“Therefore we also, since we are surrounded
by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin
which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that
is set before us…” Hebrews 12:1 NKJV
If I am particularly stubborn about a
weakness or sin of mine, God may force me to take “the cure.” The cure is described in Jeremiah 27:17;
“Serve the king of Babylon, and live!”
Strange message indeed from a true servant
of God, as Jeremiah was. We would expect to hear, “Serve the Lord and
live!” But no, the right thing was
wrong; the wrong thing was right.
There are times when God allows and even
commands, me to do what He has expressly forbidden. “He that is filthy, let him be filthy still.”
(Rev. 22:11)
“Come to Bethel [the house of God], and
transgress.” (Amos 4:4)
I am shocked! Is that because God is unholy? Not in the least.
He urges that direction because He is holy;
He simply wants me to get my fill of sin so completely that the very thought of
it nauseates me. None of the prophets
was able to convince Israel to leave their sins; yet seventy years in Babylon
did what no prophet could do.
He sent them captive into the very
fountainhead of idolatry, and they came out a cleansed and purified nation
after seven decades.
Must God go to such extreme with me? Must I be submerged in sin in order to see
its odiousness?
Lord, my prayer is, make me so sensitive to
sin that its slightest presence will send me to Calvary’s blood for protection!
The distinguishing feature of any true
disciple of Jesus is a paper-thin sensitivity to sin.
Being sensitive to sin means zero to NO
tolerance of sin. No excuses, no
justification, no looking the other way.
It means we do not want sin in us, around us or continually in our
presence. We live in a fallen world but
the world cannot live in us.
When we become comfortable with sin around
us, it will soon permeate into our lives and we will find ourselves justifying,
accepting and enabling it to remain in our presence.
There is a price to pay for sin; the loss
of God’s presence. He cannot be found in
the atmosphere of sin. He turned His
back on sin when His Son took our sins upon the cross, why would He be any
different with my sin or the acceptance of sin around me?
I notice that in reading the biographies of
the saints----the slightest sin made them mourn, weep, and agonize.
Lord, make me averse to sin like that, for
when I am averse to sin it means the Holy Spirit is deliberately refining me in
the divine image; the new heart and the right spirit are displacing the old and
the wrong.
“Create in me a clean heart, O God.
Renew a loyal spirit within me.” Psalm 51:10 NLT
Renew a loyal spirit within me.” Psalm 51:10 NLT
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