his clothing,
so he wouldn't be tripping and falling and hindering himself, so.
And then the same phrase appears in Job, in Job 38, when God says to Job,
gird up your loins, and I will question you.
That's right, that's always been kind of daunting to me.
Job's been questioning God, and then God says, gird up your loins like a man.
And I will question you, and you will answer me. So again, this metaphor,
getting yourself ready for something.
So what's the context here that Peter's giving us in the passage here?
Well, what I'm looking at is the English Standard Version, and the translation of it fits in my mind.
And this translation, it says, therefore, and the therefore is therefore
because of all the things that he's already said.
Amazing how often we come back to that, isn't it? That's right.
What's that therefore, therefore?
And this is ESV, therefore preparing your minds for action.
Prepare your minds for action. And being sober-minded, set your hope fully,
on the grace that has been brought to you,
the grace that will be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ.
And that's what the whole point that Peter's making here is that be ready.
Because it's going to happen.
And it's going to happen soon.
That's right. And the world will end and judgment will begin.
And so the whole point that Peter is making here is be mindful of what's happening and
understand what's happening. Be sober-minded. Be sincere about it.
That's right. Be prepared. Be concerned about it. Be prepared and be ready to attack, to be ready for that day,
whatever that day comes.
My dad is a gifted public speaker, Tata. And when I was a little boy, he would always teach
me and my brother how to give a talk, like if he wanted to give a devotional at church
or if he wanted to preach or if he wanted to give just a convincing talk at school or,
in our business, he wanted us to know how to do that.
One of the principles that my dad taught me about giving a speech is that there's three,
elements. You tell them what you're going to tell them. That's right.
And then you tell them, and then you tell them what you told them.
That's right. And I find it interesting here, Peter, in his little book here, Five Chapters in 1 Peter,
In 1 Peter 1, he says, gird up the loins of your mind,
get your mind ready, be alert and be sober and be ready.
Because we're in a day, he was saying, we're in a day when there's a lot of spiritual warfare
and things happening.
And I think if Peter were here today, he would tell us the same thing.
Absolutely. We're in a time when it's time to get after it.
It's not time to be letting your mind wander. It's time to be preparing your mind.
And that principle that my dad taught me of telling them what you're gonna tell them
and then wrapping it up by telling them what you told them, he comes back around to it in 1 Peter 5,
1 Peter 3 at the end, he says, in the middle.
Rather, he says, "'Even if you should suffer for what is right, "'you're blessed.
"'Do not fear their threats. "'Do not be frightened, "'but in your hearts revere Christ as Lord.
"'Always be prepared to give an answer "'to everyone who asks you to give the reason
"'for the hope that you have.'",
He's saying, get your mind ready for what you're gonna do when you have an opportunity
to share with someone why you have this hope.
Why do you have the hope? And then so he tells us at the start,
He tells us in the middle and he gets down to 1 Peter 5 and he says the same thing, be alert.
This is 1 Peter 5, 8, be alert.
And of sober mind, your enemy, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion,
looking for someone to devour.
Resist him, standing firm in the faith because you know that the family of believers
throughout the world is undergoing the same kind of suffering.
As you mentioned that verse last week.
So here he is, Peter's giving us the principles that my dad taught me 2,000 years later. That's right.
Tell them what you're gonna tell them. That's right. And then tell them what you told them.
And friend, there must be a reason that the Apostle Peter, the rock that Jesus said,
we're gonna build this church on, there must be a reason that he wants you to know,
that you need to get your mind ready.
Because what's your friend Dr. Warren always say?
You can't change your life until you change your mind, right?
That's right, yes. And you have to do it today.
But the other thing is that one of the things that we have a tendency to do is we get lazy and we rest. And when we do that, we lower our guard.
But Satan is at work all the time. And he appears when you're not looking for him.
He appears when I'm praying.
And interrupts the prayer. And sometimes I forget my place. That's right.
But because he's not willing that any of us would worship God,
or be at peace because we have salvation in Jesus' name.
The whole point there is we have to be vigilant, on guard.
So we have to, when we're in that kind of position And in that kind of posture, we're always on alert. Yeah.
And we're thinking. And the only way that I know how to do that is get in the Word. Yeah.
Stay in the Word. That's right. Reinforce yourself in the Word.
Friends, if you haven't read 1 Peter or any of the writings of 1 Peter or 2 Peter,
I encourage you to do that.
Every time I read it, I see something that I didn't see before. That's right.
But the thing that I keep coming back to is being ready. That's right.
Because what does that say when you're ready? When you're ready to go, you have peace,
and you have a quiet spirit.
Yeah. You're not anxious.
