Your Battle With Your Body – Part Two
Romans 12: 1 & 2
The exhortation to make a presentation of your body to God is one that speaks of a definite action. There needs to be a time when you make a definitive decision as to what you will and won’t do with your body.
This presentation is to be “holy”. This requires renouncing sins of the old life and committing to a life of obedience. Will you?
This presentation is to be a “living” one. In the sacrificial system the whole burnt offering ascended to God and was not reclaimable.
This presentation is to be for “service.”
Though there is to be a definite time of decision regarding making a presentation of your body to God, it needs to be renewed daily. This is done by daily “transforming your mind.”
“…do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? For you were bought at a price; therefore, glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.”
Imagine your body in light of the following. The Greek word for glorify is “doxazo.” It means to radiate the presence of and demonstrate the ownership of God in your body. Not all bodies look like a model in a glamor shot. That is not what it means. It is a reference to looking your best modestly, to have a positive attitude, a joyous spirit, a thankful outlook, a winsome countenance, to speak encouragingly, and overall a Godly nature. Thus, you can radiate and demonstrate. Go show it.
In the Old Testament era, worship centered around the altar and involved the presentation of sacrifices to God. With the sacrifice of the perfect Lamb of God on Calvary, this system ended. Because the day of animal sacrifice ended, many think sacrifices to God are unnecessary. That is wrong. He now deserves and desires a “living sacrifice.” He wants and deserves a walking, breathing, laughing, and loving sacrifice.
What does a living sacrifice look like?
First, it is nonconformist. This doesn’t simply relate to avoiding external fads; it deals principally with a deeper life of purity, cleanliness, and holiness.
Second, a living sacrifice is “transformed.” The prefix “trans” means “across” or “beyond.” To be transformed means to rise above the forms of the world. This is transcending excellence.
This speaks of a mind-set on God. A preoccupation with His will. A mental commitment to use your body for Him. This is the only way to win the battle with your body.
Your Battle With Your Body – Part One
Romans 12: 1 & 2
Jesus took upon Himself a body in order to do the will of God the Father. We must yield our bodies to Jesus in order for Him to continue to accomplish the will of the Father through us.
Think about that! Take a look at your body. It is intended to be a tool in the hand of God with which He does His work just as a hoe or shovel is in the hand of a gardener. Your body is intended to be an instrument in God’s hand with which He achieves His purpose just as a scalpel is in the hand of a surgeon.
In order to understand the spiritual application of this, let’s establish the fact that you do have to battle with your body. As proof of this, pause to remember how you have to battle with it every morning when it is time to get up. What a struggle!
One dear friend told me she used to have to set three alarm clocks to get up in the morning. One was close to the bed. Another set for a few minutes later was placed just out of reach from the bed. A third placed beyond the range of the second was set for a few minutes later. I can envision this person literally crawling out of bed. It’s a battle.
Your body fights back and resists every effort to get started. Your mind says it is time to get started but your body argues. It protests and resists physically.
This is no less true in the spiritual realm. Your mind and spirit desire to do a certain thing and behave in a biblical way, but your obstinate body protests. The body has certain interests and appetites which it craves and demands. A battle results.
Will you concede that you lose some of your biggest spiritual battles because your body wins over the spirit? The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.
Consider these biblical insights regarding your body.
“…do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? For you were bought at a price; therefore, glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.”
We need to pray as Paul that “Christ will be magnified in my body” (Phil. 1:20).
“And do not present your members as instruments of unrighteousness to sin, but present yourselves to God as being alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God” (Romans 6:13).
Inventory the members of your body. Which members afford you the greatest opposition in spiritual warfare? Give God every member. Give Him your hands, eyes, ears, reproductive organs, legs, stomach, and mind. There is victory in surrender.
Chase the Lions in Your Life
The following thoughts are derived from a book entitled “Chase the Lion.”
The story of Benaiah son of Jehoiada, a valiant warrior from Kabzeel, is recorded in II Samuel 23:20.
Put yourself in Benaiah’s sandals. Your vision is obscured by falling snow and frozen breath. Out of the corner of your eye, you detect movement. Pupils dilate. Muscles flex. Adrenaline rushes. It’s a prowling lion stalking its prey—you.
For some inexplicable reason the lion turns and runs away. Benaiah tracks him in the snow until he comes to the edge of a pit. The ground has given way under the weight of the 500 pound lion and he had fallen in. Benaiah peers down into the pit. A large pair of yellow cat eyes glare back.
Benaiah backs away, turns toward the pit, runs, and jumps in. There is a defining roar and bloodcurdling warriors yell from the pit. Doubtless the lion has a manwich to dine on.
Unexpectedly a human form slowly emerges from the pit. It is the warrior from Kabzeel, the victor. Claw marks crisscross his bloody frame.
You are not likely to face a lion under those conditions. But you’ve got to admit, “I killed a lion in a pit on a snowy day” looks very impressive on your résumé, especially if you’re applying for a bodyguard position with the king of Israel. Benaiah not only landed his dream job as King David’s bodyguard, but his life exceeded his wildest dreams. Benaiah climbed the military chain of command all the way to the top, becoming commander in chief of Israel’s army. Way to go, Ben.
