Dallas Willard on the Mental Life
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. 324.
Now we need to understand that what simply occupies our mind very
largely governs what we do. It sets the emotional tone out of which our
actions flow, and it projects the possible courses of action available
to us. Also the mind, though of little power on its own, is the place
of our widest and most basic freedom. This is true in both a direct and
an indirect sense. Of all the things we do, we have more freedom with
respect to what we will think of, where we will place our mind, than
anything else. And the freedom of thinking is a direct order to
exercise it. We simply turn our mind to whatever it is we choose to
think of. The deepest revelation of our character is what we choose to
dwell on in thought, what constantly occupies our mind, as well as
what we can or cannot even think of.
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