Is it Easier to Be Saved than Lost?
It seems very appropriate that the word dynamite
is a transliteration of the Greek word dunamis, which means
power. The word is not a stranger to those who are students of
the Scriptures. It is one of the colorful adjectives used in
the Bible to describe the gospel of Jesus Christ. Paul wrote,
"For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is
the power (dunamis) of God unto salvation to everyone that
believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek." Romans
1:16.
How few Christians have a true understanding of the
explosive power of the gospel they so lightly profess! If Paul's
words are true, then everyone who possesses the gospel should
also be filled with tremendous power. But is that the case?
Unfortunately, the lives of countless church members are flaccid,
bland, and miserably compromised. Instead of vibrant power there
seems to be discouragement and defeat. What is wrong? Do these
people really believe the gospel or not? And why is the dynamite
so obviously missing in their lives?
The answer must be that many do not truly believe
what they profess. Or else, they have been taught a counterfeit
gospel. Some of the greatest spiritual problems of today are
rooted in a misunderstanding of the gospel. The sad fact is that
millions have no true comprehension of what is afforded through
the gospel, and what it is supposed to do for them. Unaware of
its full provisions, they stumble along, claiming only what their
weak faith is able to encompass. Instead of feasting at the banquet
table of the Lord, these people gather crumbs from under the table
which barely provides enough strength to survive.
They are very much like the "missing heirs"
we have heard so much about. All across America millions of dollars
are stacked up in banks waiting for the true owners to take possession
of the money. In most cases, the heirs are unaware of the wealth
which rightfully belongs to them and which only awaits their demand
and reception. But these millions are nothing compared to the
spiritual riches which still lie untapped by those Christians
who fail to recognize their own unlimited affluence. For no reason,
except their own abysmal failure to claim their true possessions,
most professed Christians are living in wretched poverty and weakness.
SATAN HAS NO POWER
OVER GOD'S CHILDREN
Do you know why these millionaires are living like
paupers? Because they have allowed the devil to intimidate them.
He has lied to them about one of their most basic privileges.
We need to unmask the evil one and expose the false claims he
makes concerning his authority. Satan would like for us to believe
that he has unlimited control over this world and all its people.
That is not true. He is not the master of God's children and
has no power at all over the saints. Where Christ lives and reigns,
Satan trembles and flees for his life. GOD IS STRONGER THAN SATAN.
This glorious truth must fill our minds with constant assurance.
Don't misunderstand me. Satan is powerful. We have
all seen the incredible, enslaving influence that he exercises
in the life of a sinner. But when Christ banishes the devil from
that sinner and controls his life, the power for good is far greater
than the evil. If there is more power in Christ than there is
in Satan, then there is more power in grace than there is in sin.
Jesus is not just as strong as the devil, else the warfare between
them might end in a draw or a standoff. But, thank God, Christ
has already won the battle and Satan is a defeated foe right now.
This leads us to the joyful conclusion that the Christian
has somebody stronger helping him to follow Jesus than the sinner
has helping him to follow Satan. This glorious fact should give
tremendous comfort to every child of God. It also raises a very
interesting question. If we have such a powerful defender on
our side, who desires our salvation, is it correct to also conclude
that it's easier to be saved than to be lost? Before any glib
response is made to that question, we need to consider the two
major aspects of salvation. It is very important to understand
whether the question relates to becoming a Christian or
remaining a Christian.
We would like to believe that because Christ is stronger
than Satan, He would facilitate the entire process of salvation
for His children. Yet, we have experienced first hand the painful
struggle with self in making the decision to follow Jesus. There
was a titanic battle between the flesh and the Spirit, and Satan
exploited every human frailty in seeking to hold us in the bondage
of sin. It is doubtful that even one soul would concede that
it is easier to surrender fully to Christ than to continue living
after the flesh. Satan seems to have hundreds of enticing allurements
to make it difficult to break away from the ways of the world.
Furthermore, the devil has one advantage over God
in that he can lie, and make things appear exactly opposite of
what they really are. He can make sin appear unobjectionable
and beautiful. The fallen nature of man, with it's powerful propensity
to sin, has a natural bent toward things which are evil. And
even after conversion, that lower nature can be appealed to by
the delusions and deceptions of Satan. This means that the Christian
must be constantly on the alert for subtle or oblique attacks
from a very clever enemy.
