How to Defeat Lust

Lust is powerful. To defeat lust, we must engage in all-out warfare, but we cannot rest in our own strength. We need to rely on God. Here’s how.

Lust.

It’s a force that can seem even stronger than gravity.

For thousands of years, mankind was unable to make it off the ground. The only way to “get air” was to jump. For a split second, as it turns out, you can defy gravity. You can channel all your energy into your legs and take a flying leap into the air.

But you’ll only come crashing back down again a fraction of a second later.

So it is with so many of us in our battles with lust.

Do you ever feel like that? You know that lust is wrong. Jesus preaches against it very strongly in Matthew, where He says,

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart. If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body be thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body go into hell. (Matthew 5:27-31, ESV)

You know that lust is not to be tolerated. Yet there you go, again and again, unable to break free of the sin you so desperately wish to eliminate.

Like a person trying to jump to escape gravity, you find yourself constrained to this sin. You can resist for a few days, a couple weeks, but then it sends you crashing back down again.

And what’s worse?

You want so, so badly to be rid of this sin, and you make vows to yourself that you will never engage in it ever again. In those moments, you feel strong. You feel ready to take on an army.

You feel ready to run the marathon that it takes to escape into purity.

Four days later, the temptation of lust slips subtly into your mind. It weaves its way in. You say to yourself, “Not this time. I see what you’re doing.”

An hour later, you’ve caved.

Your very resolve – the thing preventing you from falling to temptation – was taken from you. It was as though, in the moment, you didn’t even want to say ‘no.’

I know the frustration. Like most other young men and many young women, I too struggle with lust and temptation.

And sometimes I fall.

But there’s good news: the Word of God offers us hope.

The Bible Tells us How to Defeat Lust

As you might expect, the Bible gives us the path forward to defeating lust. But unlike what many might tell you, there is no hard and fast solution.

There’s no special prayer you can say that will magically remove your lust.

There’s no specific action you can take that guarantees you won’t have temptation.

There is no silver bullet, one-size-fits-all approach to dealing with this sin.

Instead, the Word of God tells us to focus on two things: our hearts and our environment.

Before we delve into the meat of the issue, I first want to include a video by John Piper. If you’re not familiar with his ministry, you can click here for more.

I include this video because it’s full of wisdom and it contains a much more detailed, nuts-and-bolts approach to resisting sexual temptation than I will give in this post. John Piper is a much more learned man than I am, and his strategies for fighting lust are par excellence.

But I digress. Please watch the video – it’s a fantastic resource.

As for our discussion, let’s move forward by looking at how lust takes root in our hearts.

How to Defeat Lust: Look at Your Heart!

The very first thing to do in your journey to defeating lust is to look at your heart.

In James, we read the following:

Let no one say when he is tempted, “I am being tempted by God,” for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one. But each person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own desire. Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when it is fully grown brings forth death. (James 1:13-15, ESV)

From this, three things become clear:

  1. God does NOT tempt us. No temptation you experience is God’s doing.
  2. Temptation arises when we are enticed by our OWN desires.
  3. Sin is a result of temptation, and death is a result of sin – so we need to be doing something about this.

In other words, temptation arises in our own hearts.

The lustful attraction you feel? It’s coming from within you. It isn’t because you’re being forced to lust. You’re not being forced to stare and then use your imagination.

That’s coming from your own self.

This is also why, in the heat of the moment, we often let down our guards. It’s why we can confidently proclaim our commitment to purity at 6 o’clock, fall to sin at 8 o’clock, and re-commit to purity at 9 o’clock.

If you struggle with lust, the first place to look is your heart. Not outside yourself, not to the billboards or the magazines or the TV.

Look to your heart. Look to your inner desires.

This is where lust begins. This is the root of lust.

When I was a child, I used to weed our front garden on a rather infrequent basis. We had a pathway that ran through this garden, and the path was lined with bricks.

In between the cracks of the bricks, dandelion plants would take root.

Now, if you’ve ever pulled up a dandelion, you’ll know that these things have roots that go about 12 inches deep. Some go deeper than that.

Oftentimes, you can try to weed out a dandelion only to have the plant snap off at the root. You’ve removed the visible weed, but the root is still beneath the soil.

And the plant WILL come back.

Lust is the same way. Scripture tells us that lust doesn’t come from outside. Outside factors can aggravate and contribute to lust, but the root of the issue is within our hearts.

Please note: this next section is IMPORTANT, but it’s also the less “applied” or “practical” side of this fight.

So How do We Fix This?

Colossians 3 has the answer. This will be a rather lengthy passage of Scripture, but it’s a beautiful portrait of what needs to be done to fight sin of all types, including lust.

If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.

Put to death therefore what is earthly in you: sexual immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. On account of these the wrath of God is coming. In these you too once walked, when you were living in them. But now you must put them all away: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth. Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have put off the old self with its practices and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator. Here there is not Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave, free; but Christ is all, and in all.
(Colossians 3:1-11, ESV)

Immediately, you should focus in on the portion of this Scripture that says, “Put to death therefore whatever is earthly in you…”

Quite simply, we have a Scriptural command to put our fleshly deeds to death.

All of the things listed in that passage – sexual immorality (which almost always includes lust), impurity (which can also include lust), passion, evil desire, and covetousness – are things that take root in your fallen heart.

These are the weeds whose roots spring up within you.

To prevent them from coming back and reigning over your life, only look to the portion which says, “But now you must put them all away…. Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have put off the old self with its practices and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.”

Therein lies the solution for our hearts: we need to put away the old self.

How so?

We humble ourselves before God.

The beginning of fighting any sin, especially lust, is to stop attempting to fight it in your own power. Yes, there is certainly a place for battle. There is a place for tearful, enormous resistance.

But this is done in the power of God. It is done after we wave the white flag of surrender to Him.

Notice the verbiage of the passage: put off the old self… put on the new self.

What is the new self? It is a self which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.

When you fall before God in humility and surrender, you begin to “put on the new self.” This new self is not only fresh; it is being renewed.

It is constantly being fed from God.

Imagine a road that is re-paved every day. Every time it experiences even the smallest crack, crumble, or pothole, it is paved over again. Imagine how smooth and fresh such a road would be.

This is how God wants us to be. This is how He is able to make us.

When dealing with our hearts, we must humble ourselves and come to Him in complete surrender. We must simply “put off” the old self and “put on” the new.

It’s important to note that you cannot resist sin by tapping into your own power. The best thing you’ll be able to do under your own strength is fight your sin, become prideful about having “beaten it,” and then fall back into the sin once your pride convinces you you’re in the clear.

In the battle against sin, humility is essential. Relying directly, moment by moment, second by second, on the transformative power of the Lord is the only way to beat the sinful roots of our hearts.

Now, if you’re like me, you’ll probably ask a question here: this is all fine and dandy, but HOW exactly do you do this stuff?

The answer? There’s no fast solution. There are no special phrases or keywords to say in your prayers. There is no solid “if this, then that” method.

Rather, this is a portrait of life as a Christian. Daily, active submission to Jesus is vital here. As people, we are so tempted to want to just “do something,” but Colossians reminds us that we should be aiming, first and foremost, to be something.

We need to be rooted in Christ. We need to allow ourselves to rest in Him. It’s difficult. It’s hard to do. But it’s worth it.

Submit to Jesus.

Let’s now switch gears and look at our environment.

How to Defeat Lust: Reduce Your Opportunity for Temptation, and Always be Prepared to Fight!

Of the two main segments of this post, this will be (by far) the most practical. This is where we get into the nitty-gritty of doing battle in the trenches.

This is where we talk about our environment.

Now, it’s worth noting that the strategies discussed here will not work unless you have your heart in alignment and submission to God. If you’re not doing these things under His power, you’re not going to succeed.

Okay, here we go!

Think of this entire fight against lust as a war. Each time you’re tempted, you’re in a battle. You lose the battle when you yield to your temptation. The more battles you lose, the harder it’s going to be to put this thing to death.

When you look at things broadly, there are two main ways to successfully fight lust: either succeed in resisting temptation, or don’t enter temptation at all!

This means that there are two sets of strategies when it comes to fighting this sin. There are what I call preventative strategies and there are what I call reactive strategies.

Preventative strategies are those designed to help you before temptation occurs, whereas reactive strategies are designed to help you after you’ve come into temptation.

