Pages

Monday, 11 November 2013

THE DOSE MATTERS

Having tension headache? Work pressure and too much time spent glued to the screen? Well, there’s nothing to fear. 

Just pop two tablets of PANADOL or TYLENOL. But do we know that, in excess, such a popular drug can be toxic to the liver and may even kill?

Paracetamol (acetaminophen) is a popular OTC medicine for fever, headaches, period pain, minor aches and pain. Also known as Panadol, Tylenol which are its proprietary (brand) names.

Recently its maximum daily adult dosage has been reduced from 8 tabs (4000mg) to 6 tabs (3000mg) because of the danger of toxicity. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/231915.php

Accidental overdose can happen as many flu drugs also contain Paracetamol as an ingredient. So if one takes Paracetamol for pain and fever and also a flu drug (with Paracetamol), overdose may occur.

The dose matters so much when we take medicine. Even something good, like Paracetamol, may be dangerous when taken in excess.



                                                                    





An analogy exists in the spiritual realm. Grace is something good but when it is being overemphasised, it may be dangerous for our spiritual well-being.

Being sinners, we all need grace. In fact, lots of grace. No right thinking believer questions the need for gracebefore or after conversion. 

And what's positive about a teaching which emphasises grace is that it has welcomed with open arms many sinners into church. These people would often be alienated and judged as “spiritual misfits” by a legalistic church.

But harbouring an image of God that is agreeable and attractive—that He is always gracious, loving, mercifulhas its dangers. http://bit.ly/1fN2LyX

A wrong picture of God may have deadly consequences. Thinking erroneously that He is always meek and mild may prove disastrous when we’re confronted by God the judge at the end of our life journey or when Christ returns (Hebrews 9:27, 1 Peter 4:7, 17).

Overemphasis on grace leads to the following assumptions.  Do check out for yourselves whether the following premises in red are valid:

  • Once we are saved, we will remain saved (OSAS, once saved always saved, eternal security). http://bit.ly/GM5Srz




  • There is no need to confess sin as we merely need to rest in the imputed righteousness of Christ.  http://bit.ly/19yBzuD


  • We can afford to banish sin consciousness from our lives as the sin issue is a    thing of the past, being settled once and for all when we believed in Jesus. http://bit.ly/GDv4QL



"Faith is good only when it engages truth; when it is made to rest upon falsehood it can and often does lead to eternal tragedy."  – A. W. Tozer

“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.” – Soren Kierkegaard, philosopher

RELATED POSTS

GRACE: CAN WE HAVE TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING?

GOING OVERBOARD ON GRACE


EXPOSING THE ERROR OF HYPERGRACE



No comments:

Post a Comment