THE WAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR
IS HARD; NOT THE WAY
OF THE OBEDIENT
Does this mean that it will be discouraging to follow
the Christian lifestyle? Will the harrassments of temptation
make it miserable to live for Christ? On the contrary we can
rest in the settled assurance that we are on the winning side
of the great controversy. He that is for us is greater than he
that is against us. Isn't that exciting good news? The conversion
experience transforms the mind and will into a veritable spiritual
fortress. From that control center the Holy Spirit exercises
a subduing influence over the lower fleshly nature. As long as
the faculties are yielded to God the Christian finds relief from
the burden and guilt of sin.
Is this not what the Master meant when He spoke these
words: "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of
me. ... and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is
easy, and my burden is light."? Matthew 11:28-30. Certainly
Jesus was not saying that hardships and conflicts would disappear
from the lives of His followers. Rather He was describing the
joy and peace of mind that would mark the path of the obedient.
When Jesus met Saul on the road to Damascus He said, "It
is hard for thee to kick against the pricks." The meaning
of these words is obvious. He was telling Saul that it was hard
to resist the Holy Spirit. The misery and struggle lay in the
path of disobedience. The way of the transgressor is hard; not
the way of the obedient.
We must stop allowing Satan to brainwash us with
the exaggerated claims of his authority. It is true that under
the reign of sin it is easier to do wrong than it is to do right,
but it is also true that under the reign of grace it is easier
to do right than it is to do wrong. Why should we not assert
the prerogatives that belong to us as the children of God? The
Bible writers did not hesitate to challenge the limited authority
of Satan, and neither should we. Paul wrote: "Moreover the
law entered, that the offence might abound. But where sin abounded,
grace did much more abound: That as sin hath reigned unto death,
even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life
by Jesus Christ our Lord." Romans 5:20, 21.
Note the expression, "as sin hath reigned."
How did sin reign? As a controlling power, did it not? Driving
back every spiritual impulse, the carnal nature overpowered all
the efforts of grace to enter the heart. But notice that grace
abounds "much more" than sin, and "as sin hath
reigned...even so might grace reign"! Obviously, grace will
also be a controlling power which can overpower all the efforts
of sin to enter the life. Isn't that a fantastic assurance?
The devil has no dynamite that compares with the shattering dynamite
of the gospel in a surrendered life.
So we are brought back to the question again: Is
it harder to serve Jesus or Satan? It is undeniable that we have
access to more good power than bad. "If God be for us, who
can be against us?" Someone might answer, "Satan."
And I say, "So what? He flees at the very name of Jesus."
Of course, he wants you to be lost, but God wants you to be saved.
You can win every time by being on the side of the stronger.
Jesus referred to His mastery of devils in these words: "When
a strong man armed keepeth his palace, his goods are in peace:
But when a stronger than he shall come upon him,...he taketh
from him all his armour wherein he trusted, and divideth his spoils."
Luke 11:21, 22.
The strong man referred to is Satan, of course.
He is stronger than the wisest man who ever lived (Solomon), and
the strongest man who ever lived (Samson), and the most perfect
man who ever lived (Adam). But he is not stronger than Jesus.
Christ is that stronger One who "overcame him" and
delivers the captives out of his hands. What an exciting reality!
ALL WILL BE SAVED
WHO DO NOT RESIST
Not only does God have the power to save us, but
He has the desire to do it. It is His will that all should come
to repentance and be saved. What produces repentance in the life?
Paul assures us that "the goodness of God leadeth thee to
repentance." Romans 2:4. How many does He lead toward repentance?
Everyone, of course, since it is His will to save all. Christ
said, "I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all
men unto me." John 12:32. His love does not appeal to a
select few only, but to ALL men. His goodness LEADS every soul
to repent, and His love DRAWS all men to the cross. If this is
true, why are not all men saved? Because they resist the sweet
drawing influence of the Holy Spirit. There is absolutely no
doubt that God actively seeks the salvation of every soul on planet
earth, and He will continue to convict those who have not hardened
themselves in unbelief.
