TEMPTATION
TO LOVE
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A friend on
Facebook posted this scripture without comment.
It describes an issue the psalmist dealt with two thousand eight hundred
years ago, which affects each of us in the 21st century.
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29 Remove the false way from me, and
graciously grant me Your law.
30 I have chosen the faithful way; I have placed Your ordinances before me.
31 I cling to Your testimonies; O Yahweh, do not put me to shame!
32 I shall run the way of Your commandments, for You will enlarge my heart.
Psalm 119:29-32
30 I have chosen the faithful way; I have placed Your ordinances before me.
31 I cling to Your testimonies; O Yahweh, do not put me to shame!
32 I shall run the way of Your commandments, for You will enlarge my heart.
Psalm 119:29-32
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Nearly
forty-five years ago, as a new believer, I was seeing a young woman with whom inordinate
physical intimacy was inevitable. She
was beautiful and willing, and I craved conjugal gratification. I knew my desire opposed God’s ordinances, so
I went to Him with my dilemma. “God, I
want this.”
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It made no difference;
at that point, that yielding meant long-term sorrow. Knowing Jesus said, “Anyone who loves me will
obey my teaching” was not enough to dilute my passion. I remember, as if it were yesterday, telling
God, “I’m sorry, but I don’t love You or me enough to keep from doing this.” Instantly I sensed another Spirit reasoning
with me, “I know you don’t love Me or yourself enough, but I know you can love
her enough.” Somehow, that word,
enlarged my heart, and I was able to love her enough. However, keeping that relationship pure not
God’s ultimate objective. God’s endgame
is more than merely our righteousness.
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The 119th Psalm
is the prayer of someone, personally acquainted with God. He like all of us who are familiar with the
Lord, love Him. Why is that so? It is because He is love. When we recognize who He is, we see who we
really are, and we know we are not Love. Even though, the dissimilarities between God
and us are vast, we long to know Him and His love more intimately.
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Part of the
gap stems from our inordinate passions. He
opposes much of what attracts me. Obvious a more intimate relationship with God
demanded a heart expansion. However, just
like the psalmist, I imagine setting some noble goals was the way to reach that
intimacy.
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The psalmist,
likely King David, selected three goals he planned to take to achieve his
heart increase. He even had a couple of suggested
he thought God should take. Finally, in
frustration, he whimpered, “O Yahweh, do not put me to shame!” Only
God’s Sovran power can affect the needed change. David conceded that human determination was
insufficient to “run the way of Your commandments.” Knowing a heart expansion was God’s will,
David relented saying, “You will enlarge my heart.”
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I ran the
first twenty years of my Christian life as if my goals were a compact between
God and me. Frankly, I ran my Christian
race, pretty well that way, for two decades.
Then disastrous financial and professional setbacks knocked me off
stride. Casting lust aside was no longer
easily choice. No matter how hard I
tried, I was repeatedly ashamed of my performance.
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I lacked the
strength to make the classic leap, between Romans 7 and 8. The good I wanted to do, was not always what
I actually did. I too, finally realized
choosing proper goals failed to get the job done. I needed God to, “enlarge my heart.”
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The “false
way” is not something externally imposed on us.
It is rather, internally self-generated. Removing the “false way from me” is and was humanly
impossible. It is our way…it is who we
are. That is why those four verses are
not the shout of a victorious gold medal winner, but a plea from a runner,
losing the race.
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So, how does
God enlarge our heart? Well, He will do
it only at our request. The key to
enlarging the heart has both a cerebral and a willingness component, neither of
which we can do, on our own. I will
explain that element later. For now, I
need to point out that enlargement starts with us asking, not for victory over
sin, but asking for awareness of Him in
us, within a believing and willing heart.
There are two reasons recognition is essential. 1) He already gained victory over sin, on the
cross, and 2) that victorious One is in our heart, by His indwelling
Spirit. As important as those
intellectual aspects are, our “will” add two other essentials. He will not override our will, so 3) we must
be willing to acknowledge Him when we recognize Him. Finally, we must also 4) be willing to yield
to his will, preferring His will instead of our own. This final consideration becomes easier
knowing God, Who loves you, is not just standing with you, but is standing-up,
in you.
