I would say that i’m a logical person. Some say they see the glass half full other the glass half empty but there are those of us who would say, “well technically both are equally true”. We’re sometimes labeled realist, but i prefer the label: Biblical.
In the Bible what you’ll find is an infinite and unconditionally all-sovereign God. He’s the creator and He calls the shots. He knows the end from the beginning and He makes no bones about it. This for me defines every aspect of my thinking. If it wasn’t for this reality i don’t believe it would be possible to worship God with all my mind.
I’ve heard it said and more frequently hinted at that to believe or have faith in God we must reject what is logical—this is a lie.
God doesn’t defy logic, He infinitely exceeds it, you can’t reject logic to receive God.
Just to be clear, what i’m saying is that logic and truth go hand in hand. You cant have one without the other. I make this claim by defining truth as Jesus Christ. In other words the God (the person and His nature and work) revealed in the Bible is the very definition of truth—it is the standard by which we discern what is good and evil, what is truth and what is a lie. What is true is logical and what is logical is true. This isn’t to say that truth is logic, they are the same thing but they describe one another. That being said, truth can be beyond our comprehension and thereby not appear to us as logical.
When things happen to us that don’t seem logical (i.e. someone we love dies or we’re sold into slavery for no apparent reason), that doesn’t mean they aren’t, it just means we don’t fully understand God’s logic or God’s purpose. This is not because God defies logic or contradicts logic, rather He infinitely exceeds it. Do you see the difference? If something happens and i don’t understand the purpose, i can still trust that God’s the good author, who knows the end from the beginning and i can and should do so logically for this very reason.
Now if things happen that in fact do contradict our logic, this only means our logic isn’t logic at all, it’s really foolish ignorance and we’re on the slippery slope of doubt and almost there. The remedy for such foolishness is to repent and trust on Christ our treasure. If you are on this slippery slope, and you find your “logic” being defied by God, there is a recorded prayer from the Bible that you should pray, “I believe, help my unbelief!”. Amen.