You're not overwhelmed by trials and tribulations that come your way, the testing that comes your way,
and the sorrow and the pain that you go through.
That's right. that momentarily you'll be taken off your feet,
but then you get back up.
That's right, you have a treatment plan. That's right. You got a plan, you're ready to implement it.
You've drilled it and prepped it, and you know where you're gonna fall,
and when the hard things come, you know what promises you need.
You know, this idea of guarding your mind, Lisa and I were having a conversation the other day,
Tata, and it's been years, really, since I've mostly listened to Christian and worship music.
Like I made a decision a long time ago that I wanted to fill my, that for me,
music is a gateway into my mind and I use it to fill my heart up with things
that I can rely on and call back to mind.
Worship is one of those ways that I do that, as Tommy Walker would say.
But we were talking about an old song, I heard it on the radio or on the background
of a television show we were watching, this old song, You Light Up My Life.
Yeah. Remember that song? Yes. And all the lyrics were there from my childhood when I heard that song, hadn't heard it in,
probably 30 years.
And I'm singing along with the song and it's a catchy tune, it's a great old song.
And one of the lines is, it can't be wrong when it feels so right.
Yeah.
And I'm singing along. And then I thought, wait, time out.
I just said in my mouth that it can't be wrong if it feels right, and that's not true. That's right.
And so the point is this, not that there's anything wrong with listening to secular music,
but this goes right in line with what Peter's telling us. Like, be careful what you put in
your mind because you'll preach it to yourself as if it's true. And here I was, me, Lee Warren,
the mind guy, right? I'm singing out loud, it can't be wrong if it feels so right. And that's
That's false doctrine.
I mean, it's not a doctrine, but you see what I'm saying? It's so easy to let some idea slip into your mind from a book or a song or a friend or
a television show or even sometimes another Christian, like we've talked about before,
when you go through something hard, people try to comfort you.
Some of the things that they say are really bad theology.
That's right.
Like God must have needed another angel or something like that.
You have to guard your mind is the point.
I'm not telling you to throw out all your CDs or if anybody even has CDs anymore.
I'm just saying, be careful what you let into your mind. That's what Peter's getting at here. That's correct.
And it's so easy to let it in, just like the event that you described.
That had to be easy, but you were aware and alert enough in your own thinking
to realize that's not right. That's right.
And there's so many times that we think about, just as you said, some of the people
that have said things to us that they thought were comforting.
But the greatest comfort I ever, that I had, was when the guy came to see me that didn't say much.
I don't, he didn't say, I remember some of the things that he said to me, but I don't recall what he,
I don't recall him giving me platitudes.
Yeah, the people who show up and shut up, as John said. Yes, that's right.
But the whole point is that you can't, you can't be alert, you can't be sober
unless you're in the word, and that you understand, and that's another thing that you have to do, in my mind,
is that when you've talked to God, ask God to talk to you and help you understand.
That's right. And he will. Yeah. It will come to you. It may not come to you at the exact moment,
but it will come to you when you need it. That's right.
And so that's like putting on armor, the armor that the Apostle Paul was talking about. That's right.
Paul even talks about gird your loins with the truth, like gird yourself up.
That's right, that's right. You prepare yourself.
And this is the thing that we have a tendency to forget, that we're in a battle.
We're in a battle for our soul. God wants us home, and Satan wants us to bow down to him.
That's right.
So that's a choice that you have to make. But the only way you can do that and be fully prepared
is you have to walk with God. That's right.
And you have to ask them to help you. You have to ask for the Holy Spirit to help you,
and ask for Jesus to help you.
See, Jesus did some of the things that for us that it was impossible to do for us.
He loved us and he died for us.
That's right. No, I can't die for you and you can't die for me. That's right.
And have any hope of eternal life. That's right.
This battle metaphor, Ephesians 6, when Paul talks about the full armor of God,
again in the King James, that phrase shows up where he says in verse 14,
"'Stand therefore, having your loins girt about you "'with truth.'",
So he's saying, girt up your loins with truth,
like put things in your mind that are true.
Protect your mind from things that are not true because those things will crumble,
and won't hold you up when the world starts to crumble around you,
when your faith is tested.
You have to have truth, and you have to have things that are right,
as Paul says again in Philippians 4.
This concept is important, and that's why Peter brings it to us three times in five chapters.
Gird up the loins of your mind. Be alert, be vigilant, be sober-minded,
be careful what you think about.
It's important. The things that you think about become the ways that your life plays out. That's right.
And if you have peace with yourself and you have peace with God,
then you will have the kind of peace that no one can understand.
The peace that surpasses all knowledge. That's right.
