Grantley Morris
Living a holy life is simply letting Christ, who now lives inside
you, express himself through your actions. It’s letting run wild the divine
genes (the new nature) you inherited when you were born again into God’s family.
Living a Godly life is not about exercising will power, but reveling in God’s
love, living the supernatural; doing all manner of things that were previously
impossible for you.
Being free from enslaving and degrading habits is a wonderfully fulfilling
and liberating way to live, but don’t imagine it is the way to gain God’s
approval. You won that approval the moment you trusted Jesus for your
forgiveness. You can’t get any more forgiven, and any more the object of divine
favor than the moment you first trusted Jesus to do it all for you – when you
had nothing but sin to offer your Lord.
Natural men suppose that by cutting sin out of their lives they could reach a
holy God. It could never work. Lifetime perfection is God’s minimum standard. We
cannot even start with a clean sheet, because none of us can remove our past
failures. Because of Jesus, however, followers of Christ have already reached
God. They can live a holy life because God lives within them.
Temptation
Do you think Jesus Christ was tempted to lust? Was Christ tempted to punch
someone, to hold a grudge, to be lazy, to swear, to get drunk? The answer is
yes, Jesus suffered temptation (Matthew 4; Hebrews 2:17; 4:15; 5:8-9).
Temptation occurs when an evil intelligence violates your mind, invading your
inner person with its filth. The temptation could be anything that is not in
your highest interest. It might be to hate yourself, to over-indulge, to doubt,
to smoke, to get drunk, to take drugs, to hold a grudge; to commit fornication, the list is endless. It is something that, in the short term,
seems right or desirable but in the long term ends up robbing and hurting you.
For brevity, I call the source of temptation our own lust (i.e. the
adversary, the devil, satan, the deceiver, the faker, the crafty serpent, evil,
etc.):
To understand the nature of spiritual rape, let’s briefly consider physical
rape. A virtuous woman could be forcibly raped in a manner that induces
pleasurable physical sensations within her. Her mind would be repulsed, she
would hate what is taking place, but her body is designed to respond to certain
stimuli by sending pleasure signals to the brain. This physiological fact has
nothing to do with her purity or morality. It simply means she is normal. And
yet, for years afterwards her sensitive conscience could be tormented with false
pangs of guilt, wrongly imagining she must have the morality of a harlot to have
had her feelings of horror tinged with the slightest pleasure.
As she remembers her response, she could so despise herself as to become
convinced that her husband must now secretly loathe her, even though he sees his
darling as being as pure and as faithful to him as ever. Despite all her
husband’s loving assurances and tenderness, this poor woman could so focus on
that awful event that she continues to feel immoral, unloved and unwanted.
Overwhelmed by that illusion, she could start telling herself that she has so
ruined her life that she could not be more immoral if she became a prostitute.
Tragically, after years of such thinking, convinced she is doing her husband
a favor, she could leave the man she thinks can no longer love her. Finding no
other means of support and imagining she has no purity to preserve, this highly
moral woman could actually end up the harlot she mistakenly saw herself as
being. Sadly, such a route to promiscuity is not uncommon for sexual abuse
victims, harassed by false feelings of guilt.
When Jesus was being tempted, the purest man ever to walk this planet was
being spiritually raped. The Holy Lord was subjected to the inner urge to sin; a
craving to do wrong. His mind and spirit were repeatedly and shamefully
violated. You know he emerged from the horrific experience with his purity
intact.
So do not despise yourself when evil thoughts come to you, or you find
yourself longing to do wrong. It simply means that, like God’s holy Son, and all
his saints, you have been spiritually molested. And like the most despicable
child molester, the adversary tries to make his innocent victim feel guilty for his
crime. It’s only if you cease trying to resist those evil thoughts and urges,
that the harassment could touch your purity. And even if you totally gave in,
you would have no rational basis for continuing to imagine you are impure,
because the instant you return to your Savior with genuine regret, you are again
spotless in the eyes of God.
Does the crafty serpent often appear and speak to you face to face? He’s far too cunning.