Let’s look at preventative strategies first.

Preventative Strategies to Defeat Lust

They say that you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take. They also say that you lose 100% of the battles you don’t fight.

These things are not true when it comes to lust.

As far as it concerns temptation, it is ALWAYS better to not be tempted. You WIN 100% of the battles you don’t fight.

Indeed, the single most effective part of your active fight against lust is this: reduce your opportunities for temptation.

Here’s what that looks like:

1: Are you tempted by your phone? When it’s late and you crawl into bed to go to sleep, you may be tempted to use your phone for a while. What starts off with innocent intentions can quickly devolve into an opportunity for lust.

There you are, comfortable and tired, when a lustful thought sneaks its way into your mind. You are all alone and literally in the dark. What’s stopping you from opening an incognito tab and feeding your desire?

You know where this is going.

Here’s your preventative strategy: get rid of your phone or make it impossible for you to use it in those moments. Yes, that sounds radical. But Jesus was radical when He said, “If your right eye causes you to stumble, pluck it out. (Matt. 5:29)”

If your phone is causing you to stumble regularly, then get rid of it if at all possible. Buy a flip phone that does not have an internet browser. If you cannot get rid of your smartphone (you may need it for your job or school), then place it in another room when you go to bed.

I know people who have done that, and it helps immensely in their fight against this tough-to-beat sin.

2: Are you tempted by other technology? Your phone may not be the only (or main) source of your temptation. If you live alone or you have your own room, your computer can be a source of stumbling.

What’s stopping you from just walking over to it and downloading some less than pure content?

Think also about your TV. Do you like to watch shows that contain suggestive or outright pornographic content? Is that a risk for you?

If so, then you have two options: either remove the tempting technology or make it impossible to use for that purpose. There are various software programs you can download on computers that block pornography sites OR report your activity to trusted friends.

Here are a few:

Covenant Eyes

X3 Watch

Truple – this one works for phones, too. This is ‘accountability software’ that relays your phone usage history to a friend.

At the end of the day, cancelling your cable subscription or even giving up your Wi-Fi may be necessary. Yes, it sounds terribly inconvenient and downright legalistic. It may be a hassle for you. It may cost you comfort or even opportunity.

But we must be serious in our fight against lust.

Jesus minced no words in Matthew, and we should mince no actions when it comes to our sinful patterns.

3: Are you tempted by your surroundings? I have heard of many Christians who still attend parties or go to places where people are “dressed to impress.” These places oftentimes contain alcohol and drug use, which only increases the chance that something bad may happen.

These locations and events are stumbling blocks. Period.

It’s like trying to stay dry and then willingly going out into the middle of a soaking downpour with nothing more than a cheap old umbrella.

The fast solution? Don’t go to these places.

Does a restaurant make its claim to fame on having scantily-clad women as servers? Don’t go.

Does a party have lots of super attractive people who are looking for a ‘good time?’ Don’t go.

Do you go to the gym because there are shapely women or men there? I hate to say it, but don’t go. Focusing on physical health is great, but there are other ways to do it if your gym is a place that feeds your temptations.

All of this “avoidance” may sting (especially if you’re an extrovert), but you can find and build quality friendships and a great social life without having to do anything that may lead you to compromise.

Focus on surrounding yourself with solid friends who want the best for you.

4: Join an accountability group or find an accountability partner. Many churches have “accountability groups.”

These are small groups of men and women (almost always separated by gender) that are designed to help manage lustful temptation. They’re more common among men, but there are groups for women too.

The idea behind accountability groups is that each person in the group is accountable to others for their actions. If you fall to lust, you report it to the group. They then work to help you reduce your lust.

Accountability groups are excellent because they add a layer of weight to your actions. If you can lust without reporting it to anyone, then you start to feel as though you’re getting away without consequences. (You’re not).

But if you have a group that will ask you, “Have you fallen to lust? If so, when and how?” then you’re more likely to think twice before doing it.

Please note: it is IMPORTANT to find an accountability group that does not rely on fear or shame – they’re there to help you, not guilt you.

If the thought of going to a group scares you, or you know that you will hide your behavior from them, then you can seek a one-on-one accountability partner to help you. Accountability partners are trusted friends that help you to kick your lustful habit. In return, you help them with their struggles.

5: Pray and read the Bible. This is something that is not optional for any Christian, let alone the Christian trying to defeat lust. The more Scripture you read and the more time you spend in prayer with the Lord, the less you’ll be tempted.

There are verses all over the Bible that command us to dwell on the good things that God has done. Here are a few:

  1. Colossians 3:2 – “Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.” (We read this earlier)
  2. Hebrews 12:1-2 – “Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.”
  3. Philippians 3:14 – “I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.”

You see, Scripture makes it clear that there is a greater joy ahead of us: the joy of Jesus Christ. We have a prize to go after!

C.S. Lewis once said,

“It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

C.S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory

Indeed, we need God’s Word and fellowship with Him to strengthen our desire for Him. The more we see who He is, the less “gravity” our old sins – including lust – will have over us.

Reactive Strategies to Defeat Lust

You’ve been diligent with your preventative lust-killing strategies. You’ve downloaded anti-porn software, you’ve found an accountability partner, you’re reading the Bible and praying, and you’re locking away your phone at night.

But remember… lust comes from within. Dealing with your external environment helps, but it’s not going to be 100% effective.

You will still experience temptation.

What do you do then?

You do one of two things: you either flee, or you fight.

1: Flee. What do I mean by flee?

We read this in 1 Corinthians 6:18, which says,

Flee from sexual immorality. Every other sin a person commits is outside the body, but the sexually immoral person sins against his own body.

When faced with any sort of sexual temptation, Scripture’s clearest command is to flee. You see, the Bible talks much about warfare against evil, and how we are to stand firm and fight against Satan.

But when it comes to sexual immorality, it tells us to flee.

Sexual temptation is the one form of temptation that we quite literally cannot simply stand and resist. Every man – EVERY man (and EVERY woman) – has a breaking point against this sin.

So when temptation grabs ahold of you, run. That’s the first thing to do.

If you’re lying in bed and the desire to cave to lust enters your mind, immediately get up. It doesn’t matter if it’s 4 PM, midnight, 4 AM, or anytime in between. Get up and distract yourself. Text your trusted friend(s). Start doing something physically active, like cleaning the house or folding laundry. Put on some music or a podcast. Pray.

As John Piper says, you literally have 5 seconds to kill your sinful thought. 5 seconds.

Make the most of those first 5 seconds. Get moving, get busy, and literally run if you have to. Fleeing is your first line of defense against lust.

2: Fight. If you find yourself in the throes of temptation, you will have to try to fight it. This will NOT always work. You will fall, at least some – if not a large percent – of the time.

But fighting is better than simply giving in and not resisting.

When you are in the thick of battle, your first line of defense is to pray. Understandably, the fact that you’re in temptation may have removed or nearly removed your ability to pray in that moment.

But try it anyway.

God can work wonders, and Scripture says that it IS His will for us to abstain from sexual immorality (1 Thessalonians 4:3-8).

After praying, turn your thoughts to Jesus. This is talked about in much more detail in John Piper’s video, seen here:

The overall gist of this part of the strategy is to be fixed upon Jesus’s sacrifice in a very visible and vivid way.

Why was Jesus killed? Mutilated, tortured, murdered? Nailed to a cross?

He was put there by our sin; that is, your sin and mine.

When you’re in the midst of temptation, bring to mind the picture of Jesus on the cross. Bring to mind the picture of Him as He was flogged, whipped, beaten, and bloodied. Each blow was because of sin.

Our lust put Him there.

This may be a graphic image, but such an image may just be enough to snap you out of your lustfulness. It may be enough to prevent you from indulging further in your temptation.

When You Fail

I hate to say this, but it’s true: you will fail (more than likely). That’s why I’ve called this section, “When You Fail.”

If your lustful addiction has gone on for a long time, your brain has been re-wired to pursue this sin. Even for those who might not have a long and storied history of lusting, there is still the innate sinful nature of fallen flesh.

We are all fallen people.

If you’ve fallen to lust, the most important thing to do is to turn back to Christ.

Immediately.

It doesn’t matter what the nature of your sin was. It doesn’t matter if it was a mental fantasy or if it was acted out, either alone or with someone else.

