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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| October 23, 2003 |
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LOOK, MA, NO HANDS! #4
WHEN LUCIFER LETS YOU WIN Here’s a Thursday question for you: does the Devil
ever lose a round on purpose? Does Satan ever throw a game? “Pride can often be used,” he writes, “to beat down the simpler vices. Teachers, in fact, often appeal to a boy’s Pride, or, as they call it, his self-respect, to make him behave decently: many a man has overcome cowardice, or lust, or ill-temper by learning to think that they are beneath his dignity – that is, by Pride.” And now get this: “THE DEVIL LAUGHS. He is perfectly content to see you becoming chaste and brave and self-controlled provided, all the time, he is setting up in you the Dictatorship of Pride – just as he would be quite content to see your chilblains cured if he was allowed, in return, to give you cancer. For Pride IS spiritual cancer: it eats up the very possibility of love, or contentment, or even common sense.” Then he adds a chilling warning that all golfers and Christians should write on their scorecard: “The devil loves ‘curing’ a small fault by giving you a great one.” Staying with the sports motif, let me ask: do major-league
baseball pitchers ever purposely groove a pitch, allowing the opposition
to get a hit? Well, there are times when I think the Dodgers do it as
a matter of team policy, but ordinarily . . . no. You try to get outs.
But I remember hearing about a hitter whose personal pride drove him to
be fiercely competitive at the plate. He would go up to the batter’s box,
focused and energized and relentlessly determined to get a base hit. In
every game, he was driven to get that first tally in the box score. However,
once he had that first hit, that first successful contact with the first-base
bag, the intensity subsided. Oh, he still went up to bat for the rest
of the game, and sometimes he would get a second or a third hit. But with
hit #1 under his belt, the fire in his eyes dimmed. “Your patient has become humble,” he writes. “Have you drawn his attention to this fact? All virtues are less formidable to us once the man is aware that he has them, but this is specially true of humility. Catch him at the moment when he is really poor in spirit and smuggle into his mind the gratifying reflection, ‘By jove! I’m being humble,” and almost immediately pride – pride at his own humility – will appear. If he awakes to the danger and tries to smother this new form of pride, make him proud of his attempt – and so on, through as many stages as you please.” So friend, we really have to stop and think before
we agree to have a game of golf with the devil. What does he truly want?
Does he want to win fifty bucks from us? Does he want us to tell lies
and cheat and commit adultery and get so drunk we lose our jobs? Well,
yes. He enjoys misery of all kinds. He loves to see his subjects in the
gutter. But you know, he’s just as happy to see us in church. If we stop
drinking, and are proud of it, that’s good too. If we’re faithful to our
wives, and watch as someone else gets caught in a scandal, and we think
to ourselves, “Whoa, thank God I’m impervious to that particular temptation,”
we slide away from Satan’s little net and right into his big one. He’s
just as pleased if we’re successfully posing as – and feeling like – leaders
in the Christian faith. IF he can quietly – and he’ll gladly take 20 years
to work on it – get us to the point where we arrive in the land of settled,
resolute Pride. Where we join Lucifer in saying, “I don’t need a heavenly
Father. I will not be ruled. I am – in and of myself – all that I need.
‘I’ll do it my way.’” “If you think you are standing firm,” he writes, “be careful that you don’t fall.” “Take heed lest ye fall” is the familiar King James. And if you check out the context, we find that Paul
has just outlined the sorry experience of the Children of Israel. They
were so pleased with themselves out in the wilderness after Moses gave
them the Ten Commandments. “Sure we’ll keep them,” they all promised.
“You bet. We’re players on the Lord’s team.” Not long after, they got
up and danced in a pagan orgy, and twenty-three thousand of them died.
And Paul says here: “That story’s in the Bible as a warning. Smooth skiing
now doesn’t mean there aren’t moguls up ahead. Stay awake, and stay distrustful
of self.” |
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