What a thought! The difficult thing to do is to
fight against salvation. Unless we resist, God will persist in
drawing us to Himself. "For the grace of God that bringeth
salvation hath appeared to all men." Titus 2:11. To how
many men? ALL men! Hebrews 2:9 says that Jesus tasted death
"for every man." Again, "God was in Christ, reconciling
the world unto himself." 2 Corinthians 5:19. The only reason
all the world is not saved is simply because the great majority
resists God's provision of saving, sanctifying grace.
So the really hard thing about the way of transgression
is the binding hold that sin has fastened on the mind and body.
This is why it is easier for the unconverted to continue their
course than to turn from death to life. There is nothing within
them capable of challenging the will of the flesh. But we affirm
just as confidently that the born-again Christian will quickly
grow to abhor sin, and will find it an absolutely miserable act
to compromise the conscience by willful disobedience.
So what is the answer to the question, Is it easier
to be saved or to be lost? We must truthfully say that it is
difficult to make the initial turn from the self-life, but after
the heart is surrendered, the path of the Christian, in every
way, is happier and easier to maintain. Let's consider the theology
behind this glorious fact.
The Bible speaks of "being justified freely
by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in
his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins
that are past, through the forbearance of God; To declare, I say,
at this time his righteousness, that he might be just, and the
justifier of him which believeth in Jesus." Romans 3:24-26.
Please notice that only those who "believe in
Jesus" will be personally justified, even though the cross
provides it for everyone. The text says there must be "faith
in his blood." The utility company provides abundant power
and light to my home, but I receive no benefit whatever unless
I push the switches in my home. All of God's saving, cleansing,
justifying power is of no benefit to me in salvation unless I
accept it in a personal way.
Our text also speaks of "remission of sins that
are past" as a part of this justification experience. What
really happens in this act of remission or forgiveness of sins?
Many believe that this is something which happens outside the
life of the believer. They consider that forgiveness changes
God's attitude toward the transgressor because of some celestial
accounting carried out billions of light years away. Is it true
that forgiveness affects God so that He no longer holds something
against me? This is decidedly not the case. Forgiveness does
not change God toward us; it changes us toward Him. God didn't
need to change. He was never wrong. Man was the sinner who needed
to change. He stood condemned before a broken law that could
offer no grace or forgiveness. There was absolutely no righteousness
to be drawn from the law. It could not provide any strength for
right-doing. The sinner was powerless, condemned and helpless
under the scourging of that law.
Paul's terminology makes condemnation to be the opposite
of justification. In Romans 8:1-4 he describes what justification
subjectively accomplishes for the individual. "There is
therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus...For
what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh,
God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for
sin, condemned sin in the flesh: That the righteousness of the
law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but
after the Spirit."
Immediately, we can see that the problem lay in the
flesh which was too weak to obey the law. Something had to be
done in man to bring him back into harmony with God. The Greek
word for righteousness in this verse is dikaima,
which means just requirement. How could the weak-flesh
problem be remedied so that man could fulfill the requirements
of the law?
God provided the full solution when He sent Jesus
in the flesh to obey the law perfectly. It was only because Christ
lived a perfect life of obedience that He is able to impute justification
to each one of us. If that plan of sending Jesus had not taken
care of my weakness in the flesh, then the plan would have failed.
When Christ moves into the life, the condemnation is removed,
the sins are forgiven, and we are empowered to fulfill the requirements
of the law through Christ in us. This is the change which forgiveness
makes in the life.
Forgiveness does not change God, but us. He justifies
the ungodly by taking away the ungodliness. He justifies the
rebellious sinner by taking away the rebellion. When He declares
us righteous, His self-filling word makes us righteous. He does
not declare something which is not true. The One who conquered
Satan now moves into the human heart to provide victory over the
power of sin. The miracle of the new life is described in the
Bible by utterly fantastic expressions. We can have the mind
of Christ (Philippians 2:5), partake of the divine nature (2 Peter
1:4), be filled with all the fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19),
and be made free from sin (Romans 6:18). All this is possible
as grace begins to rule the life, and under this power, Satan
doesn't have a ghost of a chance.