Turn back to Christ.

You will feel a sense of shame and failure. You will feel guilt. You will feel like hiding your head from God. If you’re in bed, perhaps you will draw the covers over your head as though hiding from your Creator.

But the most important thing to do in that moment is to turn back to the Lord.

Come before Him in sincerity of heart and love. Pray to Him and ask His forgiveness. Repent of your sin – make a commitment to turn from this sin in the Lord’s power.

Closing Notes

To bring this (rather long) article to an end, let me just say that – if you struggle with lust as a Christian – you are most assuredly NOT alone.

There are millions of other men and women out there who are in the same boat. Remember, Scripture tells us that, “No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. (1 Corinthians 10:13)”

Yet this same verse also says,

God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.

You see, the most powerful ally we have in this fight against lust is God. We often ask ourselves what God’s will is for our lives.

Who should we date/marry?

What job should I take?

What college ought I go to?

Which doctor should I choose?

What church do I attend?

At the end of the day, God gives us substantial liberty when it comes to choosing these things. There is often no right or wrong answer.

But when it comes to our sanctification, God’s will is absolutely clear. He sets it down in the Bible!

For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you abstain from sexual immorality; that each one of you know how to control his own body in holiness and honor, not in the passion of lust like the Gentiles who do not know God... (1 Thessalonians 4:3-5, ESV) 

We are told that the will of God is that we abstain from sexual immorality of all types. We’re told that His will is that each of us know how to control our bodies. We need to possess ourselves in holiness and in honor.

And what’s more? The Bible guarantees that, if we ask anything in accordance with His will, He will hear us (1 John 5:14).

Friend, you have an advocate with the Father, and His name is Jesus. Jesus came to die, and His death saves us from our sins. We do not need to go fooling around with sin any longer.

By getting into the Word of God and (1) focusing upon our hearts, then (2) focusing upon our environment, we can all be well on the way to defeating lust. It takes effort, and it is not easy.

But it is worth it.

May God bless you.

Tagged : / / / / / / /

A License to Sin?

Some say that God’s grace gives us a license to sin. But this is not only incorrect, it’s perilous to us in our walk with Jesus.

The body of believers, since the time of the Apostles, has been beset by heresies. Paul knew this as well as anyone, and he repeatedly wrote staunch warnings against false teachings. He wanted to make sure that those who truly followed Christ stayed true to their faith and did not stumble in the wind.

Yes, even in those days; those old days when travel between towns could take days or even weeks, false doctrine and heretical beliefs spread like wildfire and threatened to corrupt a person’s faith in the risen Christ.

Today, this effect is ever the more potent.

In the modern day, ideas can circle the globe instantly. As I write this, it occurs to me that people from other continents may read this – and they may read it just minutes or hours after I post it.

A thousand years ago, a message may have taken months to make it from one side of a continent to another, if it made it at all.

But now, ideas spread instantly and effortlessly. They spread seamlessly. Can this be a great thing? Absolutely! Can it be used to help people, build the Kingdom of God, and do great works for Him?

Absolutely. That’s why I blog 🙂

Yet this vast internet of information, this vehicle for transmitting ideas, thoughts, and calls to action, can be dangerous. It can lead to the spreading of heresies and false doctrine.

These false doctrines have one lasting outcome: they damage the faith of the person who believes them.

But I’m not here today to discuss how false doctrine or heretical teachings spread. I’m not writing to discuss strategies for fighting them. Rather, I’m here to single out and analyze one particular heresy that is extraordinarily popular in today’s evangelical scene.

And that heresy, quite simply, is this – that the grace given to us through Christ can serve as a license for sin.

This is a destructive doctrine. It is as far removed from Scripture as you can get. It is poisonous. It ruins lives. It damages faith. I believed it once – more recently than I’d like to admit, in fact – and looking back, I realize just how destructive it is to true, genuine faith in the risen Lord.

Nothing good comes from it. It promises a life of ease, but yields only pain, heartache, and brokenness.

What Makes it So Dangerous?

One of the biggest ways that this “doctrine” is so dangerous lies in its deceptive power.

Think about it.

We know the following things as Christians:

  1. We are all sinners in need of a Savior (Rom. 3:23)
  2. Jesus Christ came and died for the forgiveness of sins (John 3:16, Rom. 10:9, 2 Cor. 5:15, etc.)
  3. If we believe in Him and call unto Him for salvation, He will save us because He cannot be unfaithful to His own. (2 Tim 2:13)

To the mature or passionate believer, these facts are reason for immense celebration. They look upon their Lord with love and with great respect. They have been forgiven much, and because of their thankfulness to God, the thought of sinning simply “because it’s covered by the blood and will be forgiven” is offensive to them.

But it’s not the same way with everyone.

For immature believers, or those who may only believe that they’re believers, these facts can be interpreted as a license for sin. I’ve heard it many times in my own life, and furthermore, I’ve heard it most often from the youth – “Well, I can sin because Christ forgives me. I’m covered.”

They take their limited understandings of the doctrine of grace and they twist it to their own selfish ends.

They are using logic to make the assumption: since I’m a sinner, and since Christ died for all sins, then all I must do is believe in Him and confess Him with my words, and I will be saved from my sins. This means I can sin as much as I want, in any way I want, and Christ will still forgive me and I’ll go to Heaven.

Yes, to the immature Christian, this is logical. It makes perfect sense. That’s what’s so dangerous about this belief – it makes perfect sense unless you’ve really thought it through and walked in the faith a while.

It makes perfect sense, but it’s a trap. And a devastatingly tricky trap at that.

The Consequences of This Belief

Up until now, we’ve discussed how this belief works. It’s dangerous because it’s tricky. It’s dangerous because it’s deceptive. But why? If one is caught in this big snare, what makes it so bad?

The main reason is in the damage it does to the sinner’s conscience.

You see, we’re all born with a God-given conscience, or internal moral compass. Every human has one, whether they’re born into a Christian culture, a Muslim culture, a Hindu culture, or an atheistic culture.

In fact, if you travelled around the world throughout history, you’d find that the majority of cultures would have some sort of prohibition against killing others. You’d find prohibitions against rape, against violence, against taking advantage of people, and much more.

All human societies throughout history have had morality, and the morality has been – barring some differences – quite similar.

Now, returning to the notion of the built-in conscience, one of the biggest things that a person must realize is that he/she is a sinner in need of a savior. And your conscience, your sensitivity to sin, is what helps you to see this. This is why Jesus said, “I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance” (Luke 5:23).

Notice the use of the word repent here. To repent is to change over, to confess and forsake, to be willing to leave something behind.

Repentance requires a person to see their sins, recognize them as bad, and then be willing to forsake their sins and turn to a new way of life – namely, the life Jesus calls them to.

However, note also that Jesus says another curious thing in that passage: “I have not come to call the righteous…” I must admit that when I read that verse for the first time, I was left in confusion.

After all, Romans 3:10 tells us, “As it is written, there is none righteous, no, not one.” For the longest time, it didn’t make sense to me. But then, after some examination, it suddenly made perfect sense.

What Christ is talking about here is the difference between those who acknowledge and see the nature of their sins, and those who do not.

When Jesus walked the earth, His greatest opponents were the Pharisees. You’d have expected that those who would oppose Him most would have been non-Jews. Perhaps the Romans, or maybe some other faction of society, one would think.

But instead, it was those who claimed to be God’s own people.

They claimed to be of the Lord, but when Christ commanded them to repent, they refused. They called the Son of God a madman. They were “righteous” only insofar as they trusted and believed in their own abilities to save and distinguish them.

They did not recognize their own need for a savior because they thought themselves above such a thing. Hence, Jesus essentially said, “I have not come to call those who will not listen, but rather, those who do and can listen.”

Now, we’ll take this very concept and circle back to the concept of “the license for sin.”

You see, those Pharisees had hardened their hearts. They had dulled their consciences. You can harden your heart against God. That’s not popular to say in today’s world, but it’s true.

Contrary to what popular evangelicalism will tell you, words alone cannot save you. A profession of faith alone cannot save you. It can’t save you unless you’ve got the intention and heart behind it. God knows those who are truly His, and He also sees those who are just mixed in with the flock but don’t truly want Him.

For the one who sins because he “knows Christ will cover it,” there is grave danger.

