The Special of the Day… From the Orange Moon Cafe
"The Faithful God… The Good Fight"
It does not take long after becoming a born again believer in the Lord Jesus Christ to realize how scandalous it is to distrust God's constancy of faithfulness in being who He declares Himself to be, and doing what He promises to do.
"Know therefore that the LORD thy God, He is God, the faithful God" (Deuteronomy 9:7).
We do know, don't we? However, we remain temptable to forget or neglect the remembrance of a trustworthiness that has never failed, nor ever will. "The flesh lusteth against the spirit" declared the Apostle Paul, who also acknowledged, "When I would do good, evil is present with me" (Galatians 5:17; Romans 7:21). Regardless of how well we know the Lord, or how long we have walked in His faithfulness, "the law of sin" in our fleshly faculties and members - like the law of gravity in the physical realm - tempts us downward into unbelief (Romans 7:23-25; James 1:14). Like Paul, we will often be aware of the evil of distrust in our flesh, even as we affirm in our spirits, "I will trust in Thee" (Psalm 55:23). We seek to overcome the fleshly tendency, or in the Apostle's more forthright terms, "If ye, through Spirit, do mortify (put to death) the deeds of the body, ye shall live" (Romans 8:13).
In times when it seems that faith completely fills our thoughts, emotions, and senses, let us rejoice. However, let us also realize that our confidence in God's faithfulness must often be affirmed with contrary "evil is present with me" notions and sensibilities in our flesh. Presently, we live amid enemies who provide opportunity for overcoming when God does not immediately remove them from our midst. This includes fleshly impulses and inclinations that may linger even as we choose to trust God. The Psalmist acknowledged feelings of fear, even as he affirmed the faith of his heart: "What time I am afraid, I will trust in Thee" (Psalm 56:3). Trusting God does not involve a faith without internal challenge, but rather that determines to believe in the face of anything that contradicts. We greatly glorify God thereby in a willed confidence of the heart.
A soldier was once asked by a reporter, "Do you feel fear before battles?" The warrior answered, "Yes." "How do you deal with those feelings?" the interviewer inquired. "I don't," responded the soldier. "You don't?" asked the reporter. "No, concluded the soldier. "My feelings are not relevant. I do not fight with them. I fight with my heart, my mind, my hands, and my feet." Few clearer illustrations exist that typify the life of faith to which God calls believers. Our senses and feelings certainly matter. He cares about them as our loving Father. However, we do not "fight the good fight of faith" with them (I Timothy 6:12). We fight through the Spirit, who leads and enables our spirit, regardless of what we feel or do not feel.
The day will come when our trust in God flows without hindrance or obstacle. This is not that day. No, today is the day of "the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith" (I John 5:4). This is the day of glory, not scandalous unbelief, the glory of our Lord being so present, involved, active, and able that we trust Him no matter what. Whatever the appearance of the outward, or the inclination of the inward, we make our stand in the leading and power of the Holy Spirit as He works in our spirit to enable our faith and confession, "I will trust in Thee."
"Thou therefore, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also. Thou therefore endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ."
(II Timothy 2:1-3)
Weekly Memory Verse
Know therefore that the LORD thy God, He is God, the faithful God."
(Deuteronomy 9:7)
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