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NASB | James 4:7 Submit therefore to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. |
AMPLIFIED 2015 | James 4:7 So submit to [the authority of] God. Resist the devil [stand firm against him] and he will flee from you. |
Subject: Resisting temptation |
Bible Note: Dear Tuggy, I am grateful for the spirit with which you seek to help. Our problem, however, is not in exercising the will, our problem is in the heart, from which all action flows. So very much to be said on this topic! There is a great classic, though difficult to read, called "A Christian Soldier, Taking Heaven by Storm," By Thomas Watson. Below are a few quotes from that work. In Him, Doc When zeal like incense burns, first the lamp of knowledge must be lighted. The reason so many have been tricked into error is because they either did not know, or did not love, the truth. This is the first thing in holy violence: resolution of their will; I will have heaven whatever it costs me and this resolution must be in the strength of Christ. The pampering of the flesh, is the quenching of God's spirit. The flesh inclines us more to believe a temptation than a promise Jesus Christ went more willingly to the cross than we do to the throne of grace. Had not we need then provoke ourselves to duty? We must not read these holy lines [Scripture] carelessly, as if they did not concern us, or run over them hastily, as Israel ate the passover in haste; but peruse them with reverence and seriousness. Read the word as a book made by God Himself. It is given 'by divine inspiration' 2 Tim. iii.16. It is the library of the Holy Ghost. How far are they from offering violence to themselves in hearing, who come to the word in a dull, drowsy manner, as if they came to church to take a receipt to make them sleep. The word is to feed; it is strange to sleep at meat. The word judgeth men: it is strange for a prisoner to fall asleep at the bar. Prayer is a lifting up of the mind and soul to God, which cannot be done aright without offering violence to one-self. The names given to prayer imply violence. It is called wrestling, Gen. xxxii. 24. and a pouring out of the soul, 1 Sam. i. 15. Those prayers God likes best which come seething hot from the heart. Satan tempts to sin gradually. As the husbandman digs about the root of a tree, and by degrees loosens it, and at last it falls. Satan steals by degrees into the heart: he is at first more modest Faith holds the promise in one hand, and Christ in the other If Christ thought the soul was worth the shedding of His blood, well may we think it worth spending our sweat. Men could be content to have the kingdom of Heaven; but they are loathe to fight for it. They choose rather to go in a feather bed to Hell than to be carried to Heaven in a ‘fiery chariot’ of zeal and violence. To serve God, to love God, to enjoy God, is the sweetest freedom in the world. Satan doth sow most of his seed of temptation in hearts that lie fallow. When he sees persons unemployed, he will find work for them to do. Men throw off all violence and degenerate into apostasy because they never did duties of religion with delight. Paul delighted in the law of God in the inward (Rom. 7:22). It was his heaven to serve God. A man who delights in pleasure will never surrender. But the apostate never had any true delight in the ways f God; he was rather forced with fear than drawn with love; he served a Master whom he never cared for. No wonder then that he leaves His service. |