But the main thing in that whole equation is having peace with God. That's right.
Now, does that mean that we are not sinners? No.
No. Does it mean that we still sin? No.
Will not be completed until we face Him. That's right. And that's why we've talked
about this before, but the Lamb's Book of Life, I pray that's where my name is.
Yep. I want my name in the book. Yep. Not in the books. You know it is, you definitely want to know that.
And so the point, and we have to keep driving at this point because it's so
important, is we have to be prepared mentally.
And I know, I know all the questions.
I've said this before, but one of the things that I said out loud, not in my house,
but it can be in your house. And the question is, what have you done to prepare yourself for battle?
That's right.
Because the battle, you can't prepare me for the battle that I'm in.
That's right. Neither can I prepare you. That's right. But what will happen though is people are watching us.
That's right.
And actions speak louder than words. Yes, they do. Someone said a long time ago,
I know what you're saying, but I cannot hear you.
Yeah. I'm watching you. Yeah. And where we see that, evidence of that is with children.
That's right. Little children.
Was it Spurgeon or Sproul maybe that said, always preach the gospel and if necessary use words.
Well, supposedly that was, well, the name just flew out of my head.
It was not one of those guys. I don't know if it was Spurgeon or not,
but who originally said it.
But anyway, and that speaks volumes in itself.
And then what that reflects is being prepared. That's right.
And being ready. But how you live your life. And I was way off, I just Googled it.
It's not Spurgeon, and it's not Sproul, it's St. Francis of Assisi.
Right, yeah, that's who I started, that's who I was gonna say.
I was way off, not even in the right century.
He says, preach the gospel at all times, and if necessary, use words.
That's right, yeah. Because we're judged on how we live.
That's right. And if we live according to the way that God intends for us to live and the encouragement that we have
is again in 1 Peter 1.13,
set your hope fully on the grace.
That's right.
That will be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ. That's right.
Amazing, amazing to be in that posture. That's right.
Well, I appreciate you taking this, this is one of those oddball assignments that I gave you.
I remember last year I said, let's talk about the.
What all were the ones that I asked you to bring? The speckled bird.
Yeah, the great speckled bird. And the green grapes. We talked about the sour grapes and the father,
the fathers eat sour grapes and the children's teeth are set on edge.
And then we talked about that strange phrase, saved to the uttermost.
And so those are three wonderful Tuesdays with Tata episodes where I gave Tata an obscure scripture reference,
and he had a whole sermon to work out of it.
And this is another one. I did it because Peter doesn't get the same credit
in the self-brain surgery theology world that I've made up.
As Paul does, I talk about Paul all the time because Paul gives us so many places
where he just drills into the importance of mindset in just living this life
and dealing with these hard things that we have to face and bearing witness to it.
But Peter, he comes in strong. Well, he even mentioned, Peter even references the Apostle Paul.
That's right. The same, he credits him with giving the same encouragement, but he also said,
many times he's hard to understand.
Well, maybe that was his way of getting back because Paul withstood him to his face. That's right.
And that's, as I think about this, I know that he was an apostle.
I know he was with Jesus.
And we know the story. We know that he denied him, but we know that Jesus welcomed him back.
Yep. Jesus said, you're a keeper. That's right. And I'm gonna use you in my service. That's right.
And one of the things that always struck me about Peter was when Jesus said to him that Satan had requested you.
Yeah. Sift him like wheat. But I have prayed for you when you come back.
That's right.
Pray for your brothers. That's right. That's right.
We did a Tuesdays with Tata about that verse too. Yeah. We did one on sifted like wheat now that I think about it.
I'll try to find those and put them in the show notes for you, friend.
But you know, Tata, if we're gonna gird up our loins,
the loins of our mind to prepare for this fight, this battle and this opportunity we may have to share our faith with someone and to withstand
the wiles of the devil. When do we start?
Let's start today.
Music.
Hey, thanks for listening. The Dr. Lee Warren Podcast is brought to you
by my brand new book, Hope is the First Dose.
It's a treatment plan for recovering from trauma, tragedy, and other massive things.
It's available everywhere books are sold, and I narrated the audio books.
Hey, the theme music for the show is Get Up by my friend Tommy Walker,
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They are supplying worship resources for worshipers all over the world to worship the most high God.
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If you need prayer, go to the prayer wall at WLeeWarrenMD.com slash prayer,
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and go to my website and sign up for the newsletter, Self Brain Surgery, every Sunday since 2014,
helping people in all 50 states and 60 plus countries around the world.
I'm Dr. Lee Warren, and I'll talk to you soon. Remember, friend, you can't change your life,
until you change your mind, And the good news is you can start today.
Music.
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