CHRISTIANS NEED NOT
CRINGE OR COWER
All who do not resist the goodness of God will be
led to repentance and salvation, and they should not be intimidated
by the pretended authority of a defeated foe. We must recognize
our position as the sons of God. We should also be unafraid to
acknowledge our authority in Christ over Satan. It is time for
God's children to stop trembling before the threats of a conquered
enemy. Too often in evangelism we watch in dismay as the devil
arranges his competing attractions to take people away from the
Word of God. We say, "Oh my, what are we going to do? The
circus is coming to town during our crusade." The truth
is that Satan should be worried instead of us. He ought to tremble
and say, "What am I going to do? The evangelistic meetings
are coming to town."
God's Spirit-filled children must learn to be more
confident, more aggressive and bold in their assertion of truth
in the name of the mighty, conquering Creator God. We are not
operating in the strength of the flesh but in the power of the
Holy Spirit. He that is for us is greater than he which is against
us. Praise be to God for such assurance!
Now let us consider the question, WHY IS IT NOT HARD
TO SERVE CHRIST WHEN YOU ARE A CHRISTIAN? Please don't mistake
the language of this question. We are talking about a born-again
Christian following Jesus. There is no contention that anyone
else will find it easy to live the Christian life. In fact, there
is probably no more difficult task in the world than trying to
live for Christ in the strength of the flesh. It is quite possible
that many of the degenerative diseases and weaknesses of the body
have been produced by generations of struggle to please God by
human effort. People are wearied and worn out by such futile
activity.
I am not saying that there will be no effort or struggle,
but for the committed Christian the way of obedience is a joy
and delight AND VICTORY IS ASSURED! "For this is the love
of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are
not grievous." 1 John 5:3. The great disciple of love declares
that it is not hard to obey God's law when it is the fruitage
of a love relationship. The Psalmist wrote, "I delight to
do thy will, O my God: yea, thy law is within my heart."
Psalm 40:8. There are two strong reasons why it is not grievous
for the true Christian to serve the Lord. First, he is absolutely
confident that God loves him and will do only what is good for
him. Second, he loves Christ supremely and chooses to run no
risk of displeasing Him.
RESTRICTIONS CAN BE
A DELIGHT
Someone may raise a question about the demands laid
down in the Bible and the penalties attached for transgression.
None can deny that they are there. Do these requirements and
threatened penalties make obedience a hardship? Let me answer
that question with two imaginary interviews. Suppose I have just
submitted to a complete medical examination and the doctor is
giving me a report of his findings. He says, "Joe, I have
bad, bad news for you. Your tests indicate that you are going
to die unless you follow my orders exactly. To save your life,
you must obey what I'm going to tell you, and you must continue
to follow my orders every day for the rest of your life. I've
found that you will be required to eat two or three times a day
in order to save your life. And you must force yourself to do
it day after day as long as you live."
Think about it for a moment. Those are strict rules
with heavy penalties attached. I can lose my life by violating
the law laid down by the doctor. But will it be difficult for
me to follow those orders? Of course not! Why? Simply because
there is a higher law leading me to eat every day anyway. The
physical laws of my being demand that I eat regularly, and I enjoy
doing it. It is for my own good to eat, and I do not have to
force myself to comply with the doctor's rigid requirements.
In the same way there is a law of love operating
in every Christian life which is the natural extension of a personal
relation with Jesus. The commandments and penalties of the Bible
are no threat whatsoever, because the Christian recognizes the
higher law leading him to do these same things that are for his
best good. He does not obey for fear of the penalty, but because
he is happiest obeying the One he loves.
Let's imagine another conversation that will never
actually take place. I am preparing to leave home for a month
of evangelism. My wife tells me goodbye and then solemnly holds
a paper before my face. "Joe," she says, "you
will be gone for a month, and your check will be mailed out before
you return. I just want you to read this paper very carefully.
It is a copy of Maryland Statute No. 392, and it states that
you will be put in jail if you don't send me money to operate
the home. It's not very pleasant in that county jail, so I'll
be expecting you to send that money as soon as you get your check."