He speaks in your mind, pretending to be your own thoughts. Disown those
thoughts. Refuse to cave in to false guilt.
Imagine how hard it was to tempt Jesus. The adversary had to try to persuade the Son
of God to act totally out of character. And yet it is exactly the same when the
adversary tempts you. He tries to inflict you with a desire to do something
utterly contrary to your nature. From the moment you were born again, Christ
took up residence inside you. You gained his goodness, his holy character, his
purity of motives, his inexhaustible love. You might have committed a certain
sin hundreds of times a year since childhood, and continued for the many years
you have been born again. Nevertheless, every time you commit that sin, you are
acting out of character. The crafty serpent will muster all his brainwashing skills to try
fooling you into thinking that sinning is your real nature. You will be like a
rape victim plagued by a wrong self image. This is more than just unpleasant;
keep believing that false self image, and you will end up acting as if it were
true.
Facing temptation is engaging in spiritual combat in which victory depends on
whether we can trust God to love us enough to be our personal bodyguard. It
would be highly dangerous to go into battle, tragically handicapped by imagining
you are one of God’s less loved children. Before engaging the enemy you need the
assurance that God’s love for you is so intense that he is fiercely devoted to
protecting you. You need to know you are one of God’s favorites, and that he has
made you so pure that he is proud of you.
How do we Beat Temptation?
James 4:7, "Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will
flee from you."
The answer is to let Jesus rule in your life. Let God control your life.
At first thought, this seems so oppressively restrictive that it’s
frightening. And we’re scared we’ll be told to go somewhere awful and do
something embarrassing. In reality, for you to fear God’s commands is as
unnatural as a much loved baby fearing its mother’s breast; as a shivering child
fearing sunshine; as someone sick fearing health. To obey God is to say good-bye
to mistakes and regret and open the door to excitement and achievement.
No one understands you like your Maker. No one knows your future like your
Father in Heaven. No one has your best interest at heart like the One who shed his blood for
you. No one can bring you happiness like the Inventor of sex and sunsets, sight
and sound, touch and taste, life and beauty. He alone offers heaven.
When you really analyze it, nothing could be more exciting, fulfilling and
rewarding than God’s desires for you. Fearing God’s will is as irrational as
worrying about what the world’s best mechanic might do to your car, and as
stupid as insisting on defusing a bomb for fear that experts will not do it
properly. The Almighty, your Creator and Savior, is selflessly devoted to
maximizing your happiness. Moreover he has infinite knowledge. When God asks you
to do something, he is granting you the unique privilege of tapping into the
greatest Mind in the universe. You have the opportunity to do something
infinitely smart. It could add a whole new dimension to your life.
Disregard your Maker’s right to tell you what to do. He merely gave you life
and everything you’ve ever touched. He holds your atoms together and gave you
the brain cells you think with. Forget that Christ purchased your allegiance by
trading his life for yours, becoming the devil’s plaything on the cross so that
evil couldn’t touch you. And overlook the power of God to determine your eternal
destiny. Consider merely God’s infinite knowledge, perfect goodness, and
self-sacrificing devotion to your highest good. That alone is enough to force
the conclusion that disregarding God’s slightest suggestion is the height of
stupidity.
Yet another exhilarating thing about God’s will for you is that it is not
only perfected by infinite love, it is backed by infinite power. It is not only
achievable, it is unstoppable. For as long as you let Jesus rule your life,
nothing can thwart it. Do you believe God is all-powerful? Then you believe he
could over-ride your every weakness. He could ask nothing of you that he
couldn’t do through you. And if he has a speck of love, or any respect for his
reputation, he’s not going to command, and then abandon you to your own
resources. It’s exciting when God asks the impossible of you. A miracle is
around the corner!
Since God, in his love, longs to see you reach your highest potential, his
desires for you will stretch you to the limit. But no matter how the adversary tries to
distort that thrilling truth into something scary, there is always something
more frightening than doing God’s will – not doing God’s will. The mere fact
that we could fear God’s beautiful will is clear proof that God has a spiritual
enemy who carpet bombs our minds with malicious untruths. Nothing could be
wiser, or better, than obeying the God who has a sacrificial commitment to
giving you the very best.
