Always a Choice
As we all know, most children love candy! If we have a rule in our family that we don’t eat suckers, we wouldn’t keep suckers in our house. My children would KNOW that suckers are not to be eaten. Can you imagine my son walking in the mall and seeing a candy store? He may keep walking. He may look inside. He may choose to go inside. Now, say he walks in, he hasn’t actually eaten the sucker right? As he looks around, he sees all kinds of different colors, flavors, and shapes that look interesting, maybe good, maybe even delicious. But he remembers that we, his parents, have a rule to not eat suckers. “I’m not eating it. I’m just looking,” he thinks, “Maybe even touching isn’t so bad.” After all he’s just feeling them and seeing the differences between the squishy gel suckers and the hard as a rock ones, but then he remembers he has a dollar in his pocket. Would it really be that bad to try a sucker? “I’ll just try it one time, so I know what it tastes like. That blue one over there! That’s the one I want,” he persuades himself. He puts his hand on the sucker to grab it and looks back at the door to see if anyone is watching…
Temptation is not sin.
Temptations are opportunities to be faithful to God.
No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.
-1 Corinthians 10:13
Sometimes our escape from temptation is the same door we used to walk in. We just need to walk out of the environment. Stop hanging out with that certain person. Close and get rid of that book or magazine. Put restrictions on our computers, TVs, and devices of what, when, and where they can be used, or maybe even to the point of getting rid of something.
Not only should we get out of toxic circumstances that have been continuous places of temptation and sin for us, but we have the choice to stay away from many temptations from the start. From the story, my son could have walked right past the candy store, and if he knew it would draw his attention too much, he could have taken a different route to the store he was going to. Sometimes we just need to say, “No” from the start and not walk in and “tease” ourselves with what we shouldn’t be doing.
How often are we like the child who looks back at the way of escape but for the reason of not wanting to be seen choosing sin. Instead, the view of the door should be seen as a welcome to come out of where you are, to not proceed to disobey God. Visualize this, if my son when grabbing the sucker looked back at the door and saw us, his parents, with arms wide open saying “Come on! You can make the right choice! I believe in you!” How much easier would it be for the child to make the right choice? That is what a “way of escape” is. God gives us an opportunity to turn to Him. To His outstretched arms willing to encourage and lead us into the right choice. God is faithful to us. Will we choose to be faithful to Him?
Disclaimer: I’m not saying eating suckers is sin, and although sucker intake is limited in our house, we do not have a rule against them altogether. :)