There is a point at which a person will stop caring. There is a time when, after enough intentional, willful sinning, a person can harden their heart beyond repentance. They will essentially become a Pharisee.

They believed in the idea of grace, and they claimed to believe in the Son of God, but they simply used it as an insurance policy while they did everything they wanted to do.

They treated the grace of God as a cheap thing for so long, in such a hideous way, that they moved themselves beyond the ability to repent and forsake their sins in a turn to Christ.

Yes, it can happen. And if a person keeps on sinning, if he keeps on cheapening the grace of God to cover selfish desires, then there might come a day when repentance is impossible.

This is a scary message, but it’s truth. Yet there is GOOD news!

Finding Freedom From Sin

Does the Bible teach that you can fall away from God and be condemned, even in this life? It’s a tricky issue, but I think the answer is yes.

You CAN sin against, reject, and deny God for so long that you will be unable to come to Him and seek salvation.

But here’s the good news: if the thought of this causes you concern, sadness, or a desire to change from a pattern of sin, then you’re not condemned. Those who have rejected Christ completely and firmly, who have abused His grace repeatedly and feel no sorrow and no desire to change, are in grave danger.

Yet for you – if you feel in your heart that you want to change, if you desire freedom from sin and unity with Christ – there is still all the hope in the world! 2 Peter 3:9 says,

The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance.

You see, the God of the universe wants you. Go up to any random person on the street, and God wants them. Our Lord is so great that He does not will that any would perish.

If you’re stuck in a lifestyle of sin, this is your call to get out. If you’re slipping into the heretical idea that you can sin as much as you want because God will cover it, you need to repent of this idea. You need to turn from it.

Run from it as you would a dangerous animal.

As you run and turn from your sins, run into the grace of God. Accept His forgiveness with open arms and a willing heart. Hold nothing back within yourself. Commit all you are to Him. Commit your actions, relationships, decisions, life, career, words, and deeds to Him.

He wants all of it. And you will not be sorry for giving it all to Him.

As I mentioned earlier, there was a time when I believed that I could keep on sinning freely, because God’s grace covered it. After I realized that was incorrect and dangerous, I grew fearful that I was beyond saving.

In my anguish, I cried to the Lord out of a desperate heart.

He came in.

He came to allay my fears and correct my wayward heart. He taught me the importance of seeing Him as the all-sufficient God, of counting Him as my highest treasure for all time.

This has been a journey, and I’m still in the middle of it, but each day I can see His mercies fresh and new.

Brother, sister, it is my prayer today that you’ll seek the Lord. It’s my prayer that you will turn to Him with a heart of genuineness. And if you feel as though you’ve gone too far, pray to Him. Pray to Him with all you have in you. Cry out to Him.

Go to your knees and weep.

If you call to Him out of a genuine desire to be reconciled to Him, He will be faithful to show you the way. He will restore you.

A bruised reed and a smoldering wick He will not put out.

He will disciple you, lead you, and show you the true path to life in Him. He loves you, and He wants your heart above all things. He is not willing that any would perish, but that all would come to repentance.

Please, repent today. Repent while you’ve still got life in you, and awake from your spiritual slumber.

Repent, because His mercy, while great, will someday run out. Run to Him, and run to Him with everything you have.

Your God awaits you with great love and great mercy.

Tagged : / / / / / / / /

Sowing and Reaping

The “Law of Sowing and Reaping” is a universal and inescapable fact of life. We need to be sowing to the Spirit – here’s how.

Each spring, millions of people put seed in the ground in the hopes of growing something. Some people are farmers; they load up their large tractors with thousands of pounds of seed to sow hundreds of acres worth of crops. Others plant backyard gardens complete with tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, lettuce, onions, garlic, and potatoes.

But no matter what one plants and for what purpose, one thing holds constant: the plants you grow are determined by the type of seed you used.

Tomato seeds will produce tomato plants. Pumpkin seeds produce pumpkin plants. Corn seeds will grow corn plants. Lettuce and carrot seeds, as small and hard to plant as they may be, will develop into lettuce and carrots.

This is what we might refer to as, “The Law of Sowing and Reaping.” What you sow is what you get.

The Bible tells us that the same principle applies to our everyday lives. In Galatians, we read the following:

Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life. And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up. So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to everyone, and especially to those who are of the household of faith. [Galatians 6:7-10, ESV] 

Each day, we are faced with decisions. Most of us don’t realize just how many choices we make on a daily basis. We choose whether to be stingy or generous, open or closed, available or distant. We choose what to buy. We choose what to say to our acquaintances, friends, family, and spouse. Every action at work is accompanied, in some form or another, by a choice.

Choices, choices, and more choices.

Each choice we make can be thought of as a “seed.” The action is the seed you plant; the consequences of that action are the things that grow as a result.

Just seeds will produce plants, actions will produce consequences.

Let’s re-read Galatians 6:7.

Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap.

Written by Paul the Apostle, Galatians was a letter to the churches in ancient Galatia (located in present-day Turkey). In this verse, Paul used some pretty strong wording to convey his message: Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap.

You see, the first problem facing many of Paul’s readers – and many of us in the modern day – is that we lose sight of the fundamental truth that actions have consequences.

To really drive this home, let’s ask a question: when was the last time you made a decision based upon the idea that you would not experience consequences? In my case, I find that my ongoing struggles with sin are vulnerable points here. When I am tempted to cave to a certain sin, my mind will often ask itself a question, “Can I get away with this?”

You’re faced with the temptation to lust. I can get away with this, right?

You’re faced with the temptation to curse someone behind their back. They won’t hear me, so no one gets hurt… right?

Indeed, it is so easy to imagine that small actions done in complete secrecy will not harm you. They’re done in secret, after all!

Yet these so-called “secret sins” are not the only times we are led to disregard the teachings in this verse. Sometimes, we can become convinced that even the “big stuff” is stuff we can get away with. This includes activity such as hard drinking, partying, lying, sexual immorality, and even theft or other forms of crime.

There is always a temptation to think to ourselves, “Jesus is my savior, so my sins are covered. I can sin as much as I want.”

But that is a very, very dangerous way of thinking. This is what Paul was confronting when he implored his readers to “not be deceived,” because “God is not mocked.”

If we’re not careful, even the most diligent and faithful Christians can fall into the trap of believing that there is such a thing as consequence-free living. It’s also why Paul writes, in verses 7 and 8,

...for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life.

That leads us to a very important dichotomy: there are two ways to sow.

The Two Ways to Sow

In Galatians 6:7-8, Paul shows us that we can either sow to our flesh or sow to the Spirit. These are the two umbrella categories that each and every action we take will fall into.

When one “sows to his flesh,” he is essentially planting the seeds of corruption and decay. In the Bible – and particularly the New Testament – there is a framework set forth that this world is a world of two camps: the flesh and the Spirit. The flesh includes all of our fallenness. When we sin, we please our flesh.

The flesh is inherently selfish and concerned with seeking gratification. Romans tells us,

For to set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace. For the mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God, for it does not submit to God's law; indeed, it cannot. Those who are in the flesh cannot please God. Romans 8:6-8 [ESV]

In other words, the “flesh” is hostile to God. It is against Him and against what He wants to do in our world and in our life. That’s why Romans tells us that the mind set on the flesh is death. It doesn’t submit to God, and it doesn’t even have the capability to submit to Him.

When we take an action such as willfully disobeying God, we are sowing to the flesh. When we commit sin, we’re sowing to the flesh. What the verbiage has in mind here is this: sowing is an action. If you act in a way that pleases the flesh, that satisfies your sinful desires and seeks to glorify yourself rather than God, you’re going to reap brokenness. You’re going to reap corruption. You’re going to reap death.

Each action has a consequence, whether we see it or not.

Addiction to pornography, while perhaps not directly harming another person, has consequences for those who are addicted. Laziness, while it may seem innocent or benign, harms both the person who is lazy and those around him or her.

You cannot escape the law of sowing and reaping.

If you sow to the flesh, you’ll reap bad consequences. You will receive brokenness. That’s a guarantee. To think otherwise – to imagine that you can live a life of sowing to the flesh but escaping the consequences – is to mock God.

But let’s look at the flip side: sowing to the Spirit.

