Addictions, Accusations, and Answers

Blog, Discipleship, General, Mentoring, Spiritual Warfare

Dec 16 2010

In a recent edition of Christianity Today, Carolyn Arends addresses addiction, what she (and Gerald May before her) call “the spiritual disease of our time.” While the goal of the article is rightly to direct us to fulfillment in Jesus alone, it is the reflection given to addictive behaviors that first caught my attention. A few quotes capture the author’s thinking:

  • “One of the hallmarks of addiction is ‘tolerance’—the experience of requiring an ever-increasing amount of a particular substance or behavior in order for it to satiate us.”
  • “Yesterday’s thrill is today’s old news. We always need more.
  • “. . . we are obsessed by unworthy masters who can never truly satisfy.”

Even for those of us who might claim no addictions, these words sound hauntingly familiar. In fact, replace “addiction,” “thrill,” and “masters” with the word “sin” or “sins” in these sentences, and the powerful lure of the devil’s traps becomes obvious.  We drink from the well of sin, thinking that our choices will somehow bring fulfillment – only to discover that sin leaves us thirstier in the long run.     

There is also a spiritual warfare aspect here that we seldom recognize. For the sake of illustration, imagine a “sin line” that marks the place where we cross from obedience into disobedience.  On one side of that line, the Enemy is the enticer (1 Chron. 21:1) who seeks to draw us across the line. He makes sin look inviting, exciting, and satisfying, even as he ensnares us with his messages:  “Go ahead and do it, nobody will know.”  “Look at what you’re missing.” “Everybody else is doing it.” So alluring is the sin, and so loud are the messages, that we choose to cross the line.

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ROMAN CATHOLICS, EXORCISMS, AND EVANGELICALS

Blog, Discipleship, Evangelism, General, Great Commission, Missions, Spiritual Warfare

Nov 19 2010

It has been widely publicized that Roman Catholics sponsored a conference on exorcism this past week.  Over 100 bishops and priests signed up to attend the conference, and pre-conference coverage included Associated Press and The New York Times articles. In having this conversation and this conference, Roman Catholics may well be ahead of evangelicals.  

That is not to say, though, that I see a place for exorcism training.  To begin, many “exorcists” assert that demons can possess believers.  Those taking this position must find biblical texts to try to prove that (1) a possessed non-believer is really a believer (e.g., Luke 13:10-17) or (2) that a genuine believer is really possessed (e.g., Matt. 16:21-23).  Both of these conclusions are, in my judgment, biblically indefensible.  What the Scriptures do teach is that believers are indwelt by and sealed by the Spirit of God (2 Cor. 1:22, Eph. 1:14), and the One in us is more powerful than the one that rules the world (1 John 4:4).   

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Time Magazine Speaks to Evangelicals

Blog, Church Consultation, General, Leadership, Southern Baptist Convention, Spiritual Warfare

Mar 18 2010

I don’t recall fearing writing a blog, but this one scares me.  

This week, Time magazine published its annual special issue, “10 Ideas for the Next 10 Years.”[1]  Trend number 9 — “The Twilight of the Elites” — caught my attention not because of its title, but because of its subtitle: “Why we have entered the post-trust era.” 

The article starts ominously enough:

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Chuck Lawless

Dr. Chuck Lawless is Dean of the Billy Graham School of Missions and Evangelism, and President of the Lawless Group, a church consulting firm.

My Books

Putting on the Armor

Putting on the Armor: Equipped and Deployed for Spiritual Warfare. Lifeway, 2007.

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