In every life comes potential life changing challenges. A time to go big or go home. You have to venture or vegetate. Some readers are old enough to recall such a transitional moment. Hopefully you took the road less traveled and a dream came true.
Fear has kept many from fulfilling their God-sized dream.
God’s game plan for us is to play offense. Pursue with a passion God’s will for your life. You may venture and fail, but you can always do nothing and fail even worse.
Find God’s will and go after it like a lion-chaser. If after constructive thought and a prayerful search you determine God’s will let nothing hold you back from an all out effort to fulfill your dream.
When everything is said and done, God isn’t going to say, “Well said,” “Well thought,” or “Well planned.” There is one measuring stick: “Well done, good and faithful servant!”
Take as your mantra, “Thy will be done,” and go for it.
Anticipation, Frustration, Realization
The crucifixion scenario involved several days.
As a prelude to Friday, Thursday has earned a title indicating its involvement in the happenings. It is known as Maundy Thursday. The word “Maundy” is derived from the Latin word “mandatum” meaning “command,” and this word is the origin of the English “mandate.” Jesus made the mandate telling his followers: “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” John 13: 34, 35
On the evening of Thursday Jesus gathered to celebrate what is called the Lord’s Supper. He gave His followers the command.
Friday before Sunday earned the title Good Friday. It can only be seen as a good Friday in retrospect. From the vantage point of Sunday’s resurrection Friday is seen to be good, only because of what it enabled on Sunday.
There is a life cycle that played out during those days. We all experience the cycle. The three phases are: ANTICIPATION, FRUSTRATION, REALIZATION.
The disciples experienced them very dramatically. They had great anticipation. Jesus was everything for which they long hoped. He was their champion, the ultimate victor. They anticipated He was the one who would deliver them and restore Israel. Anticipation was on a mountain top high.
Then!
Frustration pushed anticipation off stage and took center stage. The crucifixion resulted in Jesus’ death and with it all they had anticipated died.
Frustration reigned supreme, gleefully. It cast a shroud of gloom over all they had anticipated. He was affirmed to be dead by the chief officer in charge of the execution as well as the high court of the time. All involved said He was dead. Death’s dirge sounded clearly.
But wait, there’s more. Realization rose with Sunday morning’s sun. Hopes were revived with certainty. Abundant life abounded. He is alive. This reality exceeded any anticipation they had previously. Fulfillment is overflowing.
Sing it, fortissimo, HE IS ALIVE! Say it, sing it, shout it, HE IS ALIVE.
What the apostles aspired to pales in light of what they now were to experience.
Now in light of this ultimate realization, flash back to Thursday and the commandment He left them and us to: “love one another.” Out of gratitude for all these blessings we can show our love for and devotion to Jesus by obeying His command and love one another.
Dark Clouds Forming
What time is it? It is time to pray.
I have tried to live as a realistic optimist. Looking for the good in all things has been my standard throughout life, I have sought God’s will in all things and I still do. I must concede that it has become increasingly difficult to find the good in current affairs.
Foreboding storm clouds have gathered on all foreign fronts, internal strife floods our streets, and chaos seems to prevail in our legislative halls.
The prophet Isaiah spoke of an ominous era:
“Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil;
Who put darkness for light, and light for darkness;
Who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!” Isaiah 5: 20
Evidences are we are there. Just a few indications are the complexities regarding former President Trump, the China/Taiwan threats, the coalition of Russia/China/Iran, the war in Ukraine, the Tennessee three disruption, the economic uncertainty, our open borders, the lack of leadership locally and nationally, and an undercover government, are but a few of our challenges. All the while this laughed about, winked at, and refusal of admission of pending calamity.
Woe is pronounced by God when such an hour comes.
I found this commentary of such an era based on Isaiah 51: 12:
“How often do we look at the difficulties in life and the people that threaten us with pain and problems, and start to sink into an abyss of fear, a seemingly bottomless pit of terror of the shocking things of which we know that fallen man is capable?
Our home and happiness come under threat, our comfort and character are the target of their fierce arrows, our family and friends, our safety and security, and even our work and witness for the Lord seems to be the only target at which they are aiming their cruel condemnation and fiery darts of contempt and censure – and as a result our peace and contentment is shredded into distress and confusion.
But like the people of Israel, we too are to hearken to the voice of the Lord. We are to look to the Rock of our salvation. We who have trusted in Christ as Savior are to remember the many precious promises He has made towards us, and we are also to recall countless times that God has defended and comforted His people Israel in their distress, knowing that His grace is the same toward His people, the Church, as it was in ancient past.”
What this means is things may not always be alright, but those who follow the Lord are going to be alright. We must not understand that to mean believers will be exempted when difficult times, but that they will experience His grace all the way to the grave, and thereafter share in His eternal glory.
What time is it? It is time to pray and become expressive. His grace is sufficient.