Riff's Christian Journal

A Layman's View Of Christian Theology

Why There Are Moments of Failure For A Christian

The day starts our just fine. You have your early morning talk with God and you go off to start the day feeling good. You have God’s protection and you feel that nothing can go wrong. That is when it usually happens.

At some point of the day, you have a thought pop into your mind. It is a thought that you have not had for a while and in the surprise of it, you start entertaining the thought. Maybe something crosses your line of vision, the sight captivates you, and you let your eyes linger longer that you normally would have and you enjoy the view before you.

There is always the possibility that someone angers you and you spout salty words that you do not normally use. Then again, maybe something happens that causes you to react in a physical way that causes harm to someone.

As a Christian, we have to remember that we are not perfect. We still have a sin nature and though God promises not to let you be tempted beyond what you can bare and gives room for escape, there are times when you do not want to escape. At this point is when failure as a Christian comes into play. I know, for I have been there myself.

Who is he who temps us? It is not the Lord, as He temps no one. The tempter is Satan himself and, when he is not around, he has many demons to do his dirty work for him. They do not come to temp us during low or weak times. No, they come when we least expect to be tempted, in times when we feel at our best in our relationship with God. It is during these times, when we feel strong, that we forget who it is against whom we fight.

Eph 6:12  For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.

Those are the moments when we are caught off guard and we find ourselves doing the very thing that we do not want to do. The reason for this is very clear as we find in Galatians 5: 17:

Gal 5:17  For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other: so that ye cannot do the things that ye would.

We forget that we do not fight an outward fight, one that we can see with our eyes. No, we fight a spiritual fight that creeps up on us and catches us at our moment of weakness, which is when we feel at our best. Then they attack and we are neither strong nor prepared for the onslaught that the demons bring on.

It is at times like this that our own lusts or desires over comes us and we are drawn into the trap that has been set for us. As we see in James  1:14:

Jas 1:14  But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed.

While it is true that any sin that we commit, after having been “born again” by the Spirit of God, is forgiven, when we know that we have committed a sin the best thing to do is to confess that sin and to ask God for forgiveness, and to confess our sorrow for having acted in disobedience to God.

Only in this way can we come back into the presence of God, to feel that forgiveness, to allow us to fellowship with God again so that during our closeness with the Lord the gnawing aspect of our sin will not hinder, nor interfere with, our relationship with God.

The life of a Christian, one who is a true disciple of Jesus, is a lifelong journey. We will never be without temptation nor will we ever come to the point of never giving in to sin. The flesh fights against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh. Most of the time the spirit wins, but when the flesh becomes the victor we must quickly recover, confess our willfulness to sin and to rely on God to bring us back into a right fellowship with Him; to once again feel His love and forgiveness of us.

We all must fight the good fight, walk in the Spirit as much as we can, and look out for those moments of weakness during those times when we feel strong in our faith. Living the Christian life is not easy and was never meant to be, but by looking to God, and not to ourselves, to keep us safe from the tempter, and his demons who constantly lie in wait, do we have any chance of overcoming the fleshly desires when something unexpected comes our way.

In the outcome, the victory is not ours, but the Lord’s. Jesus is the one who picks us up, cleans us off and provides forgiveness for us when we have lost a battle in our spiritual warfare. He will set us back on the straight and narrow and will continue to work in us His will until the time of the end will have come.

Written by Glenn C. Riffey

December 2, 2018 at 5:59 pm