I don’t like trials and I certainly don’t like suffering. If I had my way about it, I would eliminate them all. It’s a good thing God doesn’t always let me have my way. I guess what I am really saying is that I don’t like self denial.
Sometimes I want my way pretty strongly, and to say the least, I get quite disappointed when I can’t have it. But my disappointment, thank God, is only temporary; and I often wonder how much longer it would have lasted if I had actually been allowed to have things the way I wanted them, or the way I thought things should be. I have to admit it, even though I may complain, God does know what is best for me; and if he knows what’s best for me, He certainly knows what is best for everyone else.
There is a verse in the Bible that has provided comfort, hope, and faith for the hearts of millions of saints who have lived before us and who knew what trials and heartaches were all about. Surely sorrow, discouragement, and disappointment must have been nothing foreign to them. Even Jesus was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief as the scriptures record (Isa.53:3). We all probably have read but few of us have really believed the verse which says, “And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God and are the called according to his purpose.”--Rom. 8:28
Sometimes my reasoning faculties challenge this truth, especially when problems and troubles come up and I may begin to assert my own way. That is when I am really in trouble and my peace of heart and mind go down the drain. It shows that I do not always believe God’s Word.
Sometimes I get to thinking (frankly right there is the real trouble) I know what is best for me and I begin to work towards that which I think I want and should have. Sometimes I am not smart enough to detect that there must be something wrong when I begin losing my sense of direction and I am removed from the way of peace.
If God is in something, then I should have peace about it. If it is God who is lead¬ing my thoughts, then I should be at rest concerning the matter.
Sometimes I want what I want so badly that my own desires blind my judgment. I guess this is nothing new to human beings. It all began in the Garden of Eden with Adam and Eve. It was the desire of Eve’s flesh that blinded her judgment and Satan took advantage of the situation. No wonder Paul admonished us by saying, “Neither give place to the devil.”--Eph.4:27. When we think that we are smarter than God and begin to trust our own reasoning instead of His Word, we are giving place to the devil. When we acknowledge the desires that are in our flesh instead of acknowledging the Lord in all of our ways, we are giving place to the devil. When we want something so badly that we forget to ask the Lord if it is O.K., we are giving place to the devil. The fact of the matter is when our minds are overwhelmed by anything that is in this world, we are giving place to the devil.
It isn’t that things themselves are of the devil, it is just the particular kind of twist that he sometimes has over our thoughts that makes the difference. Is it really God’s will or is it yours?
We might as well face it; there are some things we cannot have. No one should be entitled to everything they can see. Just because someone may desire something does not necessarily mean that they should have it. The mark of adulthood is to have learned that one can not have everything that is within touching distance. It is said that selfdenial is good for the soul, while self-gratification stifles its growth and development.
Eve looked at the fruit and saw that it was pleasant to the eyes and a tree to be desired. She reached forth and partook, and you know the story. There was trouble from then on. Of course, one must remember God in his wonderful mercy worked that together for their good. That is how trouble entered into the world. “By one man’s disobedience, sin and trouble came into this world.” But remember the Bible also says, “Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.”--Rom. 5:12, 20
Trouble is simply here to help teach us the lessons we need to learn. It will either make us bitter or make us better and it is a matter of the “I.” Everyone must face her and no one can escape her. I am sure that if we had our way about it, we would avoid her completely and therefore miss the provision she supplies to balance our life. When you remove pain from the human experience, you remove the ingredient that God has provided to make our lessons worthwhile.
When I say pain, I don’t mean physical pain. The Bible is full of stories of saints who had greater problems on their hands than they could handle. I don’t think Adam and Eve were really ever conscious of God’s care and provision for them until after they got into trouble. I could risk the chance of losing your attention here by saying, “Thank God for sin.” Listen to what the Bible says about trouble. “As the sparks fly upward so man is born unto trouble.” Trouble seems to be a necessary ingredient in man’s Spiritual diet in order to remind him of his need. No trouble--no need for comfort.
