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Pastor Chris White says to all of you: HELLO MY
FRIENDS. May the Lord bless you today. HOLA MIS AMIGOS. Que el Señor los
bendiga.
The Bible presents several different resources
to aid us in our effort to overcome sin. In this lifetime, we will never be
perfectly victorious over sin (1 John 1:8), but that should still be our
goal. With God’s help, and by following the principles of His Word, we can
progressively overcome sin and become more and more like Christ.
The first resource the Bible mentions in our effort to overcome sin is the Holy
Spirit. God has given us the Holy Spirit so we can be victorious in Christian
living. God contrasts the deeds of the flesh with the fruit of the Spirit
in Galatians 5:16-25. In that passage we are called
upon to walk in the Spirit. All believers already possess the Holy Spirit, but
this passage tells us that we need to walk in the Spirit, yielding to His
control. This means choosing to consistently follow the Holy Spirit’s prompting
in our lives rather than following the flesh.
The difference the Holy Spirit can make is demonstrated in the life of Peter,
who, before being filled with the Holy Spirit, denied Jesus three times—and
this after he had said he would follow Christ to the death. After being filled
with the Spirit, he spoke openly and strongly to the Jews at Pentecost.
We walk in the Spirit as we try not to quench the Spirit’s promptings (as
spoken of in 1 Thessalonians 5:19)
and seek instead to be filled with the Spirit—that is, to be fully under the
Spirit’s control (Ephesians 5:18–21). How
is one filled with the Holy Spirit? If sin is what
grieves the Spirit and hinders His filling, then obedience to God is how the
filling of the Spirit is maintained. We should pray that we be filled with the
Spirit, immerse ourselves in God’s Word (Colossians 3:16), and walk in obedience to
God’s commands. This gives the Spirit freedom to work within our thoughts and
actions.
The Word of God, the Bible, says that God has given us His Word to equip us for
every good work (2 Timothy 3:16-17). It
teaches us how to live and what to believe, it reveals to us when we have
chosen wrong paths, it helps us get back on the right path, and it helps us to
stay on that path. Hebrews 4:12 tells
us that the Word of God is living and powerful, able to penetrate to our hearts
to root out and overcome the deepest sins of heart and attitude. The psalmist
talks about its life-changing power in-depth in Psalm 119. Joshua was told that the key to
success in overcoming his enemies was not to forget this resource but instead
to meditate on it day and night and obey it. This he did, even when what God
commanded did not make sense militarily, and this was the key to his victory in
his battles for the Promised Land.
The Bible is a resource that we too often treat lightly. We give token service
to it by carrying our Bibles to church or reading a daily devotional or a
chapter a day, but we fail to memorize it, meditate on it, or apply it to our
lives; we fail to confess the sins it reveals or praise God for the gifts it
reveals to us. When it comes to the Bible, we are often either anorexic or
bulimic. We either take in just enough to keep us alive spiritually by eating
from the Word (but never ingesting enough to be healthy, thriving Christians),
or we come to feed often but never meditate on it long enough to get spiritual
nutrition from it.
It is important, if you have not made a habit of daily studying and memorizing
God’s Word, that you begin to do so. Some find it helpful start a journal. Make
it a habit not to leave the Word until you have written down something you have
gained from it. Some record prayers to God, asking Him to help them change in
the areas that He has spoken to them about. The Bible is the tool the Spirit
uses in our lives (Ephesians 6:17), an
essential and major part of the armor that God gives us to fight our spiritual
battles (Ephesians 6:12-18).
A third crucial resource in our battle against sin is prayer. Again, it is a
resource that Christians often give lip service to but make poor use of. We
have prayer meetings, times of prayer, etc., but we do not use prayer in the
same way as the early church (Acts 3:1; 4:31; 6:4; 13:1-3). Paul repeatedly mentions how he
prayed for those he ministered to. God has given us wonderful promises concerning
prayer (Matthew 7:7-11; Luke 18:1-8; John 6:23-27; 1 John 5:14-15), and Paul includes prayer in
his passage on preparing for spiritual battle (Ephesians 6:18).
How important is prayer to overcoming sin in our lives? We have Christ’s words
to Peter in the Garden of Gethsemane, just before Peter’s denial. As Jesus
prays, Peter is sleeping. Jesus wakes him and says, “Watch and pray so that you
will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the body is weak” (Matthew 26:41). We, like Peter, want to do
what is right but are not finding the strength. We need to follow God’s
admonition to keep seeking, keep knocking, keep asking—and He will give us the
strength that we need (Matthew 7:7). Prayer is
not a magic formula. Prayer is simply acknowledging our own limitations and
God’s inexhaustible power and turning to Him for that strength to do what He
wants us to do, not what we want to do (1 John 5:14-15).
A fourth resource in our war to conquer sin is the church, the fellowship of
other believers. When Jesus sent His disciples out, He sent them out two-by-two
(Mark 6:7). The missionaries in Acts did not go
out one at a time, but in groups of two or more. The Bible commands us not to
forsake the assembling of ourselves together but to use that time for
encouraging one another in love and good works (Hebrews 10:24). It tells us to confess our
faults to one another (James 5:16). In the
wisdom literature of the Old Testament, we are told that as iron sharpens iron,
so one man sharpens another (Proverbs 27:17). There
is strength in numbers (Ecclesiastes 4:11-12).
Many Christians find that having an accountability partner can be a huge
benefit in overcoming stubborn sins. Having another person who can talk with
you, pray with you, encourage you, and even rebuke you is of great value.
Temptation is common to us all (1 Corinthians 10:13). Having an accountability
partner or an accountability group can give us the final dose of encouragement
and motivation we need to overcome even the most stubborn of sins.
Sometimes victory over sin comes quickly. Other times, victory comes more
slowly. God has promised that as we make use of His resources, He will
progressively bring about change in our lives. We can persevere in our efforts
to overcome sin because we know that He is faithful to His promises.
Thank you to Got Questions Ministries
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