Seduction’s tactics are not complicated (Prov 7:10-20):
- Initiative
- Dress
- Commonality
- Touch
- Foreplay
- Piety
- Taste
- Sights
- Smells
- Adventure
Though death awaits, we still regularly go looking for trouble and find it. What applications can we make from Proverbs 7? How do we strengthen our resistance to this wily enemy?
1. Before the Seduction
The battle begins long before you face sin’s temptation. This is where you discover whether you want to resist it or not. “Whoever says ‘I know him’ but does not keep his commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him, but whoever keeps his word, in him truly the love of God is perfected” (1 John 2:4-5, ESV).
Do you have time scheduled to soak in the commands of God? Do you have adequate time in the Scripture? Do you even want to have such time?
As you spend time in God’s word, you hear the voice of Jesus. His perspective overshadows your own. His delight drowns yours. His death gives you life and reminds you of what’s most important. Hint: It’s not your self-gratification but his kingdom. When Jesus is your intimate friend, immorality’s seduction becomes less and less seductive. Why would you gorge on black licorice when there’s ice cream in the freezer?
2. During the Seduction
As best you can, try to figure out what you’re thinking while in the midst of temptation. What do you really want? What do you think this immoral act will give you? This is difficult because immorality is not particularly logical. But your thinking provides the avenue to your heart. You and I must identify the lies before we can replace them with the truth.
Did you have a hard day with difficult deadlines and unresolved conflict? Do you think sexual sin will offer an escape?
Does your life feel out of control? Do you think sexual sin will make you feel powerful and stable once again?
Are you feeling sorry for yourself? Do you feel mistreated, alone, abandoned, or discouraged? Do you think sexual sin will make you happy again? Do you think it will feel good?
Remind yourself that the Lord is near, and he sees all. How does that influence your motivations?
3. After the Seduction
You might expect me to say “remember the gospel.” And that’s critical, but it comes with another key discipline: Reinforce the pain. Not in a guilt-ridden, beat-yourself-up sort of way, but in a sobered, moment-of-truth, life-lesson sort of way.
By “reinforce the pain,” I don’t mean that you should flagellate yourself and feel sorry for yourself all over again. That would not be in line with the fact that Jesus already died to rescue you.
No, I mean that you should receive the Lord’s discipline. He disciplines those he loves, and he chastises every son he receives (Heb 12:6). No discipline is pleasant at the time, but painful. So receive the pain. Learn from it. Brand it on your conscience and leverage it to strengthen you in your Father’s love.
As a teenager, I once drove a girl home and ended up making out with her in the car before she went inside. It didn’t surprise me when it happened. I had hoped it would happen when I offered to give her a lift; I was reasonably sure she was baiting me to it (though I blame myself, not her, for the idiocy of it).
But afterward I felt awful. I felt so bad about it—not because I felt condemned by God, but because it felt so unsatisfying—that as I drove the rest of the way home, I prayed to God and shouted things at myself: “That was not fun! That really sucked! That was the stupidest thing you could do!”
I don’t condone fits of rage, and I acknowledge that this story is somewhat childish. But I’ll confess that few things have been more helpful to me when I face sexual temptation. The memory of my private shouting match has stuck with me ever since. I’m not perfect, but often, when I face temptation, I still hear my own voice: “That was not fun! That really sucked!” And the memory of the pain reminds me both to remember what Jesus has done and to reconsider what the Lord would have me do.
And I have never regretted such remembrance and reconsideration.
Question: What practical steps have helped you to unmask immorality’s deceptive tactics?
Dana Perkins says
Thanks Peter – this is helpful. I always remember to speak to myself these things. Satan is a lier, he loves to bring confusion and conflict to relationships and in my inmost being, disharmony. All sin disappoints, failing to deliver what it has promised and I am left feeling empty – even missing out on what I want most – the intimacy of knowing God and pleasing him, for whom I was made.
Samuel Asante says
Thanks for the inspiration….
I am really touched and believe there’s still a chance to turn back on things that are not good for my ministry…. God bless you in abundant…