![]() ![]() Reckon upon Him, and you will be able to stand against the most subtle temptation and the most dangerous threats that come against you. The great apostle writes to him this word of advice: Remember Jesus Christ, raised from the dead (2 Timothy 2:8). Paul is a prisoner in Rome, and Timothy, a rather timid young man, is all alone and feeling discouraged in the great pagan city of Ephesus. One of my favorite passages of the New Testament is found in Paul's second letter to Timothy. The enemy saw that they could achieve nothing with their attacks. When they remembered this, they became reassured and renewed in courage. The great and awesome God who was with them would stand with them in their peril. They had a power at work in their lives that their enemies knew nothing about. ![]() Then, second, Nehemiah reviews the spiritual resources available to them. ![]() What are we addicted to? A wrong habit, a drug, an attitude of mind? Bitterness of spirit? When we have identified the source of attack, we must post a guard at that point. We must observe exactly where we are under attack. This approach is necessary if we are going to improve our own lives. First, he carefully looks over the situation and evaluates what is needed. These kinds of things are possible when we begin to right wrongs. You may even have been invited out in the parking lot to face a physical attack. You may have been threatened with demotion or with eviction from your apartment. Have you ever faced something like that? Were you ever threatened at work when you tried to correct an immoral or illegal practice that was being carried on around you? Perhaps someone said to you, Keep that up, and you may lose your job here. The enemy immediately takes advantage of that weakness and discouragement (Nehemiah 4:11). There was an enormous amount of debris and broken stones that had to be cleared away before they could get to the walls. Still the enemy persists, and he launches a propaganda campaign. Prayer and preparedness! This blending of the resources of the spiritual life with those of the material world is a marvelous picture of how believers ought to face threats, recognizing that we need action on both levels. When you begin to move with God to change things in your life for the better, you will find that you are met first with derision, and if you keep persisting, someone is going to get very upset with you and attack you in a vicious, perhaps physical, way.īut see how Nehemiah reacts, He still relies on prayer (Nehemiah 4:9). The enemy mobilizes its forces, escalating the attack, and begins to plan direct violence. ![]()
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