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What the Bible says about Temptation as Pull of Carnal Nature
(From Forerunner Commentary)

Matthew 5:27-28

The person condemned by Jesus here deliberately uses his eyes to awaken and stimulate his lust. It is difficult enough to avoid lusting after natural things, but many things in this world are deliberately designed to awaken wrong desires. If certain books, pictures, magazines, movies, places, activities, or people tempt us to lust, we must avoid them, regardless of the cost. Not sinning is that important!

John W. Ritenbaugh
The Tenth Commandment (1998)

Romans 8:7

Consider that final phrase, "nor indeed can be." As long as we are in the flesh, made of physical matter, we have a carnal mind—a carnal spirit that is absolutely unable to be subject to the law of God.

We have heard this repeatedly over the years, but have we ever really stopped to consider its ultimate implications? It is no fun to meditate or dwell on our negatives, but this verse implies that, even with God's Holy Spirit working within us, we are fighting a losing battle if we choose to ignore this fact. What a sobering thought! Our human spirit was not designed to be impervious to evil, for that would have precluded our need to develop righteous character as God requires of all who are to experience eternal life with Him.

But, even with its designed limitations, our nature still was not created to be evil—in fact, just the opposite (see Ecclesiastes 7:29)! We realize that along with the remainder of creation, our human spirit was judged by our Creator to be good, even very good (Genesis 1:31). But it did not remain as it was created; it was corrupted by sin.

In Genesis 3, in the account of humanity's first transgression, the first pattern of resistance is revealed. Satan manages to convince Eve that eating of the fruit would make her as wise as God (Genesis 3:5). In verse 6, Eve succumbs to the temptation: "So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree desirable to make one wise, she took of the fruit and ate." Quite simply, she was attempting to elevate herself in relation to God, and in doing so, she "achieved" the first pattern of resistance, becoming the first to fail to submit to the will of God.

Immediately afterward, she lied about that first pattern, declaring in verse 13, "The serpent deceived me," trying to blame her sin on Satan's lie. But the truth is that she was allured and charmed by the notion that by ignoring His command, she could elevate herself and become like God. Satan did not make her sin. Deceived—by Satan and herself—she chose to. How did Satan know what to do, and why was it seemingly so easy?

Jeremiah 17:9, the companion scripture to Romans 8:7, says: "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked. Who can know it?" God's Word Translation catches its essence: "The human mind is the most deceitful of all things. It is incurable. No one can understand how deceitful it is." Consider together the phrase, "most deceitful of all things," and all the evil, terrible, wicked things in our world. God says that the human heart—the carnal mind—is more deceitful than any of those other things. And it cannot be cured.

Do we ever really take the time to consider that? We certainly do not bear it in mind every day, as we should. Again, even with God's Holy Spirit working within us, we are still fighting a losing battle if we fail to consider its full implications.

Eve's mind was pure when Satan first approached her in the Garden, but he knew just how to corrupt it instantaneously—with a lie it would want to hear, one her mind would want to believe. And so it did. If we are not careful, we, too, can still be deceived into believing a similar lie.

Joseph B. Baity
Patterns of Resistance (Part One)

James 1:13-16

In The Living Bible this passage reads:

And remember, when someone wants to do wrong it is never God who is tempting him, for God never wants to do wrong and never tempts anyone else to do it. Temptation is the pull of man's own evil thoughts and wishes. These evil thoughts lead to evil actions and afterwards to the death penalty from God. So don't be misled, dear brothers.

In many, desire arises to use the Sabbath in a way that is beyond God's simple directives. The temptation arises, perhaps in part motivated by a demon, and our heart follows after it rather than God's simple commands, just as Adam and Eve did in the Gard. Keeping the Sabbath is not complicated.

John W. Ritenbaugh
Sabbathkeeping (Part 2)


 

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