God telling you to do something is the Almighty Lord expressing his desire
for you to enjoy his best. And obedience is simply receiving that love,
delighting and rejoicing in the beauty, perfection and security of God’s
yearnings for your welfare. We only disobey when we secretly believe we are
smarter than God, that his love for us is inferior, or that he is so weak that
our inadequacies could nullify his power. Obedience is love made real.
Submission
Note that submission to God is letting God be God – allowing Jesus to assume
his rightful place in your life. The emphasis is not on you trying to obey, but
on Jesus ruling. It is letting him do the work. It is avoiding taking upon
ourselves responsibilities that don’t belong to us. The crafty serpent would love to
distort this into a dreary put down, but it is actually a glorious relief. We’re
free to enjoy life as God’s children and leave all the hard work to Jesus. We
don’t have to prove ourselves to God, Jesus has already done it. We don’t have
to defeat sin, Jesus has already done it.
Submitting to God must never be thought of as obeying a set of rules. That’s
dull and cold. And God is neither. Following a list of dos and do nots is not
following God, but something impersonal. It brings with it the great danger of
shutting God out. Submitting to God is loving God, getting as close to him as
you can, and drawing strength and comfort and direction from him. It is driving
with God in the front seat with you, enjoying his companionship.
An important aspect of submission involves avoiding battles God has not
authorized you to fight. We are winners, provided we are not so foolish as to
engage the enemy on a front where we have no right to be. Some situations God
permits no servant of Christ to enter. Some situations he permits only certain
servants of Christ to enter. Don’t be influenced by what other ‘Christians’ can
get away with. Listen for your Commander-in-chief’s personal orders. We live in
a war zone. Various areas are subjected to differing types of attack, and some
areas are more heavily protected. The Commander-in-chief knows his troops, and
he has equipped them to engage in different types of warfare. All of us are
safe, provided we each follow his orders, staying within our designated areas.
Sin has you in its deadly sights. It’s about to pull the trigger. Jesus steps
in front of you and takes the bullet, so that you can live and enjoy life. To
try fighting sin without your Savior’s constant help is to slap Christ in the
face, then walk out of his protection into the devil’s hail of bullets. If we
face temptation alone (without Christ), sin will mow us down. But we need never
be so foolish. We need never face temptation alone.
The moment Joe Ordinary becomes a police officer he gains special power over
evil. He’s no stronger, nor smarter, yet suddenly law breakers fear him. His
extraordinary power rests entirely on him submitting to his superiors. Disregard
their orders and he would be suspended from the force. His powers would
immediately vanish, and law breakers could walk all over him. Likewise, our
power over sin hinges on our submission to God. Because your power link with God
is critical to the defeat of evil, the Enemy will do all he can to drive a wedge
between you and your Savior. He’ll do his best to make you feel that God is
harsh, thinks lowly of you, and so on.
Resist The Devil
Resisting is refusing to be cheated out of something our Father has given you.
It’s preventing a con artist from walking off with things that cost your Father
greatly. Over and over, Scripture affirms our need to take action against sin
(Proverbs 28:13, Matthew 5:6; 16:24, Mark 9:45,47, Romans 13:12,14, I
Corinthians 6:18, 2 Corinthians 6:17, Galatians 5:16, Ephesians 4:22,27; 6:11,
Colossians 3:2,5,10, Titus 2:12, Hebrew 12:1 , James 1:21, 1 Peter 2:1; 5:8-9, 1
John 2:15, etc.).
Notice, it’s not all God. We would have to cut our Bible to shreds to produce
one that says God does it all. We ourselves are expected to put in an effort.
This surprises many people, and others get it wrong, so let’s see what is
involved.
Sin kidnapped us, and our effort does nothing to pay our ransom. Only Jesus
could pay that exorbitant price. Innocence was nailed so that we, the guilty,
could go free. All we do is stand up for the rights Christ paid for in blood.