Just as consequences are guaranteed for every action done for the flesh, consequences are also guaranteed for each action done for the Spirit. These are good consequences! If you sow to the flesh, you’re going to reap corruption and brokenness. But what if you sow to the Spirit?

Galatians says you’ll reap eternal life!

Indeed, that is the hallmark of a Christian life which is truly in obedience to God and what He has for us. If you step out in faith, trusting the Lord for all your needs, you are sowing to the Spirit. If you seek Him, if you make time for Him, if you desire to please Him and follow His will for your life, you’re sowing to the Spirit.

Galatians tells us that you’ll be rewarded. In fact, the rewards to sowing in the Spirit are so vast that we probably will not – and cannot – experience them entirely in this lifetime. We cannot comprehend what that fully means for us.

Romans also shows us that the mind set on the Spirit is “life and peace.” Do you want peace in your situation? Do you want to have that peace which surpasses all understanding? Do you want to be that person who can stand in the middle of life’s fiercest storm and say, “It is well with my soul?”

Guess what?

Sow to the Spirit. It all starts there.

A Practical Application

We’ve looked at what is meant by sowing to the flesh and sowing to the Spirit. We’ve compared and contrasted them. But what does this dichotomy look like in our day to day lives?

It might be tempting to think that this is a question of rote obedience. We can approach this from the angle of, “If I do this, then God will do this.”

But that is the incorrect way to look at it.

As a Biblical example, the Pharisees of Jesus’s day were among the most outwardly-righteous people on the Earth. They prayed, they tithed, they read and memorized Scripture, and they never missed religious services. They were lauded by the Jewish community and looked upon as community leaders.

Yet Jesus’s harshest words were reserved for these men.

Christ made it clear that God did not accept the outward righteousness of the Pharisees. In fact, He hated it. There was no place for fake righteousness in God’s favor. And that has not changed today.

Rather than look to outward deeds – deeds of giving, tithing, “stopping sin,” or going to church – we need to look inward.

We need to ask ourselves, “Where is my heart? Why am I doing this?”

Do you need to stop sinning? Yes. God commands us to repent, which means nothing less than turning away from our sinful behavior and embracing His perfect plan. But rote obedience is not His answer. And if you try to battle your sins, whatever they may be, in your own strength, you will fail a hundred percent of the time.

If you battle sin and death in your own power, you are not truly “sowing to the Spirit.”

To truly sow to the Spirit, we need to focus on our hearts. We need to adopt a position of resignation. We need to wave the white flag. All too often, the storms of life find us doing everything we can to calm the waters on our own strength. That’s my natural setting. When a huge battle comes before me in my life, I will do all I can to win… and prayer is my last resort.

But prayer should be our first resort.

Our hearts should always be inclined towards God in a spirit of willing submission. God is our good Shepherd, and we – His sheep – know and obey His voice. By obeying God in love and humility, we are truly sowing to the Spirit. We are truly loving God. We cannot take a passive approach to our Christian walk – effort is involved in every relationship, including the one we have with God – but the source of our strength cannot come from ourselves.

The solution here is simple yet incredibly hard: rest in God. Rest in Christ.

Do you have a sin that seems impossible to overcome? Stop fighting it in your strength, and start fighting it in His strength.

Do you have situations that are beyond your control? Stop trying to control them. Stop trying to come up with answers on your own power. Go to Him.

Do you have issues that have no solution? Are you stuck between a multitude of paths, each one appearing rocky and uneven? Do not trust yourself. Go to Him.

Every time we fall before the Lord in a place of humility and submission, we sow to the Spirit. Every time we obey Him out of love and trust, we sow to the Spirit. Every time we display a righteousness that is NOT our own, but rather His, we sow to the Spirit.

Remember: no matter who you are or what you’ve done, you do not have to continue going down the path you are now. You don’t have to keep sowing to the flesh! You can start sowing to the Spirit today, and reap a reward of peace and life that will last with you into eternity.

Tagged : / / / / / / / /

The Greatest Things

Even the greatest things in this world are nothing compared to Him. We live for our Savior, and as we live, we partake in His providence and His glory. We live by Him, for Him, and because of Him. He is our light, our sole shelter, our shepherd on high. He laid down His life for us that we might be free from sin and death.

Yet even then, sin still taints this world. Everything we do, we do in fallen, imperfect bodies. Every thought we think, big or small, is in some way still influenced by the curse of sin on the human race.

All those people we interact with on a daily basis – they’re all damaged beings living in a damaged world. All those good works we do are still tainted. In fact, it is said (in Isaiah 64:6) that our best works are no more than filthy rags to Him.

We are corrupted to such a great degree that, without faith, it is impossible to please God. Belief, trust, surrender to the Lord… that is the only thing that God can credit to us as righteousness.

Indeed, we have a Savior who loves us more than we could ever imagine. We have a perfect, clean, faultless Lord who came and died for the very people who had turned their backs on Him in the greatest cosmic outrage the universe has ever borne witness to.

Yes, through Him, we enjoy and see the blessings of Christ on this side of the great divide. He has redeemed us, and we are free! We are liberated from sin. We are still sinful, still broken, still fallen… but redeemed. Loved. Freed.

Alive.

Now this same God who loved us and loves us to this day, well, His main residence isn’t even down here. It’s in Heaven. We feel Him, we interact with Him, and we love Him while we’re here. We grow in Him. He is a father, and we follow our Father’s leading.

But I must ask – if our Father is giving us all we need in this utterly broken world, what will it be like on the other side? What will it be like when we breathe our last and our spirit passes from the body to the heavenly realm? Surely, I do not know.

I cannot imagine. I cannot comprehend. I cannot do enough to describe God’s infinite mercy as it appears in this present age. Oh, how could I possibly describe Him in all His fullness? I could spend my entire life preaching just one message – the infinite love of God – and I would be no closer to fully conveying the true nature of His love on my final day than on my first.

His love is endless. It’s wholly sincere. It’s entirely real, the most real thing there is. He is love! He is fully good, and in Him is no darkness at all.

Yes, we see Him now in part. We see Him in the skies and in the sunsets. We enjoy Him in the Word and in the Church. We interact with Him through prayer, through listening, through the quiet longings of our hearts. We watch the thunderstorms roll across the land in a roaring display of His power.

But all that – well – it’s like reading just one sentence about the Lord who could fill a hundred billion volumes and still have room for a hundred billion more. All we can read now is that one sentence, but in the next life, perhaps we will get access to those other volumes.

Paul Washer, an evangelist and preacher, once said, “Heaven will be an infinite tracking down of the glories of God.”

What a profound statement! All these things we have now – fellowship, friendship, love, family, marriage, and so forth – are intended to manifest the glory of the Creator. But these are only the very beginning! What greater glory is to be revealed in Heaven; how much more shall we come to appreciate our Father there? We have great gifts now, but then… wow.

Yes, in this world, it is necessary to be thankful for all we have. Do you have a spouse? Thank the Lord. Do you have a career? Thank Him. How about friends, a place to live, or the ability to think and reason? Praise God.

Every breath we breathe, every friend we meet, every chance we get to pray – it’s entirely there to reveal Him. But these things, why, they’re just the beginning. They constitute the first page in a narrative that stretches to a hundred trillion pages in length and forevermore beyond.

Even the greatest things in this world are nothing compared to Him. He is the treasure, the glory, the all-sufficient Savior of all those who will come unto Him.

Do you know Him? Have you truly made Him the Lord of all you are, Lord of all your life? He is there. He loves you. That infinite God that far outshines even the brightest of earthly gifts… He beckons for you to come unto Him and cast all your cares on Him, because He cares for you.

The Secret to Being Content

How many times have you felt discontent in your life? I can’t speak for anyone else, but if you’re anything like me, it’s a lot!

When I entered college as a freshman, I was away from home for the first time. All I’d ever known – my friends, my family, my surroundings – were hundreds of miles away. Even though I was making new friends and joining new clubs, I began to grow discontent.

Why did I have to come here? Why can’t I just be back at home with my friends and my family, where everything makes sense?

My pain was made all the more real when I would scroll through Facebook or Instagram and see all the fun that my loved ones were having. There were church events happening that I could not go to. There were hangouts happening that I couldn’t go to.

In those moments, I would hang my head and silently ask myself, “Why do I have it so bad here?”

Now, I’ve always been the type to reach for achievement. For me, getting a college degree wasn’t an option; it was a necessity. I had to have it. For the sake of my own peace in life, I felt like I had to get that degree.