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“O Lord, enlarge the chambers of my
heart that I may find room for Thy love.
Sustain me by Thy power, lest the fire of Thy love consume me.”
Prayer from the 16th century French
dishwasher, Brother Lawrence The Practice of the Presence of God
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Now, what do
we perceive when see Him within?
Remember, our spirit is the one that desires that which is
inordinate. It is His Spirit that desiring
the good. Psalm 119 is coming from the
heart of a man, but what is voiced is, not solely, his desire, but the desire
of God. The desire for something godly, is
never purely ours alone. It is a desire
influenced and shaped by God’s Spirit.
For that reason, when a Christian
experience an unusually selfless giving type of love moving within, which is
compatible with the Biblical record of Christ Jesus, he can rest assured he is
witnessing God’s Spirit within his heart. The believer’s spirit, at that moment, is
looking at God.
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1 John 4:2 “By
this you will know the Spirit of God: Every spirit that confesses that Jesus
Christ has come in the flesh is from God.” Galatians 5:22 “But the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness.” 1 John 3:23+24 “And this is his command: to believe in the name of
his Son, Jesus Christ, and to love one another as he commanded us. The one who keeps God’s commands lives in him,
and he in them. And this is how we know
that he lives in us: We know it by the Spirit he gave us.”
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At that
moment of recognition, you have a choice.
You can acknowledge His presence or you can tell yourself that, despite
the general fallen nature of humanity, you are by nature an unusually godly
person. That is like pretending you are
one giant step above the Apostle Paul, who knew God was in him but was unable
to yield to God’s ordinances, admitting, “For I know that good itself does not
dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature.
For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it
out.” If you can bring yourselves to
confess that your mortal human nature is selfish, then you will recognize the immortal
origin of those godly tendencies and their extra-mortal source. When you do, as Paul did, you will likely, “want
to know Christ--yes, to know the power of his resurrection.” There is a conscious that God is in you, which
allows you to quietly yield to God’s ordinances contentedly. God’s Spirit and our spirit inhabiting a
single expanded heart in peace.
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Therefore, running
the way of God’s commandments is not us actually defeating sin, but our escape
from sin. His way is our turning to Him
at the first sign of temptation (called repentance), and asking Him to allow us
to discern Him within us. Do not fight
the evil desire, yield to God’s desire instead.
Sadly, if you are strong enough to fight sin and win, you not only miss
the opportunity to know God within more intimately, but pride in your victory
is a heart condition God hates.
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Incidentally,
temptation, in-and-of itself, is not evil.
Our selfish desires are.
Temptations remind us that our consciousness of our indwelling God has
slipped, and needs renewing. There is
pleasure in finding Him alive in our expanded heart. A joy we miss when we float along temptation
free. The Lord’s Prayer distinguishes
between temptation and evil saying, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the
evil.” The prayer is more a reminder,
than a request. “God cannot be
tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone.” That is why the prayer designates temptation
and evil separately. We need no one to
lead is into temptation, as mentioned earlier, they have no problem finding us,
on their own. However notice, God is the
One who delivers us from evil (not from temptation). Evil reaches all of us, and usually accompany
our yielding to inordinate desires.
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It may
surprise you that over these last twenty years, I have grown to cherish each
invitation to sin (temptation) knowing they automatically causes me to turn to God
within. Acknowledging His presents here,
in my heart, is a deeply pleasure-full experience. In my life, experiencing temptation rescues
me from spiritual complacency. Unfortunately,
Christians, who appropriate hate sin, usually confused sin and temptation, as
the same things.
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Fixated on
stamping out the sources of temptation has led us to amplify, rather than
reduce the allure of a number of human urges.
Instead, we should focus on the individuals harmed by yielding to their inordinate
desires. Their constricted hearts are defenseless
against self-destructive desires. Our
determination to arrest temptations seems to overshadow God, as the Way. “God has chosen to make
known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ
in you, the hope of glory.”
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Understood
for what it is, temptation is not a disorder.
For those who know the indwelling God, it is a drastic, yet beneficial, reminder
of God’s abiding love and presence.
Therefore,
let us say with the psalmist of old, “I shall run the way of Your commandments,
for You will enlarge my heart.”
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