Resisting the devil is simply cooperating with God; choosing to enjoy the
freedom Christ has won for us. All the hard work has already been done for us,
and even then God is with us every step, to ensure we make it.
But there’s a spine tingling reason why God wants you to play a part. Like
the proudest father, our Lord wants you to be like him. The Almighty actually
wants to share his throne with you! This is serious, and glorious. You are being
readied for a heavenly crown, not a party hat. That’s why God has entrusted you
with a role in resisting the adversary’s attempt to trespass on your turf. You are being
trained to rule.
You’ve probably heard of people being effortlessly freed from sin’s grip,
such as heroin addicts delivered from addiction without a single withdrawal
symptom. That’s the mighty God we serve! For God to forever do everything for
us, however, would be like a teacher never trusting us to sit for a test, but
always taking the test for us. Eventually, like the devoted parent he is, our
heavenly Father wants us to begin to grow up and start exercising the authority
he has proudly entrusted to us. Maturity must never be confused with lack of
intimacy with God, however. We exercise spiritual authority only by maintaining
our power link with the Almighty, and letting his power flow through us.
The Weapon
If you’re looking for a soft religion, dump Christ right now. The Bible never
promises that our fight with sin will be painless, just that surrender would end
up being significantly more painful.
Ironically, the more prepared you are for a long, tough fight, the shorter it
usually is. Once you uncover one of the serpent’s schemes, and become determined to
hold your ground no matter how strong the pressure gets or how long it lasts,
the Enemy quickly senses he is wasting his time persisting with this tactic, and
he usually backs off soon after.
The adversary is furious at having lost you. He knows he has no hold over you, but if
he fools you into thinking he can still boss you around, you’ll make his day.
He’ll try every dirty trick he can dream up to bluff you out of all that is
rightfully yours, and to cast doubt on the extent of Christ’s stupendous
victory. To stand up to someone as persistent and conniving as an adversary, you have
to thoroughly know the rights Christ won for you, as spelt out in God’s Word.
Think of it this way. Through a life and death struggle, Jesus disarmed the
adversary and handed you a loaded weapon. Don’t expect Jesus to pull the trigger. That’s
easy. He’ll let you have the fun of scaring off the adversary. But if that diabolical
cheat can fool you into thinking the weapon Jesus gave you is unloaded, he knows
you won’t bother to use it. He then has nothing to fear, and he’ll walk all over
you.
Because you have given Jesus control of your life, you have the upper hand
whenever you meet evil. Resisting is simply realizing that your enemy is beaten,
and acting accordingly. It is refusing to let a defeated enemy steal back your
precious liberty and dignity that cost Christ everything. The almighty Son of
God let the devil nail him, so that you could walk free. Live in that freedom.
And no matter what happens, keep seeing yourself as God sees you – powerful,
holy, victorious. It is this faith that makes you a conqueror (John 5:4-5).
By ignoring the serpent's lies and letting Christ do all the hard work, we have the
firepower to put the devil on the defensive. With Jesus in us, we make demons
quake. But temptation will not vanish. Just as Jesus won every time against
temptation, through him, you too can win every time. That’s God’s
promise (Luke 10:19, Romans 8:37; 16:20, I Corinthians 10:13; 15:57, 2
Corinthians 2:14, Ephesians 2:4, 2 Thessalonians 3:3, 1 John 4:4; 5:4).
There’s not the vaguest hint that you won’t feel like giving up. Nor the
slightest suggestion that you won’t feel as helpless in the teeth of temptation
as a mouse trapped in a lion’s cage. But there’s a divine guarantee that no
matter how weak you feel, no matter how horrific your past failures, no matter
how impossible it seems, you can beat every temptation that comes your way. If
you ever meet a temptation too strong for you, the God who raises the sun each
day has suddenly become unreliable, the God who didn’t spare his darling Son for
you has suddenly lost interest in you, and the moral integrity of God has
collapsed.