But to get it meant moving away, traveling to a completely different environment and then learning the ropes there. And doing all that for four years, with only occasional breaks to go home (except during summers, that is).

You see, I wanted to enjoy college. I wanted to love what I was doing. I wanted to love going to events, joining campus ministries, and making new friends. I wanted, coveted, desired, and yearned.

But who was I kidding?

I was miserable at college.

At the end of my freshman year, I seriously considered dropping out. I’d gotten into a relationship and it had ended badly. Very badly. That, in conjunction with the feeling that I had just never truly found my footing, focused the pressure upon me to just quit.

Just drop out, go home, and live life there.

But I kept going. I prayed, pleaded, and begged God to give me some form of contentedness.

Yet I heard and felt very little.

If I only just had a wife!’ I thought.

‘If I only just had a house here, instead of having to live in this dorm!’

‘If only I was just able to go to college from home.’

My yearnings and pleadings took me well into sophomore year. Despite my prayers, sophomore year was perhaps my toughest year of college. Every day, I pointed my eyes heavenward and pleaded with God to give me the greatest desire of my heart: a wife.

I wanted to be connected. I wanted to feel loved. Yet I felt like I had no friends and no purpose for being at my university. I wanted to be content. I really did.

But guess what?

I wasn’t looking for contentment in the right place. You see, I thought that contentment came from my circumstances and my possessions. As humans, we tend to think that way. There’s even a phrase in our pop culture, “The other man’s grass is always greener.”

We peer over the proverbial fence to see what our neighbors have. They have a spouse, kids, a nice car, a big garden, a beautiful dog, a good job, an easy life. And we want that for ourselves.

If I was to ask you personally what your number one desire was, what would you tell me?

If you’re young, you might desire a significant other. You might desire also to graduate college or to get your first professional job.

If you’re older, maybe you desire more time. Maybe you wish you could go back in time to fix things in your past.

In any regard, there are things throughout our lives that we yearn after and wish we had.

The lonely single man – that was me for a long time – wishes to get married. He wants a wife with everything he is.

The lonely single woman feels as though nothing short of having a husband can make her feel content.

The low-income man yearns for a higher-paying job. If only he were making ten, twenty thousand dollars a year more. Then he could start saving for the future and stop worrying about paying his bills.

But look at the flip side: there are plenty of people in unhappy marriages that wish they weren’t. They look at the young single and think, “What I wouldn’t give for that kind of freedom.” There are lots of rich people who get up every morning and face the monumental task of retaining, growing, and stewarding their wealth. Usually – though certainly not always – being more wealthy comes with more responsibility.

They might look at a person with a lower-paying job and think, “It must be so simple for them.”

Truly, the other man’s grass is always greener. When we place our happiness and joy in our circumstances – our money, our possessions, our location, our job, our health, or even our relationships – we are seeking for contentment in all the wrong places.

The Apostle Paul shows us the right place to look for contentment.

In Philippians 4, we read:

"...I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me."
-- Philippians 4:11-13 [ESV]

Now, if anyone had a reason to be discontent, it was Paul. Paul had once lived a life of power and honor. He’d been a member of the Sanhedrin, a body of Jewish elites that inhabited a place of reverence in Jewish society.

But once he became a follower of Christ, he embarked on a life of dangerous missionary work. He was imprisoned many times, beaten many times, and left lonely many times. He had experienced shipwreck, homelessness, stoning, and hunger. Yet look at what he emphasizes here:

I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content…

Can you feel the gravity of what he’s writing? Whatever situation he may find himself in, he knows how to be content.

What might constitute a list of situations Paul had been in? Well, he’d been in far worse circumstances than what most of us have ever – or ever will – find ourselves in. It’s one thing to say, “I am content, even though my boyfriend broke up with me.” Or, “Even though I make $25,000 a year less than what I want, I will still content myself in the Lord.”

It’s quite another to say, “I am in prison. My stomach hurts from hunger. My skin itches from lice. Any day now, the jailer might come and kill me. Yet despite all this, I am content. I want for nothing.

Wow! What a statement! Saying that one has found the way to be content in any circumstance is, on the face of it, a bold statement to make. But it’s all the more bold when we consider who it was coming from.

If Paul can endure all he endured and still be content, what’s stopping you and I from being content? Odds are, we’re not being threatened with execution or stoning or starvation. Odds are good that we probably have enough to meet at least the barebones material needs of our lives.

So if Paul can be content in a Roman prison, why can’t we be content in our lives?

The answer is simple: because we are not looking in the right place!

If Paul had looked to his situations for contentment, he would have ridden a never-ending cycle of boom and bust. When he was well-received by the Church, he would have been happy. But when he was persecuted and thrown in prison for preaching Christ, he would have been unhappy.

He would have yearned to just get out of prison; he would have spent every waking hour focusing on how – if he could just be on the other side of those bars, able to feel the sun and go wherever he wanted – he would be content.

So what is the secret to contentment in ALL circumstances? If it isn’t looking to our circumstances to make us happy, what is it?

Paul gives us that answer, too.

I can do all things through him who strengthens me.

Boom. I know we’ve all seen that verse before. It’s plastered all over shirts and posters and bumper stickers. Usually, it’s overlaid on top of some image of a woman taking a basketball shot or a guy lifting weights.

But these things sell short the promise and weight of this verse. We’ve seen it so many times that our knee-jerk reaction is often, “Yeah, yeah. I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. Yada yada yada.”

Yet if we stop to really consider and analyze it, we’ll find – hidden in plain sight – nothing less than the secret to being content.

Think about it: I can do all things through him who strengthens me.

The very fact of this verse ought to rock us to our core.

Did you know that there is NOTHING you cannot bear with the help of Jesus Christ? Your debt, your sickness, your divorce, your failings, your bankruptcy, your (fill in the blank) – all of these things are bearable. And not only are they bearable, but you can find contentment in them.

If Paul could be content in Roman prison, you can be content in your situation. If Paul was content even when execution was the fate set before his eyes, then you can be content as well.

I say this not as a pep-talk nor as an admonition. The last – believe me, the last – thing I want to do is to sound like I’m talking down to you. I’m certainly not! Rather, I want you to know that this level of contentment, of freedom, of satisfaction, and of peace is available to you if you are a follower of Jesus.

Even if you’re not a follower of Christ, you can make your decision today – you can choose to turn to Him and follow Him – and He will make this available to you as well.

When we really stop to think about it, this is the true “Prosperity Gospel.” Here in the United States, we have a real problem on our hands as a Church. There are preachers – towering figures, some of whom are very nearly household names – that will claim up and down that God always wants to bless you with better circumstances. Many have called this the “Prosperity Gospel.”

‘He wants to bless you with a mansion, with a car, with a big paycheck, with glowing health,’ they say.

But this is wrong. The true “Prosperity Gospel” is laid out before our eyes right here: I can do all things through him who strengthens me. So, so often, God does not change our circumstances. So, so often, our troubles remain just as real after we’ve prayed, fasted, and sought God earnestly. But they do not need to get the best of us. They do not need to steal our joy.

Believer, we have within us the One who can grant contentment in all things. We have God, our Father, and He is more than capable of strengthening us into contentment.

All we need do is turn to Him in seriousness and trust Him in faith.

Guess what? If you pray to Him but have no intention of receiving His instruction or obeying what He says, then you’re probably going to come up empty. Will He still be with you? Yes. But you will not feel that overriding, all-consuming peace and contentment that comes with a life that is sold-out for the Lord.

Turn to Him.

Turn to Him in full, and trust that He holds you in the palm of His hand. Trust that the Lord of all creation can and will bless you with contentment. Seek after God’s transformation of your mind rather than transformation of your circumstances.

You’ll be surprised at what happens. All of this goes on in your heart, right down at the core of who you are.

Once you’ve fully trusted Him and sold out to Him, the sickness won’t seem quite as scary. Financial woes will seem temporary and earthly. Someday, you know in your heart of hearts, you will be rid of them. Singleness feels less weighty, less lonely. Dark days don’t seem so dark any longer.

Brethren, this is the message that is so often missing in our lives today: that you can be content no matter your circumstances. If you rest in Christ, if you put all you have in Him, you will receive the peace that only He can give. He waits for you to simply shoulder everything onto Him, to turn to Him and to submit fully to Him.

