Tuesday, January 31, 2017

THE SOLUTION TO BACKSLIDING

“Though I forget Him, and wander away...”

Fallen Believers are a reality in the Church. Both James and Paul were aware of such possibility (Jas 5:19; Gal 6:1); and Paul himself testified of having lost a certain Demas to the world, (2Ti 4:10). Sin, for a true Christian, is a heart-wrenching issue and No true Believer relishes the fact that they have fallen into sin. Yet many still find it hard to come to repentance.

A major reason for this is a misunderstanding of the Father’s attitude towards them. If a fallen Believer holds the erroneous notion that they have “crucified the Lord a 2nd (29th?) time”, or that they have so “grieved” the Holy Spirit that He has left them, they’re likely to be too stricken to return.

We may be being sincere when we tell them that God’s heart is “wrenched” when the Believer sins, but we must remember that our primary goal is to restore our fallen Brother/Sister, NOT try to highlight our moral high ground. A truly distraught child of God isn’t going to want to return to a Father whose heart they have broken. And left outside of God’s shielding, they’ll remain in guilt and condemnation and be the repeat-prey of the enemy.

Scriptures makes us see that repentance is expedited by knowledge of the Father’s unconditional love for us. The parable of the “Prodigal Son” (Lk 15:11-32), perfectly portrays what happens when the lowest of the low child recalls that there is still a glimmer of hope for him in the heart of the Father.

Though the prodigal son had partial knowledge of the extent of his father’s forgiveness, it was still enough to cause him to return. He wanted to be a lowly servant, but the father would have none of it, he wanted to confess, but the father cut him short, he trudged half-heartedly back home, but his father  RAN to him.

Beloved, the image of God scowling on His throne screaming, “How could you?” is not just unbiblical, but has also created a barrier to full restoration for His children. It causes them even when they do return to come with uncertainty and un-assuredness. They feel the ‘returning’ Holy Spirit still has a grudge; and what about that lovely promise of the Father to them before they fell? Well, just Forget About It!

NO. Let the word of P. P. Bliss instruct us today:

Though I forget Him, and wander away,
Still He doth love me wherever I stray;
Back to His dear loving arms I do flee,
When I remember that Jesus loves me.

The Love, not the disappointment, of the Father is what draws his children back to Him.

AMEN.
More Blessings await you today; you’ll not miss them in Jesus’ Name.

GREG ELKAN

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