”You
may have to fight the battle more than once to win it.” Margaret
Thatcher.
No
doubt the iron lady of Great Britain was speaking about politics,
but her statement applies to us as we fight to overcome sin.
At one point, Peter was willing to fight a whole band of men who
had come to take his Lord by force. A few hours later he was so
weak that he denied three times that he even knew Jesus.
We
must also continue to fight the battle to overcome the temptations
that surround us. Sometimes we are able to resist with ease and
come away unscathed. At other times we are weak and vulnerable to
the very same temptation.
It is important for us to recognize that the battle must be fought
over and over and that we are not always the same.
For
this reason we need to get up mentally for the fight against the
flesh. Paul said, ”I die daily.” He also said, ”Fight the good fight
of faith.”
We need to recognize that the battle must be fought over and over
again and each day we have to mentally get up for the fight of faith.
Paul, at the end of his life, was able to say, ”I have fought a
good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith.” He
could only say this because he had died daily, he had kept the faith
one day at a time, every day.
All
too often we fight the battle and win, we resist the temptation
and temporarily it is gone, and then we let our guard down, and
here it comes from the other direction.
The Lord Jesus was tempted to eat when he was starving. He resisted.
He was tempted to use his God given power to protect himself in
a fall. He resisted.
He
was tempted to take a short cut to glory and power. He resisted.
But this was not the end of his temptations. These same temptations
came back to haunt him over and over again during his ministry.
He had no sooner resisted the challenge to cast himself down from
the pinnacle of the temple and land safely, but his own people in
Nazareth ”took him by force and led him unto the brow of the hill
whereon their city was built, that they might cast him down headlong.”
This time he could simply have allowed them to push him over the
edge and used his God given power to float gently to the ground.
He resisted again.
The
lesson we learn is that every day there is a ”battle to be fought,
an onward race to run.” Everyday we must be prepared to face the
temptations and trials of the day, knowing that we will never be
”tempted beyond that which we are able to bear.”
We must not rest on our laurels and think we can win today’s battle
with yesterday’s score.
”This is the day which the Lord hath made.” ”Behold, now is the
accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.”
The
words of our hymn express the truth of Margaret Thatcher’s statement
that ”you may have to fight the battle more than once to win it.”
”There is a battle to be fought, an onward race to run, a crown
of glory to be sought, a victory to be won.”
|