The prodigal son didn’t think of his father until he got into trouble. Paul would never have had the revelations and understanding that God gave him if he would have walked a smooth and even path. Even of Jesus it is recorded, “Though he were a Son yet learned he obedience through the things he suffered.”--Heb. 5:8. I am sure that Jesus had His own desires as a man or He would never have had to learn obedience. He would have already known it. He would not have had any temptations either because James says, “God cannot be tempted with evil but every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own desire and enticed.”--James 1:14
Desire--that’s the key word. Everyone has desires. That is why the Bible says, “You shall not covet.” The word “covet” simply means “Thou shall not desire,” or it’s against the law to follow any desires that are not godly.
Desires that are contrary to the divine nature are deeply rooted in the flesh. It is quite natural for the flesh to have its own desires. One does not have to practice to develop the desires of the flesh. They are already there. But it is how these desires become paramount that I am concerned because if we know how desire conceives, then we can do something about it. James says, "When desire has conceived, it brings forth sin and sin when it has finished brings forth death.”--James 1:15. Paul says, “If you walk in the Spirit, you shall not fulfill the desires of the flesh.”--Gal.5:16
If we go back to the 7th Chapter of Romans, Paul gives a narrative of personal struggle and defeat. “The good that I would, I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do”--Rom. 7:19. It sounds like a hopeless dilemma, doesn’t it-- nothing but struggle!
The 8th Chapter of Romans gives us the positive answer to a negative defeat. We must read it closely because here Paul gives us instructions. They are the only way to ride above our problems and desires.
Listen--“For they that are after (pursuing) the flesh do mind (think on) the things of the flesh. But they who are seeking Spiritual things are thinking upon the things of the Spirit.”--Rom. 8:5. The question is what are you looking for, what are you thinking about and what do you want? What are you seeking?—God’s kingdom?
The conclusion is your own experience and the sum total of what you place your affection or mind upon (Col.3:1-2).
Paul warns us and knew himself of this conflict. Listen to what he says: “Don’t be fooled; God is not mocked; whatsoever a man plants (seeds of thought) that shall he also reap. For he that sows to his flesh (minds things of flesh) shall of the flesh reap corruption (death); but he that sows to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting.”-- Gal. 6:7-8. Whatever seed you plant in your mind will conceive. Conception in this wise is simply by the seeds of thought. The carnal mind is fertile ground for unspiritual thoughts.
Jesus had this conflict and knew of it. He said, “The Spirit is indeed willing, but the flesh is weak.”--Matt. 26:41. The whole thing depends upon what we think about. If we mind the things of the flesh, the solemn denouncement is, “Ye shall die.” If we mind the things of the Spirit of God, the promise is, “Ye shall live.” We live by God’s thoughts.
It is most difficult to learn our lessons, but God is faithful. Paul said, “Being confident of this very thing that he that has started a good work in you shall perform it until the day of Christ.”--Phil.1:6
Satan likes to p1ay with our thoughts and emotions. His greatest success is found within the realm of our imagination. He likes to dangle things in front of our minds and make suggestions that the answer lies somewhere in some distant land, that is in every place but in the Lord. That is why Paul instructed us to cast down imaginations and bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ (2 Cor.10:4-5).
The carnal mind is like its father, the devil. It does not understand Spiritual things, so never ask its advice. Paul said, “The natural man does not understand Spiritual things, neither can he know them.”--1 Cor.2:14. That is what Paul meant about the carnal mind not being a subject (citizen) of God’s way of thinking or of His Kingdom. The devil can dangle many tempting ideas in front of our minds, but the responsibility of a son of God is to cast down those imaginations.
Satan would rather use the cares of this world to do his dirty work than war. That is how he can secretly undermine and destroy a soul. The devil gets more pleasure out of our prolonged aggravation, than our death. Only God can say, “I will keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on me,” because only God knows anything about peace. No one else has it.
Aren’t you glad we have the mind of Christ?