What she says is true, but do I need the threat of
that law to make me support my family? No, there is a higher
law of love which makes me want to take care of my loved ones.
Love turns duty into a joyful privilege. I remember walking
ten miles in the pouring rain to keep a date with the girl I loved.
I had no regrets. My love for her overruled the hardship. We
can make anything a burden by the attitude we have toward it and
by the way we relate to it. It is a burden to serve Jesus only
if the relationship is wrong.
IS THE NARROW ROAD
HARD AND UNHAPPY?
I have heard people say, "But Christianity is
so restrictive." True. But marriage is even more restrictive
than religion. Does that make it miserable? Do brides and grooms
complain about the narrow promises they make to each other? I
have performed many marriages and have never seen newlyweds unhappy
about their commitments. They are always radiant, even though
they have just promised their lives away.
Imagine someone approaching the new bride with these
discouraging words: "Oh, my! You really are in a bad situation
now. Just think, you've got to cook for this guy every day of
your life. You'll be required to clean the house, mend his clothes,
and put up with his untidy habits. This marriage thing is bad
news." Do you know how that new young wife would respond?
She would say, "Wonderful! I love it!"
Suppose someone should try to discourage a newly
baptized Christian, who has just been "married" to Jesus,
with these words: "Oh, you've got yourself into a miserable
mess. Just think, you can't go to the bars and dances anymore.
You can't go to the ball games on Sabbath, and you won't be able
to eat pork and shrimp anymore." Without question that beaming
newborn Christian would answer, "Wonderful! I love every
moment of it!"
The explanation for this response is made in 2 Corinthians
5:14, "For the love of Christ constraineth us." Love
propels and compels people to do anything and everything to please
the One who died for them. No burdensome yoke binds such disciples
to the path of service and obedience. "Blessed are they
that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree
of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city."
Revelation 22:14. That word blessed really means happy.
The commandments may be restrictive, but it is a joy to be restricted
by love.
To the unconverted these thoughts are alien and contradictory.
People who are not in love cannot appreciate the selfless involvement
of those who are happily married. Some married couples have destroyed
their love for each other, and they look upon marriage as a galling
bondage. The fault is not with the marriage, but with the
attitude. When Christians fall away and lose their relationship
with Jesus, they also begin to complain about the burden of religion.
The fault lies not in the religion but in the loveless hearts
of the complainers.
Does all of this stand in opposition to the teaching
of Christ concerning self-denial? Jesus did say, "If any
man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his
cross daily, and follow me." Luke 9:23. Did He mean that
the way of obedience would be hard and unhappy? No. He was simply
picturing the reality of competing attractions in the life of
a Christian. There will always be allurements of the flesh and
of the world appealing to self and trying to draw me away from
Christ. Without the compelling influence of a higher affection,
the emotional appeal of those things might be overpowering. Here
is where the lines of love's authority are revealed. The powerful
love of Christ constrains me to cling to Him and say "No"
to the incessant invitation of the flesh, the devil, and the world.
Those foolish challenges to my relationship with Christ will
always be present, but I will always be able to choose to stay
with Him for two reasons: I love Him more than anything or anybody
else in the world, and I know He will do only what is best for
me.
Satan will utilize feeling as one of his most effective
weapons against the saints, but a true Christian will recognize
that the flesh and feelings cannot be trusted. We must serve
God because of right and truth and not because we feel in the
mood. Moods have led millions to deny the Lord and live for the
flesh. Most of those who serve the devil today are doing so because
they have been deceived and blinded by feeling. It is a constant
marvel to watch people follow the shallow artificialities of sin
in pursuit of happiness. Obviously, they do not derive any true
pleasure out of smoking, drinking, and otherwise destroying themselves
by indulgent behavior; yet, robot-like, they go through the motions
dictated by their carnal desires.
Walter Winchell summed it up when he wrote in his
newspaper column: "The saddest people in the world are those
sitting in joints making believe they are having a good time.
This Broadway Street is full of amusement places trying to make
people happy, yet its people are drenched in unhappiness."