Admittedly, this is not easy. Sometimes, I think it would be easier if God had just handed us a checklist of stuff – a take and bake recipe, if you will – to contentment in all circumstances. But that isn’t how it works.

Instead, it requires effort. It requires doing things that go against what your fleshly instincts tell you to. It requires you to call upon the power of the Holy Spirit and then live in that power. It requires your willingness to obey. It requires long hours of pressing into Him in prayer and in seeking.

But in the end, it is all worth it.

In the end, you will find Christ’s satisfaction, no matter what season of life you might be in.

If you seek Him with all your heart, you will find Him. You will then truly be able to do all things through Him, because He strengthens you. Even if He does not change your circumstances, He promises rest and peace. He promises life.

He promises that He will grant you freedom from the fears of this life, if only you will press hard into Him.

If you do that, you will have found the secret to being content… no matter what.

The Storm Front

I grew up in the Midwest. In the Midwest, we have all types of weather.

There are heat waves. There are blizzards. There are cold outbreaks that make it so cold your face hurts the second you walk out the front door.

We have thunderstorms, flooding rains, hailstorms, and windstorms. We have tornadoes. And sometimes, we get all of these springtime weather events – the wind, the rain, the hail, the booming thunder – rolled together into one.

Whenever a cold front comes to visit in the spring or summer, you can get a huge line of thunderstorms to form ahead of it. This is called a squall line, and these things can bring some pretty scary weather.

They can bring damaging winds, winds capable of tearing the rooves off of houses. They can bring large hail that ruins crops and smashes windows. They can bring tornadoes, which slice through towns and take out longstanding buildings. They can bring flooding rains, which cause water to flow across streets like a whitewater rapid.

These are some pretty terrifying storms. Yet they often come with their own sort of reward. Before the storm hits, you’re usually suffering beneath the heat and humidity of summer. You walk outside and your forehead starts to sweat within seconds. Nobody wants to work in this type of heat.

But then comes the cold front, which – after an evening of furious thunder and driving rain – changes out that summertime mugginess for the clarity of dry, tranquil weather. It’s not uncommon for the high to hit 95 degrees one day, have severe storms that evening, and then to enjoy weather in the 70s the next day.

As I’ve stepped back to consider this, I have come to realize that this is a portrait of what often goes on in our own lives. We experience the stifling heat building up – the pressures, the conflicts, etc. – and it eventually reaches a point where it becomes practically unbearable. Then the storm front hits and all is washed clean.

We can breathe. We can think. There is release. There is peace.

God has a way of using intense trials to clear our lives of debris.

Before the trial – whatever it may be – we often get our priorities mixed up. We put things ahead of God. We start chasing our own desires, plotting our own paths, and seeking our own will.

Yet God does not intend for us to do life that way. He intends for us to do life His way, which is ultimately the best way. Whether we believe it or not, He has a will for each and every one of us. He has a personal will for each one of us; for you, for me, for everyone who is His child and is called according to His purpose.

God is a God of good gifts and free support. Yet when we start to walk out from underneath His proverbial umbrella, we step out into the rain. We expose ourselves to all sorts of things that might be bad for us.

Case-in-point: I’ve known lots of Christians who have gone through seasons of their lives when they were not walking in God’s will. I am one of them.

In one particular season of my life – a season where I was most assuredly not walking in the will of God – I became involved with sinful behavior that I had no business being involved with. I knew it was wrong. I knew I was disobeying God. But I did it anyway.

Over the weeks and months, I built up guilt and shame. I would cry every time I even thought about God. What I was doing broke my heart, but my flesh pulled harder than my soul. I kept indulging in this sin. I kept disobeying God, running from Him.

And then the storm came.

For a month and a half, I was crushed. The person who I’d done all this sinful stuff with, and who I thought I was in love with, decided to leave me. It came out of nowhere, at least at the time.

One day, she and I were tight.

The next day, she left.

This marked the beginning of a period of crying, seeking the Lord, and searching for answers. It was a time of great repentance. If I could have donned sackcloth and anointed myself with ashes, I would have done so. I was like David after his sin with Bathsheba.

I was crushed.

You see, all that heat and mugginess had crept into my life. It had gotten to the point where I was unable to work, unable to focus, unable to do anything except follow my sinful flesh. But then God called me back to reality. It was a tough break; it meant many days and hours of mourning, tears, repentance, and pain. It was a time of great shame and a feeling of great loss.

But it happened, and once the storm was over, I felt better. I was refreshed. I truly felt at peace and ready to pursue the Lord wholeheartedly once more.

Today, brothers and sisters, I have come to say this: although the storm may be intense, it is often God’s way of bringing peace. It feels uncomfortable, tumultuous, as though your world has been flipped upside down.

Storms are rough. Life gets tough.

But God is with you through it all. And when He brings you out the other side, once the storm clouds have rolled away and the sun has risen on a new day, you may find that it’s easier to breathe and easier to focus.

Do not fear the storm. Trust God in the midst of it, as Paul did when he was imprisoned. Trust God in all things; have faith. Put on His love for you.

He will not lead you astray.

Tagged : / / / / /

The Power of God

God is powerful. I mean really powerful. In fact, the power of God is something that we cannot really comprehend. Just when we think we’ve got some kind of handle on it, something new is revealed and our minds are blown again.

Sometime last spring, I stumbled across what is perhaps, in my opinion, one of the greatest sermons of all time. It was given by a preacher with the name of S.M. Lockridge in the early 1980’s out of Calvary Baptist Church in San Diego, California. I think it’s only an excerpt (click here to listen on YouTube), but it sure is impactful.

Anyway, a major theme that runs through this message is one that I needed – and continue to need – to hear. You see, Lockridge quotes many Bible verses throughout this 14-minute long video. He visits the Old Testament, where he references Psalms and Isaiah. He also visits the New Testament, quoting from Matthew, Revelation, and Mark. And all throughout these verses, he is proclaiming a message of great consequence….

God is powerful. All powerful.

He is so great, so far above us in every way, that we cannot even begin to comprehend His outstanding glory and might. He is to us as the sun is to a speck of dust.

Just think about that for a moment.

Genesis 1 tells us that He created the world in seven days. A huge ball of rock, metal, soil, and water, weighing in at a combined 13,170,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 pounds, and He just snapped His fingers and it appeared! By contrast, the biggest structures in human history took decades, even centuries, to build. If we were to unite today as a species and direct all our efforts into constructing the biggest thing ever, we couldn’t build in a century what God did in a split second.

But our Creator didn’t stop there.

While He was forming the earth and separating out its seas and continents, He also created the entire universe. Now the universe is an unfathomably huge place – it’s so wide, our most powerful telescopes cannot see to its end. Light is the fastest thing known to science, and it takes 4 years to travel to earth from the nearest star aside from the sun. It’s estimated that the light from the edge of the observable universe would have to travel for over 12 billion years before reaching us.

Yet God created it all with the gesture of His hand. It takes the fastest thing in the universe an unimaginable amount of time to cross it, yet God just pointed his finger and said, “let it exist!” And it obeyed. Atoms popped into being, energy formed, stars and planets and solar systems came to be. He spoke, and it was so. The great nothingness obeyed Him at His word.

He is extraordinary, and worthy of all praise simply on the nature of who He is.

Now, here’s where things get even more mind-bending: that same God who made the earth also made you and me. The same God who can think an entire planet into existence knitted you together in your mother’s womb. He knew how all your days would turn out before they ever came to pass. And furthermore, although we are all sinners, this God gave us His only Son. He sent Christ to come, live a perfect life, and then die on the cross so that we would be justified and made alive in Him. The God who made the sun, the moon, the earth and the stars… He also made you. He lived for you, died for you, and arose once more for you.

Is that incredible or what?

Here in this world, we’d be absolutely shocked if the president, the prime minister, the king or the queen – whoever our leader is, wherever we live – came up to us, addressed us by name, and offered to take us out to dinner. We’d be shell-shocked. Beyond stunned.

Yet what many of us fail to realize – and I myself used to be one of them – is that we do have a King who knows us. We have a King who cares about us. We have a King who laid down His very life on Calvary so that we could live forever with Him.

That King is Jesus Christ.