The Devil is the Deceiver
The adversary is a con artist. He wants to rip you off, cheating you out of
everything that is rightfully yours. He’s the enemy of everything good, hating
you with all his filthy fury. He offers the soft, warm bomb that will explode
your life into a million pieces. He generously gives momentary relief and fun
that leads to deeper bondage and torment; the shortcut to heaven’s ecstasy that
ends in the grave.
With Christ having rendered all of evil’s weapons inoperative against the
servants of Christ, the Enemy has nothing left but psychological warfare –
illusions, false accusations, attempted brainwashing.
Suppose you were a soldier at war, and an evil enemy had the opportunity to
attempt brainwashing you. The enemy would try to wear you down by repeatedly
putting thoughts into your mind that the side you serve is wrong, or not worth
serving, or will lose the war, or is not strong enough to protect you, or has
rejected or abandoned you, or does not care about you. The enemy would also try
to isolate you, make you feel useless, and destroy all hope.
That’s the diabolical enemy you face everyday. He’s the master of the half
truth. Yes, sin is delicious – like candy laced with poison. It’s true that sin
is exhilarating – as exciting as skydiving without a parachute. And he’s right
when he hisses that God’s ways can feel annoyingly restrictive – as confining as
a parachute harness when you are plummeting to earth.
The Seducer makes giving up seem the easy option, but the real cost is
enormous. Sin is never the easy way out; the attractive alternative. Take the
bait and you’ll feel the hook. Swallow the lie and you’ll writhe in regret. The
best defense against cunning lies is to fill your mind with truth. Immerse
yourself in God’s Word.
Strategies
Feel defeated? Chances are that you could be weaker than you are, and still
have total victory over the temptations that presently defeat you. How? By
taking temptations more seriously, and drawing the line against them much
earlier.
Morally, there is a huge difference between sin and mere temptation (even the
holy Son of God was severely tempted) but the crafty serpent loves to muddy the difference.
It's enjoying wrong thoughts - deliberately entertaining them – that
is wrong.
If the serpent succeeded in actually getting you to sin in your mind he would then
try the lie that you have blown it so much that you might as well sin
physically. However, no matter how much mental sin corrupts the fantasizer, it
leaves the other one pure. To sin with someone else doubles the evil because it
corrupts the other person as well.
If few of us have this fear of sinning against God, it is not because we live
in the age of grace, but because we barely know God. The point is that we rarely
view any sin with the seriousness that God does.
Over and over and over, Scripture insists that, like nothing else, sin has
the power to destroy you (1 Corinthians 6:9, Galatians 5:19, Ephesians 5:5,
Revelation 21:8). Sin is the most fearsome thing on this planet, worse than a
ferocious wolf lusting after your blood. When a blood-crazed beast is on the
prowl, the only sensible thing is to put as big a distance as possible between
it and yourself. That’s how we should treat sin. Yet, instead of seeing sin as a
ravenous wolf with deadly fangs, we often treat it like a smelly stray pup –
rather disgusting, basically harmless, at times almost cute. The thought of
dabbling with sin should terrify us. If it doesn’t, we are toying with disaster.
We need to flee from sin, as the Scriptures say.
Increase the Distance between You and Sin
At all costs, avoid the horror of following a set of rules, rather than a
living Savior. This double tragedy ends both in arrogance and deserting Christ.
Ugly pride, even bigotry, festers when you discover you draw your line further
from sin than someone else. And you are in danger of abandoning your Savior when
you begin to trust your homemade rules for salvation (your holiness and
protection from temptation) rather than seeding your entire faith in your
crucified Lord.
Burn your Bridges
What would you think if a husband told his wife he wants to be faithful to
her, but explained that just in case temptation gets too strong, he will program
his former girlfriend’s phone numbers into his phone? Well what does your Lord
think if you deliberately make it easy to access drugs, alcohol, or some other
thing you are trying to give up? Don’t you think God sees right through someone
who asks for forgiveness for something, and keeps a tiny supply ‘just in case’?
