"My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into
divers temptations; Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh
patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and
entire, wanting nothing” James 1:2-4.
Temptation and patience are hard at work in
your life, are you taking advantage? Count every bit of the temptation and
trial you are enduring as joy. To do that, we have a bit of work to do
ourselves. No temptation is joyful when we are resisting against it and enduring
through it, but it is our task to “count it all joy”. We need to look at the
bad situation and prayerfully take an accurate account of the temptation, and
see it as a means for joy because of what it is going to accomplish. We must look
at temptations in the right way – temptation is working something in us for our
good. Hopefully it will give your spiritual muscles a workout. When I played
football, we put in hours of off-season conditioning in the weight room. When
the coaches were pushing us and working us hard, I was hot, tired, sore, and wishing it was
all over with. But we were working our physical muscles and getting stronger
with every workout. We couldn’t see the immediate effects but we kept it up
being reminded of the benefit this workout would have on the football field on
Friday nights. We counted every exercise as profitable to what we wanted, even
though it wasn’t very fun at the time. Likewise, temptation works our spiritual
muscles.
Temptation gives your patience a workout. It is “trying”
your faith. It is putting your faith to the test. Biblical patience is
endurance, it is not giving in or giving up, but patiently pressing on looking
for our deliverance. Temptation makes us
struggle against it and to endure in holiness. It’s resistance training,
fighting through the trial and not giving up because it's hard. After months of
offseason training, it was time to start actually playing the games. Those
players who had put in the hard work of conditioning and strength training were
better equipped to play in the games. We wanted to play the game and play well –
that was what we wanted most. In order be better players, our coaches put us
through difficult weight resistance training. Every time I was excised by
resistance, I became just a little stronger. Temptation works in our soul in a
similar way. As Christians, we desire holiness, and one of God's ordained means
for spiritual growth is enduring temptation. As we press back against the
resistance of temptation, it exercises our patience and endurances. Patience,
in turn, completes us. It strengthens our spiritual life, by making us more
dependent on God, motivates us to prayer and Bible reading. The more we fight
through trials and battle against sin in our lives, the more endurance we have.
It gives us a full spiritual workout.
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