DEALING
WITH TEMPTATIONS
Known As, "Reckon on Christ"
By Kenneth Wuest
A
Christian is to take these facts into his reckoning as
he deals with temptations that confront him or evil impulses
that come from within. His attitude should be that, in
view of the fact that the power of the evil nature is
broken, he is under no obligation to obey its behests
(Rom. 8:12). He has been emancipated from sin, and the
proper procedure is to read God's emancipation proclamation
to the insistent demands of the Adamic nature.
The believer must also realize that whereas before salvation,
he could not help it when he sinned, yet since God saved
him, should he sin, it is because of his free choice,
since sin's power has been broken. He is responsible for
that sin. This should make him think twice before he contemplates
an act of sin at the demand of the evil nature.
Then, he must also count upon the fact of his possession
of the divine nature. This will keep him from depending
upon himself and his own strength in his effort to live
a life pleasing to the Lord Jesus, and will cause him
to throw himself upon the resources of God. He will be
trusting the Lord Jesus to fill him with the Holy Spirit
(John 7:37, 38), with the result that the Holy Spirit
will do two things for him. He will suppress the activities
of the evil nature (Gal. 5:17) and He will produce in
the believer a Christlike life (Gal. 5:22-23).
Paul says in Galatians 5:16, 17, "This
I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill
the cravings of the flesh, for the flesh has a strong
desire to suppress the Spirit, and the Spirit has a strong
desire to suppress the flesh, and these are entrenched
in a permanent attitude of opposition to one another,
so that you should not do the things that you would desire
to be doing;" and in Galatians 5:22,
23, "The fruit of the Spirit is love,
joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faithfulness,
meekness, self-control."
Contrast this adjustment of the intelligent Spirit-taught
saint, with that of the believer who is not aware of the
fact that God has broken the power of sin in his life,
with the result that he is more or less under its compelling
power, try as he may to live free from sin. Since he is
ignorant of the fact that God has placed within him His
own nature, he depends upon himself and his own strength
in an effort to defeat sin in his life and live a life
pleasing to God.
This believer is living a defeated life because he is
not in proper adjustment to the new mechanical set-up
of his spiritual being. . . The translation of verse 11
follows: "Thus also, as for you, constantly be taking
into account the fact that you are those who are dead
with respect to sin, and indeed those who are living ones
with reference to God in Christ Jesus." A paraphrase
may make things clearer yet. "Thus also, as for you,
constantly be taking into account the fact that you are
those who have had the power of sin broken in your lives
and those who have had the divine nature implanted."
The words in verse 12, "let not sin reign,"
are in a construction in the Greek which forbids the continuation
of an action already going on. The word "reign"
is in the Greek "reign as king." The tense speaks
of habitual action. "That you should obey" is
literally, "with a view to habitually obeying."
The word "lusts" is literally "cravings."
The word "Therefore" does not go back to "sin"
but to "body." . . . "Lusts therefore"
refers to the cravings of the human body, which cravings
come from the sinful nature. The translation reads, "Therefore,
stop allowing sin to reign habitually as king in your
mortal bodies, with a view to your habitually obeying
the cravings of that body." God is never unreasonable
in His demands upon His own. What He asks of us is always
within our ability to fulfill as we appropriate the divine
resources of grace. Since the power to sin is broken and
the divine nature is implanted, we are well able to keep
sin from reigning in our bodies.
Treasures from the Greek New Testament, pp. 96-98
Dean
Berg Ministries -
Broken Arrow, OK
Phone: 918-851-9548
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