Romans 13:14, "...make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof." In other words, store up nothing, make no allowances for sin.
When Jesus spoke of hacking off a hand or foot, or gouging out an eye
(Matthew 18:8-9), he was not speaking literally, because he would have advised
the removal of both members. Removing, for instance, just one eye would have
little effect. We could still see quite well enough to sin. But he was
describing the need for radical, painful and costly sacrifices in order to make
it harder to sin.
Your collection of things that help you sin might have cost you a lot of
money. If you don’t destroy it, however, you’ll find it will cost you a lot more
still! Note the circumstances in which you are most vulnerable to temptation and
do all you can to avoid those situations. If, for instance, when you lie awake
in the morning, your mind wanders to things it shouldn’t, try your hardest to
avoid that situation. Set your alarm earlier and make sure you get up. If you
find you are more vulnerable when alone, avoid that situation as much as
possible. Would it help to share accommodation with someone? Alternatively,
would it help to move out? When you feel vulnerable to temptation, get your mind
off it by visiting or phoning someone. Go for a walk or a drive, if it will
help.
Resolve that if ever you sin against someone, you will confess it to that
person and put it right. If, for instance, you steal, you’ll restore what you
stole, with an additional 20% as compensation. If you lie, confess it to the
person you lied to. Make yourself accountable to a mature, trustworthy disciple
of Christ, who is unlikely to be tempted by the knowledge that you have fallen
(should the unthinkable ever happen). Be sobered by the knowledge that if ever
you sin, you will have to endure the shame of confessing to your accountability
partner.
Friends
Pray for godly, faithful, praying friends who will spiritually motivate you
and support your every step forward with Christ. And be such a friend to others.
No matter how strong you are, choose the wrong friend, and you’ll be corrupted
(Psalm 1:1, Proverbs 12:26; 13:20; 14:7; 20:19; 22:24; 24:21, 1 Corinthians
5:11; 15:33, 2 Corinthians 6:14). Since the Bible insists you have little chance
if you chose ungodly people as close friends, you must choose between God and
wrong friendships. When choosing close friends, especially where there is a
chance of romantic involvement, remember this simple fact: one either belongs to
God or to the devil. There is no middle ground.
We’ve noted that most people fall into temptation because they don’t start
the fight soon enough. They give the adversary too many early victories – easy,
uncontested wins – by playing with thoughts, keeping deadly friendships, phone
numbers, contacts, etc., and viewing/hearing/reading things that weaken them.
Suppose you are in a leaking boat. You are lounging on deck as the water
seeps in a few bucketful’s an hour. No problem. Any fool can bail that out. Hour
after hour you continue to snooze until you suddenly find yourself plunging
towards the ocean floor. You then bail furiously but it’s too late. The disaster
was not the product of some momentary weakness or inexplicable lapse the last
five seconds. It was all so avoidable, if only the danger had been taken
seriously.
That’s what it’s like with temptation. Act soon enough, and you’re safe. Take
no action as temptation begins to seep in; do nothing to block the temptation,
keep open doorways to sin, and the danger slowly mounts until finally not even
the strongest saint could survive the onslaught. It’s not what happens in a
moment of weakness that is critical. What matters is what you do right now to
protect yourself from those moments. Almighty God dwells within you. If ever sin
defeats you, it’s not because you are weak. Plain stupidity, laziness and
disobedience are the most likely culprits.
Prayer is important. We should look daily to God to sensitize our consciences
so that the alarm bells will sound whenever the adversary slips us his sugar-coated
poison. Prayer is bringing ourselves under God’s authority; submitting to God.
It’s recognizing our utter dependency upon God; reminding ourselves that we will
win, but only with Jesus’ power flowing through us. One strategy that could
prove very helpful is to, with God’s help, train yourself to pray in the Spirit,
or begin praising God, the moment temptation hits. If a particular temptation
becomes your cue to act more spiritual, the adversary should quickly tire of using that
temptation!
