Skip to main content

When Temptation Holds Out Pleasure.

Can a dead thing make you happy? Strange question, I know. In the moments when we’re vacillating between obeying God or disobeying God, though, the question might help identify who or what we are really believing in for joy.
For me, a lot of my life was wasted on the assumption that dead things were the best things. Dead things being another way to describe “sinful things” all the ways we try to be happy when we’re dead in our trespasses and sins (Ephesians 2:1). I intentionally and persistently chose behaviors and affections that dishonored God and neighbor, because I figured they had the ability to satisfy me.
And in some ways, they did. If the experience of a particular sin felt abominable to the sinner, they’d most likely replace it with another sin that felt good. Sinners don’t just sin because, being sinners, they have to. Sinners sin because they want to they enjoysinning (John 3:19). Being made in the image of God, we were made for joy, but not the shallow and temporary joy we feel when we sin.
When Your Life Ends
All of the dead things I loved the things I said, thought, did, talked about, watched, walked in, listened to, promoted, and went to bed with had a measure of satisfaction in them, but they were never enough. I was made for an infinite God, so how could some little idol make me whole or happy?
“Though I am no longer a slave to my sins, I am still tempted to believe that they, and not God, will provide joy.”
I don’t mean the kind of happiness that can fit inside of time. I mean a happiness that extends beyond the time we have here. That’s the caveat sin doesn’t want you to think about: After you’ve had your fill of everything but God, and you stand before the Holy One, will the smile that sinful delights gave you hold up under the wrath of God?
Thankfully, the Holy One is also the Merciful One, whose Son, Jesus Christ, enjoyed his life to the full as in, he never once trusted dead things to make him happy. What gave him joy was loving his Father and sinful people. Having died (as we all should) and rose (as we all can), he now empowers us to walk as he always has: as obedient children (1 Peter 1:14).
What Jesus accomplished on the cross has the power to set us free from sin, and set us up for joy. But how?
Obedient Delight
When Jesus triumphed over death and sin, he finally cleared the path for our feet to walk into joy. He reconciled us to God(Romans 5:10), in whose presence are pleasures forevermore (Psalm 16:11). Jesus himself is the bread of life (John 6:35), the only one able to satisfy the body fully and completely. He is the fountain of living water (John 7:37–38), the one who quenches all our thirsts. He’s the good shepherd (John 10:11), the one who leaves the needy without want. Jesus brought us into fellowship with God, and by doing so, he’s brought us where real happiness is found (1 Peter 3:18). What Christ has done has made us alive to all that God is. Now we can live as he would have us live, in obedient delight.
From Genesis 1 on, obedience is what God has demanded from his creatures (Deuteronomy 13:4; John 14:15). The perfection of the garden wasn’t without boundaries set in place by our God (Genesis 2:16–17). Israel stood at the bottom of a mountain they couldn’t touch, as they listened to the terrifying voice of God (Hebrews 12:18–20). Jesus, God in the flesh, not intending to abolish the law, brought it into our world not only to be obeyed in deed but joyfully from the heart (Matthew 5:28). The writers of the Epistles, gathering their commands as led by the Spirit of God, continue to teach us how to love God and neighbor for the glory of God and for our joy.
More Real Than Temptation
What’s difficult for me, and perhaps for you, is that though I am a new creature, though I am no longer a slave to loving dead things, I am still tempted to believe at times that they, and not God, will provide the joy I want. That obedience to God would kill, and not increase, my joy.
“All of the dead things I loved had a measure of satisfaction in them, but they were never enough.”
But oh, the irrationality of temptation. If anything, obedience creates the opportunity for joy. Fleeing sexual immorality (1 Corinthians 6:18) sets me free to experience the sustaining power of God. Choosing to forgive (Colossians 3:13), instead of being vengeful, keeps my heart free from the heaviness of hatred and fills it up with faith, trusting that God will handle every wrong done to me (Romans 12:19). Casting my cares at the feet of God, the one who has told me that he cares for me, unclutters my mind, clearing the way for the peace that’s eluded me (1 Peter 5:7).
Often, our temptations, however, feel more tangible than his promises. When they do, remember that God is alive (Hebrews 7:25). Since that is the case, his word is also alive (Hebrews 4:12) and so is your hope (1 Peter 1:3). We are not miserable people to be pitied, as if Christ has not risen from the dead (1 Corinthians 15:19–20). We are no longer dead in our trespasses, but we have been made alive together with Christ (Ephesians 2:4–5) resurrected to live delighting in all that God is and empowered to live delighting in obedience to the one we love.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Good one

Popular posts from this blog

GOD VS. FORNICATORS @SEX + NO MARRIAGE #fornication #fornicating #fornicated

IT'S TIME FOR US TO LEARN THE SEX LAWS OF GOD ALMIGHTY.  Is God going to forgive those who refuse his laws and rules about sexuality? Or will He punish them?  God already told us (read below). And we thank GOD that there is forgiveness of sins and mistakes available to us, before it's too late.... "Fornication" is defined as "voluntary sexual intercourse between two unmarried persons or two persons not married to each other." "fornicari, ‘to commit fornication,’ from which is derived fornicatio, ‘whoredom, fornication.’" How does God Almighty define a marriage? Jesus Christ teaches: " Have ye not read, that he  [GOD ALMIGHTY]  which made them at the beginning   made them  male  and  female , And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother ,  and shall  cleave  to his  wife : and  they twain shall be  one   flesh ? Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore  ...

8 Mindset Shifts To Help You Tap Into A Sense Of Purpose Any Time, Anywhere.

Jim Collins wrote, "It is impossible to have a great life unless it is a meaningful life. And it is very difficult to have a meaningful life without meaningful work." If you’re in the doldrums, craving more meaning in your work life, these mindset shifts will get you on the path to a greater sense of purpose: 1 . Focus on your values. When your main focus is on all the ways your job is lacking, you can lose sight of the many ways that your job may actually be fulfilling. To get more in touch with the ways your job is meaningful, take some time to consider your   core values . To do this, simply write down your top five values, then reflect on how your job aligns with them. For example, if being of service is important to you, consider the ways your job allows you to serve others. If you discover that there’s too much of a disconnect, it might be time to move on.  2. Take small steps. Although it sounds. romantic to abandon everything, move to Bali, and write your...

Take no OFFENCE in little things.

Question: "How can I learn not to take offense at little things?" Answer: Trying to not take offense is like trying to not think about elephants. If someone says, “Don’t think about elephants,” we automatically think about them. If we focus on trying not to take offense, we will keep thinking about the offense. This principle applies to just about any sin a person can commit. When we focus on a behavior, even in an attempt to eliminate it, the result is more of that behavior. This is just how our minds work. Thankfully, there is another, better way to address this problem. People are lured and enticed into sin as a result of desire—wanting is the beginning of sinning (James 1:14). Every sin or bad behavior begins with desire. Desire itself is not bad; there are many good desires. But the desires that lead to sin are wrong desires, the desires based in false perspectives and misplaced expectations about others and ourselves. To eliminate a bad behavior, we must first dis...