Monday, May 7, 2018

Where Is the Battle?


I have never met a person who does not struggle. Yes, there are those who are better at hiding it than others. I should know, I had a nice shiny mask to wear when I didn’t want you to see me struggle.
One of the biggest struggles of my life had to do with what I believed regarding my standing with God. When I was 21, I was two weeks away from moving to North Florida to attend a ministry college. I attended a youth camp with some younger guys. On the last night of camp, the camp pastor preached a sermon from Matthew 13 regarding the parable of the wheat and tares. By the end of the sermon, I had this overwhelming feeling that I could be a tare. If you are not familiar with the parable, the tare is the fake. I felt like a big fat fake! I heard this loud accusation in my thoughts that I wasn’t really a Christian. This new thought produced doubt at a level beyond what I could handle.
I spent the next 12 years wrestling with this doubt. During that time, I battled with a couple of major depression episodes and a lot of minor depression. The minor depression become so familiar, most of the time I didn’t even realize I was depressed. It was only coming out of it and looking back that I recognized the depression.
What was going on inside me during this time? I realize every person’s journey is their own, but being human, we all struggle with the same root issues. We are all driven to get our needs met. Of course, there are the obvious physical needs, but I’m not talking about those. We have deep inner needs of love, worth, significance, adequacy, and security. As I look back on that deep struggle, I realize the struggle touched on all those needs. Without the assurance of my salvation, being loved, worthwhile, significant, adequate, and secure came into question. I didn’t walk around thinking about these needs, but I constantly felt it.
We are all constantly exposed to stressors. A stressor is anything we prefer to avoid. They can be big or small. When we encounter a stressor, we immediately process the stressor with our mind. In that processing, we consider past experiences and feelings, and then we factor in the positives and negatives of the stressor. We also contemplate as to how that stressor will affect our future. All this processing leads to a belief. As soon as the belief is formed, there will be an emotional and behavioral response. If the emotional response is heavy, such as anger, depression, fear, anxiety, panic, etc., we immediately want to resolve the heavy emotion. The awful emotions now become a stressor that has to be resolved, along with the original stressor. This desire for resolve also determines the behavioral response.
Without understanding where the true battle lies, we all look back to the stressor as the cause of our problem. Since the stressor is the problem, we attempt to control the persons or situations that form the stressor. Of course, when you attempt to control people or situations (which usually involve others), it ultimately doesn’t work. When it doesn’t work, we repeat the cycle. This leads to more conflict and control. Now we are trapped in a futile cycle that not only hurts us, but hurts others in the process.
If the stressor is not the problem, then what is the problem? The true battle takes place in the mind. You will never experience a stressor-free life, but you can experience a life with much less stress. Yes, you heard me right. Change, leading to victory, happens when you and I are believing the truth. No matter what the stressor is, it is possible to walk through that stressor believing the truth. Correct belief won’t change the circumstances, but it will change you and me.
At the end of that 12-year battle with doubt, there was an encounter with God where I started believing the truth. That experience changed my life forever. Something happened at the seminary that brought all my doubt to a head. I thought I had it under control, so much so, I believed it was gone. When this moment came, the doubt came crashing down like a mountain. I went before God and prayed something like this:
God! I’m tired of this struggle. I have done everything I can think of to make it go away. I have prayed to receive you into my heart many times and nothing has changed. I’m still struggling as much as ever. So, I have come to this conclusion: If I die and go to hell, then that is where I go; if I die and go to heaven, then that is where I go. My destination is out of my hands, it is totally up to You. Amen!
Something happened in that instant. It was like a heavy fog lifted and the sun came out shining very bright. For the first time in 12 years, I truly gave up. There was this amazing peace that settled over me and into me. I heard God speak in my mind. He said something like this, “Tom, I have waited for you to realize that your security was never in your hands. You have been trying to secure yourself, and you can’t - only I can! I have chosen you, to love you. I only want you to believe and accept that.”
In that instance of truth, God Himself met my needs for love, worth, significance, adequacy, and security. I had been trying to secure these needs for myself. For years, I wore the mask “good Christian,” but behind the mask was the belief that I am not good. God’s truth in that moment crushed the lie and lifted me out of my hole. Don’t miss this: God did it, not me!
We all struggle with external battles that can become internal. We can’t control other people or circumstances. People can say and do hurtful things to us. And certainly, it does hurt. Living the life God meant for us is not about avoiding hurt and loss. It is about living through it while being loved by our Father. The true battle takes place in our mind. On one front of the battle is God speaking truth that excites our God-desires. On the other front is the enemy with all his lies that can tickle our ears and appeal to the flesh desires (Eph. 6:12). If we listen to God, the battle ceases to be internal and then we can walk in peace.
If you are in Christ, the war is already won. You don’t have to fight these battles; the enemy is defeated. You only have to believe the truth. Believing what God says will change you!
“For though we live as human beings, we do not wage war according to human standards, for the weapons of our warfare are not human weapons, but are made powerful by God for tearing down strongholds. We tear down arguments and every arrogant obstacle that is raised up against the knowledge of God, and we take every thought captive to make it obey Christ.” (2 Cor. 10:3-5, NET)

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Desire


There is a confusion regarding “desire.” The message I have been taught (or maybe caught) is my desires are anti-God. If I want to follow God and be obedient to Him, I must surrender my desires. It seems that my desires will lead me away from my relationship with God.
If I could somehow operate in this world without following desires, I would need to be able to turn desires off. I don’t know about you, I haven’t found the switch! I believe to live without desire is to cease being human. We are made as beings who have desires.
Paul said, “… Walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” (Gal. 5:16, NASB) “Walk” is always referring to acting out or behaving. It is the motion of our lives. The word “walk” and the phrase “carry out” are synonymous; they both imply action. There are two possible actions that can be pursued in this verse. One action has to do with the things of God, whereas the other doesn’t.
When Paul said “desire of the flesh,” he was not proclaiming all desires to be fleshly. There are also desires of the heart. In Romans 6:18-19, Paul said to the Roman believers they were now slaves of righteousness. He indicated their obedience emanated from their hearts. The Psalmist said in Psalm 37:4, “Delight yourself in the LORD; and He will give you the desires of your heart.” (NASB) It seems “desire” is something natural for humans to contain.
We all wrestle with conflicting desires. Don’t make the mistake of seeing yourself as a dualistic person – both good and bad. That leads you down the path of believing you have two natures. The work of the cross did not leave us in that desperate condition. The “desire of the flesh” does not come from our new hearts (Ez. 36:26). That “desire” comes from the flesh. The flesh is an imposter. The flesh is something that is in us that is not us. The flesh impacts our thoughts, emotions, and will, but it is not our master.
I have come to realize when I am struggling with a fleshly desire, my heart is telling me something very different. In those moments, I wish I could just buck-up and do the right thing because it is the right thing. However, God does not desire for us to operate in this manner. He wants to empower us with His life, His very presence, to enable us to “walk” or behave in a godly manner.
Here is how I would paraphrase Galatians 5:16: Let the godly desires of your heart be animated by Holy Spirit so you can behave godly. While doing this, the fleshly desires will not be acted on.
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What is the desire of your heart? If you belong to God, that desire is pure and holy. It is safe to own it. After all, God is the One who gave it to you!
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