Keep reminding yourself that you fight a defeated enemy. He can do nothing
but tell lies and hope we are silly enough to believe him. One of his highest
aims is to discourage us. Whenever you feel discouraged, you can be sure who is
behind it. You need never fail again, but even if you failed continuously, for
as long as you keep wanting to beat sin, and keep looking in faith to Jesus, God
is proud to call you his child. In his eyes you have the purity, holiness, and
self-control of Christ himself. Everyone else might give up on you, but God
won’t. He believes in you. He’s staked his reputation on you. He’s invested
everything in you. What matters is not how many times you hit the dust, but how
many times you get up again.
When Habits continue to Dominate
A brother once asked, "Can you shed any light on what I am going through with
this habit – why God would so dramatically set me free of other things, but
leave me to struggle with this one?"
Although the Israelites were guaranteed eventual total victory, God
deliberately chose to give them only gradual victory as they entered the
promised land. If much of the land were left vacant, the Lord explained, wild
animals would multiply and become a problem (Exodus 23:29-30; Deuteronomy
7:22-23). If someone were given sudden and total victory in every area of life,
what dangers could there possibly be? Pride was the obvious answer – feeling
superior to others who are still battling with problems, and/or losing sight of
one’s need for constant and total dependence on the Lord. I felt this brother
could reach the point where he need no longer be defeated in this area, by doing
two things:
1) Build himself up in the area of humility and in his awareness of his total
dependence upon the Lord.
2) Desire victory for the glory of the Lord, not so that he could boost his
pride by proving himself to others, or so that he could pat himself on the back,
or even for lesser reasons than God's glory, such as saving money.
An effective way to become strong in humility is to repeat with conviction
many times a day for several weeks, 'I can of myself do nothing.' This truth is
found in John 15:5. What is even more powerful, however, is that Jesus said it
of himself (John 5:19,30; 8:28). If that is true of Jesus, how much more true is
it of ourselves!
Having received insight from that incident in Israel's history, I began to
wonder about other things that kept the Israelites from defeating and removing
the Canaanites from their land. Was there any point in looking at Scripture in
this way? On the surface there seems little similarity between a believer
ridding his/her life of habits and Israelites ridding their promised land of the
enemy. However, the same players are involved – God, his people, human nature,
God's enemies.
The presence of the same players opens the possibility of similar principles
being involved. This possibility is strengthened by the fact that considerable
space is allocated to these battles in a book given by God not for historical
insight but ". . . for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness" (2 Timothy 3:16). Indeed, the New Testament writers frequently
used the history of the Israelites to draw spiritual lessens for individuals (1
Corinthians 10:1-13) and they often used the metaphor of warfare for spiritual
life (Ephesians 6:13-17). So let's look at things that stopped the Israelites
from experiencing victory over their enemies.
1) They did not even try to attack the enemy. Rather than obeying God, they
chose to believe that the enemy was too strong for them (Deuteronomy 1:26-32).
We, too, can choose to believe a habit is too strong for us.
2) They engaged the enemy in their own strength, rather than in humble
dependence upon the Lord (Deuteronomy 1:42-44). This is a most dangerous move
because the inevitable defeat seems to confirm that the habit is too strong to
resist.
3) They attacked the enemy (the city of Ai) while there was unrepentant sin
in their midst (Joshua 7:11-12). If we are deliberately disobedient in one area
of life (stealing, for instance) we have no right to expect God's empowering in
another area of life (such as giving up smoking). This is not a Catch 22. It's
not that you must give up sins you find impossible to give up before God will
empower you to give up those sins! I refer to willful disobedience in matters
where you could easily obey.
4) They entered into compromise with the enemy (the Gibeonites), having been
tricked into thinking they were not the enemy (Joshua 9:14-19,22). We listen to
voices that say "Other Christians do it; they do worse; Surely it's only
natural; there's no harm in it; I can't see anything wrong with it," and so we
let ourselves be fooled into allowing something to remain in our lives that God
says should be eradicated.
