The Common Saint

Thoughts and Meditations of an Ordinary Christian

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    The LORD is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. The LORD is good to all, and his mercy is over all that he has made. Psalm 145:8 - 9
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    The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
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Archive for the ‘Fighting for the Faith’ Category

The Cure for Spiritual Adultery

Posted by Kyle on May 24, 2008

“You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” James 4:4

The world is a strange woman, an adulteress, seeking to seduce me, to draw my affections away from Christ, much like the adulteress in Proverbs 7. I have been joined to Christ and and the world is His rival…His enemy, and as such should be mine also. What we mean by the “world” is the system that seeks to conform us to it’s mold (Rom. 12:2). It is the system that is opposed to God. You feel it’s pressure through various things, especially the media. It is “arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God.” (2 Cor. 10:5). The world appeals to the evil principle within me and seeks to make me a slave to my former master: sin.

To have a spiritually adulterous heart is to go to bed with the world; to be lured in like the foolish young man in Proverbs. How do I stay true to Christ? Just as I would stay true to my wife. I must know the pitfalls of adultery and the wiles of the seductress. I must know my own weaknesses. But, most of all, I must have an exciting and growing relationship with Christ. In Proverbs 5:18 it says, “rejoice in the wife of your youth” and then goes on to describe what that means. This is the greatest deterrent to infidelity in marriage. In Philippians 4:4 it says, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.” This, I believe, is the greatest deterrent to spiritual infidelity. This is more than just singing a hymn all day. It is a rejoicing, similar to rejoicing in one’s wife. I must know His worthiness in the depths of my being and be totally satisfied with Him. I must experience Him and His joys daily, so much so, that the world appears as something completely repulsive compared to His beauty and splendor. He must be my greatest pleasure. I must be able to gush and sing as the Psalmist:

…in your presence there is fullness of joy;at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” Psalm 16:11

Posted in Fighting for the Faith, Living Out the Faith | Leave a Comment »

Slay the Enemies of Your Soul

Posted by Kyle on May 10, 2008

After the stone sunk into his forehead, Goliath fell to the ground. David then took Goliath’s sword and finished him off by removing his head (1 Sam. 17:48-51). After Saul came back from war, in disobedience he spared king Agag and the best of the livestock. The Scripture says that Samuel took his sword and “hacked” Agag to bits (1 Sam. 15:32-33). Joshua, after the five Amorite kings were brought out of the cave, told his men to place their feet on the neck of each king. He then told them that God would do this to all their enemies. They then killed the kings and hung each of them on a tree (Joshua 10:22-27). Do these seem radical and over-the-top? A little on the fanatical side? A bit too bloody and messy for our day and age? Well, yes, if we were talking about the neighbor down the street that we couldn’t get along with or an annoying telemarketer. In these cases from the Old Testament, however, what we see is a holy hatred toward that which God hates and a zeal and fervor for what God commands. When it came to an enemy of God, God’s enemies were their enemies. God’s enemies (and as a result, Israel’s enemies) were people who were a threat to Israel’s physical and spiritual vitality. They brought oppression, idolatry, and many other things that threatened God’s purposes for Israel. When in battle with God’s enemies, in zeal and fervor, these faithful men of Israel made sure the job was done whole heartedly and completely.

Our battle today as Christians isn’t a physical battle against men but a spiritual one. We have enemies that advance on God’s territory and seek to capture us. These enemies, if not fought zealously, will eventually destroy us and as a result bring reproach to our God. Some of our enemies are external and some are internal (Eph. 6:12, Rom 8:13). External enemies would be the spiritual forces that are portrayed in Ephesians 6:12. These would include Satan and his forces and the general spirit of the age in which we now live. It also includes the world system that bears it’s weight upon us in order to conform us to it’s mold. Internal enemies would be the things that make up the law of sin (Rom.7:21) that still dwells within us. A list of some of these is in Galatians 5:19-21. These enemies that we fight are to be fought with the same zeal, the same fervor, the same hatred as David approaching Goliath or Samuel approaching king Agag. We are to show no mercy and no pity. The stakes are too high.

“Let no man think to kill sin with few, easy, or gentle strokes. He who hath once smitten a serpent, if he follow not on his blow until it be slain, may repent that ever he began the quarrel. And so he who undertakes to deal with sin, and pursues it not constantly to the death” said John Owen the early puritan preacher and theologian. He also said, ” be killing sin or it will be killing you.” As we approach the enemies of our soul, let us pray that we hate them as God hates them. Second, let’s seek to kill them (mortify the deeds of the flesh) with a holy zeal and fervor that God intends. To do otherwise means that it will soon overtake me or it has already.

The start of our battle must be a holy hatred of the thing… God’s hatred towards it. The next is I must go about my task with a holy violence. I don’t want to see the thing just “whimper” but I need to kill it. Each time an enemy of my soul appears taunting me and my God, I must approach it in the name of the Lord my God, draw my sword, and start hacking!

Posted in Fighting for the Faith, Living Out the Faith | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

John Piper on the Prosperity Gospel

Posted by Kyle on May 10, 2008

A great excerpt from one of John Piper’s sermons regarding the prosperity gospel. The prosperity gospel is not the true gospel of Jesus Christ, but a dangerous error that we need to be aware of.

Posted in Fighting for the Faith | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »