- Sep 29, 2022
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Just a thought that crossed my mind recently.
We all struggle with sins. That is a given.
But some of us may struggle with a more "addictive" sin that is extremely hard or almost near impossible to shake off/get rid of on your own.
Now we know that it is only by the grace of God, through the work of the Cross in Jesus Christ that our sins have been conquered, defeated and we can be set free from it (death) and have eternal life (salvation) in God. So it is not by our own power or might that we can boast we somehow conquered sin or got rid of it but only boast in Jesus (God) who overcame the power and death grip of sin on our lives.
So now comes my question. I struggle with an addictive sin that I've had most of my life (elementary school age). It's something that seems to have started even before I consciously could be aware or understand it and willfully get myself into it. It just seems to have been part of my "nature" or natural instinct built in me to be oriented this way. Of course as I grow up, I gain more wisdom, knowledge, understanding, and the Word of God into my life but by that time, the addictive sin has already gripped me and I have been in an intimate relationship with it that one cannot simply say, "I recognize now this is a sin and I should turn away from it this instance" and then it's just gone. It's hold on me is as natural and instinctual as breathing or eating. It's not like I can just say, "I will stop eating or I will stop breathing by choice".
So if I am supposed to struggle and wrestle with this my entire life and let's say I muster up so much courage, strength, willpower, discipline, commitment, perseverance, endurance, patience, self-control etc like superhuman level and I somehow overcome and beat this addictive sin out of my life once and for all, then wouldn't that be contradicting God's grace/power? It would be me that deserves the credit and accolades that I somehow with my own ability and depth of character that I overcame and defeated this deathgrip of sin in my life. If I made the choices each day and every second of each day to combat and overcome my struggle with sin, then why would we need to give credit to God and say it was only by his strength or power that I was delivered from this sin? I'm the one who is struggling and making every human effort possible to combat and fight against it and if I somehow succeed then the praise would belong to my hard work and actions and not boast that Christ miraculously by his power set me free.
I find that it seems to me I have to do 90% of the work to overcome my sin and not God. Of course, it would be ideal if God miraculously just delivered me from this sin or take away this spirit of "x" sin away from me but this would almost seem like a lazy man's way of copping out and expecting God to do everything and somehow sin will be gone from me.
No matter how much I pray or repent and ask for forgiveness, the sin will keep recurring and it seems that I have to somehow have extraordinary superhuman level of character and willpower to stop this sin from controlling my life....therefore it is by own strength and power that it will be done it seems and not so much a miracle from God who just delivers me from it.
One example I can paint is something like this:
There is door way to salvation. God is the only one who could open this door so that we can walk through it. But it is WE who must walk through it. God did his part in opening that unopenable door so we praise and thank God for it. But he doesn't force us to walk through it. He doesn't possess our bodies and controls our bodies to walk through it. He sits back and observes as he provided the way but we must take the action to walk through the door. But let's also add that you have 1000 kg weights on both ankles chains and balls and you must somehow by your own physical strength or creative intelligence come up with a way to move yourself to take those steps and walk through that door. If I was able to accomplish that, wouldn't that be by my own amazing ability that somehow I figured out a way to do it? Then all credit would go to the human and not God. God would only get credit for opening that door. Or are we saying that God will possess our bodies and somehow gives us superhuman strength to move despite the 2000 kg total weight on our ankles? Or that God would make those weights our ankles just miraculously disappear??? so that I can walk easy and go through that door. Or would God say that I should be willing to cut off my own two legs to remove the 2000kg weight and crawl through that door to heaven? (I'm familiar with that passage where Jesus says better to gouge out your eye or cut off your hand that makes you sin and enter heaven maimed than to be thrown into the lake of fire with your whole body intact).
We all struggle with sins. That is a given.
But some of us may struggle with a more "addictive" sin that is extremely hard or almost near impossible to shake off/get rid of on your own.
Now we know that it is only by the grace of God, through the work of the Cross in Jesus Christ that our sins have been conquered, defeated and we can be set free from it (death) and have eternal life (salvation) in God. So it is not by our own power or might that we can boast we somehow conquered sin or got rid of it but only boast in Jesus (God) who overcame the power and death grip of sin on our lives.
So now comes my question. I struggle with an addictive sin that I've had most of my life (elementary school age). It's something that seems to have started even before I consciously could be aware or understand it and willfully get myself into it. It just seems to have been part of my "nature" or natural instinct built in me to be oriented this way. Of course as I grow up, I gain more wisdom, knowledge, understanding, and the Word of God into my life but by that time, the addictive sin has already gripped me and I have been in an intimate relationship with it that one cannot simply say, "I recognize now this is a sin and I should turn away from it this instance" and then it's just gone. It's hold on me is as natural and instinctual as breathing or eating. It's not like I can just say, "I will stop eating or I will stop breathing by choice".
So if I am supposed to struggle and wrestle with this my entire life and let's say I muster up so much courage, strength, willpower, discipline, commitment, perseverance, endurance, patience, self-control etc like superhuman level and I somehow overcome and beat this addictive sin out of my life once and for all, then wouldn't that be contradicting God's grace/power? It would be me that deserves the credit and accolades that I somehow with my own ability and depth of character that I overcame and defeated this deathgrip of sin in my life. If I made the choices each day and every second of each day to combat and overcome my struggle with sin, then why would we need to give credit to God and say it was only by his strength or power that I was delivered from this sin? I'm the one who is struggling and making every human effort possible to combat and fight against it and if I somehow succeed then the praise would belong to my hard work and actions and not boast that Christ miraculously by his power set me free.
I find that it seems to me I have to do 90% of the work to overcome my sin and not God. Of course, it would be ideal if God miraculously just delivered me from this sin or take away this spirit of "x" sin away from me but this would almost seem like a lazy man's way of copping out and expecting God to do everything and somehow sin will be gone from me.
No matter how much I pray or repent and ask for forgiveness, the sin will keep recurring and it seems that I have to somehow have extraordinary superhuman level of character and willpower to stop this sin from controlling my life....therefore it is by own strength and power that it will be done it seems and not so much a miracle from God who just delivers me from it.
One example I can paint is something like this:
There is door way to salvation. God is the only one who could open this door so that we can walk through it. But it is WE who must walk through it. God did his part in opening that unopenable door so we praise and thank God for it. But he doesn't force us to walk through it. He doesn't possess our bodies and controls our bodies to walk through it. He sits back and observes as he provided the way but we must take the action to walk through the door. But let's also add that you have 1000 kg weights on both ankles chains and balls and you must somehow by your own physical strength or creative intelligence come up with a way to move yourself to take those steps and walk through that door. If I was able to accomplish that, wouldn't that be by my own amazing ability that somehow I figured out a way to do it? Then all credit would go to the human and not God. God would only get credit for opening that door. Or are we saying that God will possess our bodies and somehow gives us superhuman strength to move despite the 2000 kg total weight on our ankles? Or that God would make those weights our ankles just miraculously disappear??? so that I can walk easy and go through that door. Or would God say that I should be willing to cut off my own two legs to remove the 2000kg weight and crawl through that door to heaven? (I'm familiar with that passage where Jesus says better to gouge out your eye or cut off your hand that makes you sin and enter heaven maimed than to be thrown into the lake of fire with your whole body intact).
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