The problem is that those millions have no power
of a higher law of spiritual love operating in their lives. With
no competing force to oppose it, the flesh holds a controlling
influence over the mind and body. Self responds to the emotional
appeal of external stimuli and has no choice but to be captured
by the flesh. It reminds me of a story I heard about a concentration
camp. A man stood looking through the barbed wires of an overcrowded
death camp. Inside, the prisoners stood with emaciated bodies,
hollow cheeks, and sunken eyes. As the man on the outside gazed
at the spectacle of those starving inmates, one of the prisoners
called to him and said, "Ha! You can't come in here, can
you?" Immediately, the self-nature reacted to the challenge.
"Who says I can't? I'll show you." And the man crawled
through the wire to join the other sad-faced internees.
That is probably as close as we can come to explaining
the senseless carnival of death that leads millions every year
into presumptuous violation of the laws of their being. Incredible
as it may seem, self is willing to make itself miserable in order
to have its own way, and those in the flesh have no power to resist
its dictates. It is much easier for them to do wrong than it
is to do right. But let us repeat and reaffirm the glorious truth
that for those who are deeply in love with Christ, it is easier
to do right than it is to do wrong.
Here is the good news of the full gospel of Jesus
Christ, and I hold it out to every reader of these words right
now. Jesus came to provide the dynamite power by which we can
be both justified and sanctified. We may have deliverance from
the guilt of sin and also from the power of sin. By accepting
the simple, free provisions of the gospel, salvation is assured
in all three tenses of our Christian experience - past, present,
and future. May God help us not to be satisfied with a partial
understanding or application of His grace. Let us lay hold of
the incredible riches and power (dunamis) which have been
given to us as the sons and daughters of God.
HOW TO CLAIM
VICTORY OVER SIN
Have you heard about the evolutionary way of getting
the victory over bad habits and sins? It is sometimes called
the tapering method or the trying method, but generally,
it just doesn't work. Oh, it partially works, of course, because
old age takes care of some temptations and sins, and time settles
the rest when death comes. But do you know why trying
does not work in overcoming the devil?
Why can't we fight the devil for a few months and
finally drive him away? Because the devil is stronger than we
are. We could fight him for a year, but he would still be stronger
than we are at the end of that year. Trying will never break
the power of sin in a single instance because we are facing an
enemy who will always be stronger than we are. What, then, is
the answer to our weakness and defeat? This question leads us
to the sweetest and most sublime secret in the Word of God.
First of all, one must understand that all of Heaven's
gifts are available to us through the promises of the Bible, and
we receive them by faith. Peter describes the "exceeding
great and precious promises" and assures us that "by
these ye might be partakers of the divine nature." 2 Peter
1:4. Mighty power is stored within the promise to fulfill itself
to all who claim it in faith. So few are willing to believe that
the promised blessing becomes theirs the very moment they believe
it. Why is it so hard to believe implicitly that God will do
what He promises?
Now, let us come down to the very heart of victory
and consider the four simple scriptural steps that any believer
may take in claiming God's power. Four texts will illuminate
the amazing transaction. FIRST: "But thanks be to God,
which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."
1 Corinthians 15:57. Allow your mind to savor the fantastic
message of these words. VICTORY IS A GIFT! We do not earn it
by our efforts or deserve it because of any supposed goodness.
The only thing we need do is ask for it, and the victory will
be given to us freely by Christ. He is the only One who has ever
gained the victory over Satan, and if we ever possess the victory,
it will have to come as a gift from Him.
Let me ask you something. Do you need victory in
your life over some binding, miserable habit of sin? Some are
slaves to appetite, to alcohol, or tobacco. Others are struggling
helplessly against impurity, anger, or worldliness. The Bible
says you may have the victory as a gift through Jesus Christ.
Do you believe He will give you that power if you ask Him? How
certain can you be that God will answer your prayer for victory
immediately? Here is how sure you can be - just as sure as Christ's
words are true!
Our SECOND text is Matthew 7:11, “If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him?” Is it a good thing when you ask for victory over tobacco or any other fleshly or moral evil? Of course it is! And you don’t even have to ask if it is God’s will! He has already told us in the Bible that it is His will to destroy the works of sin and the devil. If we pray for more money or a better job, we should always ask according to His will, but the victory over sin is promised to everyone who asks in faith. Will God give the victory when we ask Him? Jesus said He is more willing to give this good thing than we are to feed our children when they are hungry. He is waiting to honor your faith and to “supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” Philippians 4:19. These assurances are so open-ended and unlimited that our minds are staggered by it. Why have we been so reluctant to apply for the provisions of grace? Why is it so hard to believe that God means exactly what He says?
