Dan Everiss
<oregdan@hotmail.com> | Sun, Mar 27, 2016 at 2:10 PM |
|
On the reasons why God permits temptations to come upon those who love Him
From the love that the saints show for God on account of the things they suffer
for His Name's sake (when they endure straitness and do not forsake
that which God loves), their hearts acquire the boldness to gaze toward
Him without a veil and to beseech Him with confidence. Great is the power of bold prayer. For this reason God allows His saints to be tried by every sorrow, then to experience anew and prove His aid, and to understand how great a providence
He has for them, for in their perils He is found to be their Redeemer.
And again, He does this so that they may gain wisdom from temptations,
lest they be unlearned men and be deprived of the two parts of training,
and so that they may acquire the knowledge of all things, lest perhaps
they be mocked by the demons. For if He exercised them only in that
which is good, they would lack training in the other part and would be
blind in battles.
If
we say that God guides His saints without training and without their
knowledge of it, then we are saying that He wishes them to be like oxen
and asses and creatures which possess no freedom. If a man is not first
tried by the experience of evils, he has no taste for the good. Hence
when in evils he meets with that which is good, he will be unable in
knowledge and freedom to make use of it as being his very own. How sweet
is knowledge that is gained from actual experience and diligent
training, and what power it gives to the man who through much experience
has found it within himself, the same is known by those who have been
assured of and have seen the help it affords them.
Then they learn the weakness of their nature and the help of divine power, when God first withholds His power from them while they are amid temptations. Thus He makes them conscious of their nature's impotence, the arduousness of temptations, and the cunning of the enemy. Thus
He gives them to understand against whom they must wrestle, what kind
of nature they are clothed with, how they are protected by divine power,
how far they have advanced on the way, to what height God's power has
raised them up, and how powerless they are before the face of every
passion when the divine power is withdrawn from them. Through
all these things they acquire humility, cleave closely to God, look for
His help with expectation, and persevere in prayer. Whence could they
have received all these boons, if they had not had experience of the
many evils which God allowed them to undergo? As the Apostle says, And
lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the
revelations, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh,
a messenger of Satan.' (2 Cor. 12:7 ) But by the experience of many
interventions of divine assistance in temptations, a man also acquires firm faith. Henceforth he has no fear, and he gains stout-heartedness in temptations from the training he has acquired.
Trial is profitable for every man. For if trial was profitable for Paul, 'Let every mouth be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God.' (Rom. 3:19) The
diligent are tried, that they might add to their riches; the lax are
tried, that they might guard themselves from what is harmful; the sleepy
are tried, that they might be armed with wakefulness; those afar off
are tried, that they might draw nearer to God; those who are God's own
are tried, that with boldness they might enter into His house.
The son who is not trained will receive no profit from the riches of his father's house. For this reason, then, God first tries and afflicts,
and thereafter reveals His gift. Glory be to our Master Jesus Christ
Who brings us the sweetness of health by stringent medicines!
There is no man who will not feel oppressed at the time of training, nor any who will not find
the time bitter wherein he is given the medicine of trials to drink.
Without temptations a man cannot acquire a strong constitution, yet to
endure with patience is not within our power. For how should the clay
vessel endure the vehemence of the waters, if the divine fire
had not hardened it? If we submit ourselves to God, while beseeching
Him humbly with perseverance in unceasing desire, we shall certainly
receive all, in Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Guest comments MAYBE can be made by email.
joannahigginbotham@runbox.com
Anonymous comments will not be published. Daniel will not see unpublished comments. If you have a message for him, you need to contact him directly.
oregdan@hotmail.com