5) God allowed enemies to remain to teach the Israelites warfare (Judges
3:1-2). If you were instantly delivered, you could miss out on learning
principles of spiritual warfare, such as faith, persistence, obedience, and
exercising your Christ-bought authority. Learn the principles and then prove you
know them by using them to defeat the habit.
When we start winning over temptation we must beware the tendency to want to
find out how strong we have become. For instance, most people who have had
success in overcoming an alcohol problem will be tempted to walk into a bar to
prove to themselves that they can now refuse alcohol. This is virtually putting
God to the test, and must be strenuously avoided. It could be very awkward and
threatening to one's career to avoid a work party where the drink flows, but
this might be the very thing God requires of someone with a past drinking
problem. We must be especially careful to seek God's direction before exposing
ourselves to any temptations to which we have had a past weakness.
Bringing it Together
In the eyes of God, you are already the greatest winner the universe has ever
known. You can see yourself that way, or you can reject God's revelation, malign
all that Christ has done for you, and let the Deceiver dictate how you view
yourself. That pathological liar says you will never win. Jesus says you have
already won. The Enemy calls you a lowlife. God says you are royalty. The devil
claims we are helpless victims; slave to passions, emotions, cravings and
circumstance. God says we can rule over these things (Romans 5:17; 8:35-37). Who
will you believe?
Your risen Lord has freed you from slavery to bad habits. Stripped of his
power, the Devil can only resort to bluff, trying with all his evil cunning to
fool you into believing the lie that a certain temptation is either too big to
resist or too small to bother resisting.
To overcome, discover how wonderful Jesus is. The more you realize how much
he loves you, how highly he thinks of you, and how much he has done for you, the
more you will fall in love with him. That makes it easy to stay close to your
loving shield. Knowing his wisdom and unselfish devotion to you, you will gladly
obey him. And knowing he has committed his very life to your well being, you
will trust him to give you all the resources you need to expose, and reject, the
Faker's diabolical tricks.
Refuse to give in, knowing that your Savior has deposited within you all the
strength you need to call the serpent's bluff, but you must exert every bit of that
strength. So you must remain sober and alert (1 Thessalonians 5:6,8), prepared
for what will sometimes be a long, hard fight.
It can hurt to resist, but keep persisting, inspired by the knowledge that
Jesus endured still more pain to ensure that you would make it, and remembering
that, despite the serpent's lies, the ultimate cost of yielding to wrong doing
is always far higher than whatever it costs to hold on. Scripture is adamant
that, through Jesus, we have full power over sin, provided we do not stray on to
enemy territory without divine authorization. We must remember that the source
of our power is in Jesus, not ourselves, and that sin is so lethal that we must
keep as far from it as we can get.
Because you are spiritually one with Christ, when the adversary attacks you, he is
attacking Christ. In touching you, the adversary will suddenly find himself facing the
full wrath and might of the Almighty Lord. Evil does not have a hope,
provided you do not jump into the fight ahead of Jesus. When the attack begins,
instantly look to Jesus and by faith see him rushing into the battle.
Immediately you can relax, knowing that the Almighty is shielding you with his
own power, and that victory is certain because the invincible Lord is fighting
for you. Then, knowing he's there despite what you may feel, take up your
position behind Christ, prepared for a long fight, but knowing that Jesus is
taking all the heavy blows. He loves you so much he wants to take you into
battle with him, so that you get the thrill of sharing in his victory, but he is
all the time protecting you, allowing only those attacks to reach you that he
knows you can handle. He is training you for war because you will reign with him
as conqueror forever.
Destined for Success
Are you a born failure? Who cares! You've been born again! Born once to
imperfect parents, but born again to the Almighty Conqueror. Once a slave of
sin, now a child of God himself. A slave no longer, you belong to the King.
Royal blood flows through your veins. God's smile is on you, his victory is for
you, his power is in you. God is unstoppable and he lives in you. Rise up and
assume your rightful place of authority in the Royal Family; in Christ
invincible.
James 1:14, "But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed."
James 1:14-15, "But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed. Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death."
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