While
serving in the military in Italy I was able to study with a young man in
the barracks who seemed to be deeply interested in spiritual things.
Over a period of some time I made it a point to go over all that I knew
to cover in order to teach him how to be a Christian. We went over the
Bible plan of salvation and he seemed to accept it quickly. We studied
the nature of the church and one's relationship to it when one is born
again. I was pleased beyond words when he expressed his desire to be
baptized for the remission of his sins. The small church there was happy
to receive a new babe in Christ.
He
enthusiastically participated in our Bible studies and worship for a few
weeks, and then he began to grow distant and less interested. Then he
ceased to attend. He became unavailable for further private study and
reluctant to discuss spiritual things. We were concerned that someone
had possibly said or done something that had created a problem and we
wanted to do whatever might be reasonable or possible to help.
Finally, he
told me his problem: "It didn't work." He went on to explain that he had
had a habit of smoking cigarettes and he had expected God to "deliver"
him from this habit upon becoming a true, New Testament Christian.
Instead, the temptation was even stronger than it had been before and he
had been praying and pleading with God to remove it. We offered all of
the encouragement that we knew how to give to him. We were sympathetic
and patient. We prayed for him. He would not return to the race,
however, and the pained look on his face suggested that his belief about
this matter was sincere.
I suspect
that most of us can, to some degree, identify with this man and his
challenge. We have found ourselves faced with difficulties and have
yearned for some immediate and God-given relief. We have been able to
recognize the moral rightness of some activity that we have wanted to
engage in and yet we have been unable to easily find the resolve to go
and do it. We have seen the evil in some thing that we desire to do and
have yet struggled with an intense desire or tendency to do it. Honest
and introspective men will admit to this and kind men will not ask me
for examples.
Does God
fail us? When the preacher loses his train of thought or stumbles over
some words after some good brother has publicly prayed that he will have
a "ready recollection of the things that he has studied" can it be said
that God has failed? When a young man in Italy does not obtain the
desired reduction in his temptation after genuine obedience and fervent
prayer, has God neglected to do what He has taught us to expect?
God does
not fail us. On the other hand, we victimize and defraud our brethren,
especially new converts, when we teach them to expect some immediate
relief, some supernatural reduction in their temptation, or some
miraculous increase in their resolve to do what is right. These are real
people with real struggles who are seeking real answers. We help them on
their way up that narrow road to the strait gate of heaven when we teach
them the process by which God does give powerful aid through His
inspired word.
This
profound difference (between the notion of direct aid and the truth of
moral assistance given by God by means of His word) is not merely
academic. The doctrine of direct help produces human fatalities. It
leads men to expect what is not offered and that expectation causes very
real stumbling -- and emotional distress. It leaves honest men and women
feeling abandoned by God and looking the other way while God's hand is
extended to them.
God wants
to actively work in the heart of every Christian. The fact that He has
chosen to use His word as His instrument for doing so does not diminish
the power of His operation upon our moral lives. Only our All-Knowing
and All-Powerful God knows our hearts and is able to supply our needs.
He tells us that his word is "living and powerful, and sharper than any
two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and
of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of
the heart"
(Heb 4:12).
He teaches us to expect that He, through His word will teach us, reprove
us, correct us, nurture us in righteousness, and furnish us completely
for every good work"
(2 Tim 3:16).
Let us teach our brethren that God is ready, willing, and attempting to
help them if they will only avail themselves of His offered help. He
knows of our personal struggles and sympathizes with us as He leads us
with His word
(Heb 4:12-15).
May we be able to say to those who remain faithful that "we also thank
God without ceasing, because when you received the word of God which you
heard from us, you welcomed it not as the word of men, but as it is in
truth, the word of God, which also effectively works in you who believe"
(1 Thes 2:13).
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