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Set Free: Knowing the Enemy, Part 2
In addition to knowing who is our enemy. We need to know our
enemy. That is we need to know how he works and attacks. We cannot
possibly win the battle if we close our eyes to what the enemy
does and how he attacks.
Napoleon Bonaparte is reported to have
said, “You must not fight too often with one enemy, or you will
teach him all your art of war.” Our enemy has fought too often
with us for us to be ignorant of his schemes. Paul himself told us
we know them in II
Corinthians 2:11.
We can certainly look in the scripture
and learn that Satan lies, he disguises himself, he uses our own
desires against us, he will use our emotions, he will use others,
he will even attack us smack in the middle of the church’s
assembly. Satan will stop at nothing to take us captive.
But what I am really talking about here
is taking a rigorously honest look at how Satan attacked when we
sinned. Did you lie this week? Did you gossip? …cheat? …lust?
…drink alcohol? …gamble? …have an outburst of wrath?
…commit sexual immorality? …steal? On this list could go.
Too often when we sin, we simply gang
up on ourselves with rebuke to stop sinning. However, we already
know it is sin. We already want to quit. Just hearing that we need
to stop over and over again doesn’t seem to help much. Consider
again Paul’s own experience in Romans
7:14-23.
If we were in a physical war and the
enemy won a battle, we wouldn’t just say, “You have to stop
losing battles.” We would start examining the enemy’s patterns
of attack, looking for reoccurring themes. We would look for
weaknesses of which the enemy took advantage. We would deal with
these issues first to win the war.
We should do no less with Satan. What
led to the sin? Was there a conversation that led to the sin? Is
there a relationship that seems to repeatedly provoke sin? Did you
see something that started you thinking about the sin? Hear
something? Where did that happen? Did it happen some place you can
avoid? If not, is there something you can do to mitigate the bad
influence? What is causing the weakness Satan keeps exploiting?
How can you strengthen your spiritual muscles?
We need to be brutally honest with
ourselves and the attacks we have faced. If we really want to
overcome our bondage to sin, we have to examine Satan’s patterns
of attack and our weaknesses of which he is taking advantage. We
must erect defenses against Satan and allow God’s word to guide
us in mounting our own attacks.
Know your enemy. Through God’s grace
you will overcome.
More on this to come.
Edwin L. Crozier
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