That King has supremacy over all creation. It says in Colossians 1:15-17,

“The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”

Yes, all things hold together in Him. The stars shine because of Him – He is the one who allows them to go on doing so. If Christ gave the word, the sun would suddenly cease to give its light. If He gave the word, water would flow uphill. If He gave the word, the planets would fly out of their orbits and careen into the blackness of outer space.

All things, everything that ever has been or will be, hold together in Him. And that same Christ desires a relationship with you.

He desires you to lay down your life and come to Him, surrendering all you are to all He is. He is Lord, and He is Savior. He is Friend, and He is King. He is everything, or He is nothing. He gives life, and without Him there is none.

He calls to you. Will you answer?

For the Christian, will you answer His call to keep up the fight? Temptation is powerful. We all make mistakes: I have made them, you have made them. Our adversary, the devil, is always working against us. He’s warring for our joy, for our very life, and he is seeking whom he may devour. Do not let him devour you. Hold strong to the Lord, serving Him with a willing heart, no matter what you’ve done or how far you’ve slid. God is powerful enough to deliver you and set you upright. If He spoke the universe into being, imagine what He can do with your life if you’ll let Him.

Now, to the one who does not believe, will you answer His call in your heart? You can fill that emptiness within you with a lot of things. You can fill it with drugs; you can fill it with money. You can fill it with relationships, or even volunteer work. You can fill it with a career, or with achievement.

But it’ll never be enough.

Only Jesus Christ is sufficient. Only He can truly fill you with light and with love, with peace and contentment.

Come to Him. For He says, “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” (John 10:10). Lay down your life, surrender to Him, and know true peace, joy, and contentment forevermore.

Tagged : / / / / / /

Who do You Live For?

Today’s culture is selling you something. It’s written all over the commercials you see on TV. It’s in books, it’s in songs; it’s in movies and shows. It is the driving force behind almost every popular movement that springs up, dominates the airwaves, and then dies down again. It saturates our academics and forms the foundation of our commerce.

It is all-reaching, and no matter who you are or where you live, there is no escaping it.

Do you know what it is?

It’s selfishness.

We live in what is perhaps the most self-centered culture the world has ever known. Commercials bombard us on a daily basis with the promise that we can “have it all.” Self-help books peddle the idea that the only way to be happy is to ‘learn to love yourself.’ Business ethics have largely gone by the wayside, and the preferred method to get ahead is to be the one who pushes everyone else down in a ruthless climb up the corporate ladder.

The phrase used to be, “Nice guys finish first.” But in recent times, that’s been replaced by the far more sinister, “Nice guys finish last.”

Indeed, the world’s teaching is that the one sure way of getting ahead in life is to focus entirely on you. How often have you heard people say that they’re “going to focus more on me?” How often have you been told that you must “love yourself, no matter what?” Or what about this one: “Your only responsibility is to yourself?”

Let me ask another question: is this a right way to go about life, or is it dreadfully wrong? If we go to the Bible, we’ll see the answer provided to us as clear as day.

We will start with a visit to 2 Timothy 3, concentrating on verses 1 through 5.

“But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God— having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people.”

That’s quite an indictment on these men and women. Nearly twenty different words and phrases are used to describe their conduct, not one of which is positive. Now, note also that verse 1 contains within it the phrase, “in the last days.” On this topic, the MacArthur Study Bible commentary states,

“The word for “times” had to do with epochs, rather than clock or calendar time. Such savage, dangerous eras or epochs will increase in frequency and severity as the return of Christ approaches. The church age is fraught with these dangerous movements accumulating strength as the end nears. The last days. This phrase refers to this age, the time since the first coming of the Lord Jesus.”

Following from this, it’s clear that we are indeed living “in the last days,” and have been for nearly two thousand years. However, as the time of Christ’s return draws nearer, the severity of sinfulness and deceit will increase, giving rise to an era marked by increasingly selfish, dominating, calloused, and unloving individuals.

Sound familiar?

Moving on, James 3:16 gives us another (much shorter) passage on the vices of selfishness.

“For where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there will be disorder and every vile practice.”

Once more, we see another fundamental force of our culture outlined in this text. How many times have you felt a hot surge of anger when someone else got what you thought you deserved? We all feel this way at times – I certainly have – but many people in today’s world are allowing this type of behavior to define them. We are taught by prevailing cultural wisdom that jealousy is good, and that it’s perfectly healthy – even expected – to have selfish desires that nearly control your life.

Yet the Bible tells us that wherever jealousy, wherever hardness of heart, wherever self-seeking, self-centered ambitions exist, there will be consequences. Such is our society today – a culture filled with selfishness and envy, a culture where revenge is looked upon as a virtue. It’s a society wherein parents are subservient to children, abusive spouses are ubiquitous, and minor disagreements are met with furious retaliation.

It’s all the horror and darkness in this world that causes many an idealist to look out the window and muse something like, ‘We humans are terrible. We ruin everything we touch. We wreck the environment and oppress the weak, and we just carry on like nothing is wrong.’

Indeed, to the one without Christ, there is no hope. We live in a dark world, a world filled with selfishness and injustice and sin, and that’s not going to change, at least not for now. But for those who have Jesus, there is hope. There is hope overflowing, hope that never ends, hope that abounds to the ends of the earth.

You see, God is not mocked. He is not caught by surprise. He knows our predicaments – every one of them – and yet He chose to send His only Son to die for us that we might have life, and that in that life He might have the ultimate glory.

He came to testify; He came to die, He came to be buried and then triumphantly rise again to the glory of God, having dealt sin a mortal blow. On that cross, Jesus Christ gained a resounding victory over death. He put Satan to utter shame. He destroyed the works of the devil. When He arose, He got up with every bit of power He possessed – which is to say, all the power there ever has been or ever will be – and He spread His arms wide.

He told us, in John 14:6,

“I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you had known me, you would have known my Father also.  From now on you do know him and have seen him.”

What a promise we have in our God! What an amazing Lord He is, that He would leave His place in heaven to humble Himself to the point of death on a cross.

With His sacrifice, God opened the door to Himself. He opened the door to eternal life in Him, to peace in this life, to abundant love in our hearts. But what He also said was this, in Luke 9:23

“…If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me.”

Today, most are familiar with the idea of salvation by faith alone – this is known by the Latin term Sola Fide – but comparatively rarer in teaching is the material found in Luke 9:23. Quite simply, to follow Jesus, we must deny ourselves, take up our cross day-by-day, and follow after Him. This isn’t optional. It isn’t an add-on, or a side activity. Following Christ requires one thing – your entire life. All you are, all your dreams, desires, faults, flaws, failings, and talents, belong to Him if you wish to follow Him.

Thus, I ask you: who do you live for? Modern culture teaches us that the highest purpose of life is to live for you. The Bible, on the other hand, teaches the exact opposite: to truly live, you must live for Christ. In Galatians 2:20, the Apostle Paul makes an incredible declaration of faith and surrender to the Lord,

“I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”

These are not the words of a man who begrudgingly served the Lord Jesus. Paul speaks his praises without reservation, without inhibition. His writings are full of reverent obedience and heartfelt joy towards God, and towards the Son who brought him out of a life of sin and into a life of eternal significance.

Paul was content wherever he went. His joy and faith lied in Jesus, and Jesus Christ never failed him. Jesus never failed any of His apostles. He never failed any of His followers. He is the great shepherd who lays down His life for the flock, and who came to earth to serve the lowest of the low, that He might ascend to the highest of the high.

Christ, the suffering servant, the one who paid it all, now sits at the right hand of God. And He will never fail. He cannot fail! It is no more possible for Him to lose than it is for fire to become ice, or for the sun to become the moon.

But to truly know Him, to truly receive Him, we must surrender to Him. We must abide in Him. We must “take up our cross” and follow Him.

This will mean forsaking some of our own desires. It will mean giving up some of our perceived “freedom” to act in whatever way we want.

It will mean that we no longer live for us, but for Him. All those ideas about “focusing on me” or “being responsible only for myself” will be thrown out the window. Our idols, whatever they may have been or are, must be exchanged in favor of the One who is truly worthy of our worship and admiration.

Lay down your life and live for Christ. He is the only One who cannot fail, and the only One worthy of all praise and glory. He is the greatest friend you can ever have, the strongest king, and the closest of all brothers.

Tagged : / / / / / / / / /