"Whom having not seen you love.   Though now you  do not see Him, yet believing, you rejoice with joy  inexpressible and full of glory, receiving the end  of your faith, the salvation of your souls"       1 Peter 1:8-9
"Stop it!"  she cried indignantly.   "I will not do that!   Now go  away and leave me alone."  Silently, ashamedly, dejectedly,  the interloper backs out of the door, but a smirk crosses  his face as he turns to leave, "I may go now, but rest assured,  I will return."   He whirls and saunters down the hallway to  the bank of elevators.
The struggle this woman faced is one we face every day...the trying of our faith.   It may have been a perverted temptation  that caused our heroine to cringe.   It could have been the temptation to lie or steal or cheat or speak falsely, but  she was victorious... this time.   Will she be equally firm  when temptation visits again?   She did the right thing.   She stood firm.   She denied the tempter entrance into  her domain.   How long can she hold out for surely the  visitor will return again ... and again ... and again?   If she  continually turns her back on the fatal attraction, she  will find her faith and her resolve strengthened and the  accuser will visit less frequently.   But he will use the  time to devise more subtle temptations.   Will she be  in tune with her God enough to see the new attempts  and flee from them?
Ah, the troubles and trials of the believer in Jesus.   Have  you ever wondered why God doesn't save people, let  them preach in their newfound zeal for a few months,  then "take them home"?   I have.   Many of the people  I have ministered to in the past have.   It is not an  uncommon thought - one that often comes to us  after a failure.   That's when I ask "why?"   We don't  like to fail.  We don't enjoy falling.   When we sin, we  feel miserable wondering if we will ever "get it right."   Those are times when our faith is tested.   Those are  times when we must dig deep into our spiritual reserves  and find the strength to start over again.   We all struggle  with temptation.  We all stumble from time to time.   We  all fail to meet God's expectations... that is what sin is.
The difference is this: God forgives and forgets; we  degrade ourselves and ponder the nature of our sinful  lives.   It isn't God who condemns us.   He forgives.   It  isn't the Holy Spirit that makes us feel like failures.   His lifts us up and leads us into righteousness.   We  are the ones who cast condemnation upon ourselves  because we listen to the accuser of our souls.   The  accuser would have us cast ourselves upon the spear  of blame and impale ourselves condemned to die in  the lost condition from which God redeemed us through  Jesus Christ.
The object, the goal, of our faith is salvation.   We need  to take our sight off of our failures and focus on the  beaming face of God as He sees us, as He wants  us to be - perfect.   And if He sees us whole and  blameless, we must believe that, that is what we  are through the blood of Jesus.   In this way our  faith is made whole and strong and perfect and  we are victorious.   Amen and Amen.
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