Here is the next question. How do we know we have the victory after we ask Him? Simply because He said we would have it. We know God does not lie. We can believe His promise. The very moment we ask, we should accept the fact of fulfillment, thank Him for the gift, get up and act as if it has been done. No kind of proof-feeling or sign should be demanded or expected. The self-fulfilling power in the promise is released in response to our faith alone.
This brings us to the THIRD text found in Romans 6:11, “Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.” The word reckon means to believe, or to consider it done. Every practice of faith should be focused on that one request for victory, and then, it should be accounted as done. Do you remember how Peter walked on the water? He asked Jesus if he could step out of the boat onto the raging sea, and Jesus told Peter to come. But how long did Peter do the impossible by walking on the water? The Bible says, “When he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me.” Matthew 14:30.What was Peter afraid of? He was afraid of sinking and drowning. In spite of Christ’s assurance that he could safely walk on the water, Peter began to doubt the word of the Master. That is when he began to sink. As long as he believed the promise of Jesus and acted in faith, he was safe. When he doubted, he sank.
Now, what is the impossible thing as far as you are concerned? It is not walking on water. It is overcoming that tobacco habit or other besetting sin. And Christ says, “Come to me. I will give you victory.” As long as you believe that you have been delivered, you will have the victory. It is as simple as that. The very moment you ask for victory it will be placed in your life as a reservoir of power. You won’t feel it, but it is there. It will remain there as long as you accept it in faith.
For some people the deliverance is so dramatic that they lose even the appetite for the sin. Tobacco addicts have sometimes been delivered from the craving. BUT THIS IS NOT THE USUAL WAY GOD DOES IT. Usually, the desire remains, but in the moment of temptation, the power to walk past the temptation springs forth from within. Faith accepts the fact of deliverance and constantly claims the victory which is in the secure possession of the believer.
The final step to victory is described in our FOURTH text, Romans 13:14, “But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof.” So strong is the confidence in the appropriated power of God that no consideration is given to falling under the power of that sin again. Under the old trying plan, provision was made to fail in most cases. Cigarettes were placed on a shelf, and the smoker said to himself, “I’m going to try never to smoke again, but if I don’t make it, I know where they are.” But under the trusting plan, we have no reason to fear failure on the grounds of human weakness. Victory does not depend on our strength but on God’s power. We might fail, but He cannot fail. Cigarettes are thrown away. All plans that might involve any degree of compromise are abandoned.
Little Jimmy was in trouble because he had gone swimming against his mother’s orders. When asked why he had disobeyed her, Jimmy answered, “Because I got tempted.” Mother then said, “I noticed that you took your bathing suit with you this morning. Why did you do that?” Jimmy answered, “Because I expected to get tempted.” How typical of those who do not quite trust their own strength to win the victory. They make provision to fail.
Someone might raise the objection that this could be discouraging. Suppose the person does fail? Even Peter began to sink. Would it not shake confidence in God if the victory was not maintained? No. Peter’s sinking had nothing to do with the failure of divine power. It did not change Christ’s will for him to walk on the water. It only pointed up Peter’s need of stronger faith to enable him to obey Christ’s command. Our faith could weaken. We might need to be reminded of our total dependence upon His strength. But this does not diminish from the beautiful plan of God to impart power and victory through “the exceeding great and precious promises” of the Bible. Without faith by the receiver, not even God’s promises can be appropriated. The limits are clearly defined in the words of Jesus, “According to your faith be it unto you.” Matthew 9:29.
There it is, friend, in all of its simplicity. AND IT WORKS! If you are willing to be delivered, it works. Nothing will help the one who is not willing to give up the sin. But if you want it, it is there. VICTORY, POWER, DELIVERANCE—just reach out in faith and it is yours. Believe it and claim it this very moment. God wants you to be free.
|