Victory Over Sin | thebereancall.org

Hunt, Dave

Torn between their sincere desire to serve and honor their Lord and the inner turmoil of fleshly lusts and the seductive pull of worldly pleasures and honors, many Christians struggle to live for Christ. For them, Christianity involves great effort, little joy, much frustration and disillusionment, and the loss (when they have enough willpower to deny themselves) of so much they once enjoyed in life. They struggle to avoid Paul's list of "don'ts" in Colossians:3:5-8: "Mortify therefore your members...fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry...put off all these; anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication out of your mouth." Failing repeatedly, they repent remorsefully and puzzle over their inability to live as they know they shouldbut seemingly can't.

They fare no better with Paul's list of  "do's" that follows (vv. 12-17); "Put on therefore, as the elect of God...bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving...giving thanks to God and the Father by him."

Is it really possible to be sweet, kind, humble, loving, and forgiving at all times? The spirit is willing, but the flesh proves ever to be embarrassingly weak. How can one live up to [these] high standards...? Is there some secret to victory we are overlooking?

The two key expressions, "mortify"...and "put on"...only increase the bewilderment and sense of failure. Is it really possible to "put to death" ungodly desires and, shedding that body of evil...to be clothed in a resurrection body of godliness? Surely Paul, led of the Holy Spirit, is not taunting us with goals that cannot be attained and...are not at all practical. Was he not himself an example of this kind of life, and did he not say more than once, "Be ye followers of me even as I also am of Christ" (1 Cor:4:16; 11:1)? Then why do we fail? From whence comes the motivation and the strength to accomplish what is at once so desirable and yet so seemingly impossible?

What Is "Therefore" There For?

There is a general failure to recognize the importance of one little word that occurs in both verses 5 and 12. It holds the answer to our dilemma. Paul does not say, "Mortify your members" and "Put on bowels of mercies, kindness...." That would impose a "do-it-yourself" religion of gritting one's teeth...and struggling to live up to high moral standards.... That is not Christianity. Paul carefully and pointedly says, "Mortify therefore.... Put on therefore...." Clearly therefore refers to something that Paul is convinced gives the Christian the motivation and power to do what he is commanding and lifts the Christian above the impossible struggle of flesh trying to live a godly life. It is, therefore, the Christian's secret to a happy, fruitful, and holy life that is pleasing to God.

The mortifying of the old deeds and the putting on of the new is possible only because, as the previous verses declare, "Ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God" (Col:3:3).... Herein lies the secret dynamic of the Christian life. Why, then, doesn't every Christian experience this power in daily living? Sadly, many who call themselves Christians have a very superficial understanding of the gospel they claim to have embraced (1 Cor:15:3,4).

For many who believe that Christ died for their sins, this event is more mystical than historical. The horrible death of the cross is something that happened to Christ but which has only a theoretical...connection to them. Some may have such a faulty understanding of what Christ's death means that they are not true Christians at all. They have imagined that the death of Christ in their place delivered them from their deserved eternal punishment in hell, so that, like Barabbas, they could live as they pleased. They have never desired what Paul rejoiced in: "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me" (Gal:2:20).

...For that great apostle, the cross was no mere religious symbol but the place where he had died to life as he would have lived it and had begun to experience the very life of Christ being lived in him. He knew that Christ gives resurrection life; therefore only those who have died in Christ can experience it....He realized that Christ had actually taken his place before a righteous, holy Godand that God had put Christ to death in payment for his (Paul's) sins. Therefore, Paul was a dead man. Christ's death in his place was literally his own death, and he rejoiced in that fact. If he was to experience life thereafter, it must be the resurrected Christ living in him. This...is to be our daily experience by faith.

Resurrection Power

...The most seductive temptation Satan can devise will arouse no response from a dead man....As a dead man, Paul experienced a new freedom over sin that he had never known before. Yet, in spite of being dead, Paul was more alive than he had ever been: "I am crucified...nevertheless, I live." Dead to sin, he was alive to God through Christ. So real was this to Paul that it was as though Christ Himself were living in himand, indeed, He was! Christ had become his very lifeand this, said Paul, was what Christianity was all about.

Paul reminded the saints at Colossae that victory over sin and self was not possible through willpower and fleshly struggle. True victory could only come through understanding and believing what Christ's death for their sins and resurrection for their justification really meant....

But how could Christ's death, burial, and resurrection be as real to them as it was to Paulso real that their very lives would be totally transformed?...They must believe that Christ was coming any moment to take them to heaven, where they would thereafter appear with Him in glory. It was the hope of Christ's imminent return that would make the difference between victory and defeat in the Christian life!...They were to be so heavenly minded that the things of this earth would have no appeal and thus no power over them.

...Through Christ's cross Christians have been crucified to the world and the world has been crucified to them, as Paul so firmly declared (Gal:6:14). A man who has just been taken down, dead, from a cross has no interest in this world nor does it have any claims upon him....So it is with the Christian and the world through the cross of Christ....Christ declared that the world would hate and persecute us as it had Him (Jn:15:18-20; 16:2; 17:14). By His cross we have been cut off from this world just as surely as He has been.

Death, however, did not end it all. Christ rose triumphant from the grave and ascended to the right hand of the Father in heaven. Moreover, He is coming again in power and glory to judge and take vengeance upon those who have rejected Himand we, who have identified ourselves with Him in His rejection and death, will participate in His triumph and glory. Nor is that Second Coming so far in the future that it has no practical meaning for us now. On the contrary, the Rapture (which precedes the Second Coming) could occur today. The glorious fulfillment of the hope that the gospel has instilled within our hearts could burst upon us at any moment! This fact causes eternity to invade the present and makes the Christian no longer of this world.

Only the Dead Can Be Resurrected

Hear Paul say it again: "For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." Consenting to be dead and willing for Christ to be their life was not only the Colossians' basis for victory, but the essential meaning of the gospel they must embrace....Let us diligently and enthusiastically "seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God." Let us "set [our] affection on things above, not on things on the earth." Why? "For our conversation [citizenship] is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ: who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself" (Phil:3:20,21). Praise God!  

Taken from An Urgent Call to a Serious Faith by Dave Hunt