Overcoming the World
James 4:7-10
Many believers are overwhelmed by the great gulf
between how they should live and how they actually live. They begin to doubt their
salvation because they feel that they have fallen far short of that which is
expected of Christians. Every Christian, I believe, feels that way at one time
or another. But we musn't acquiesce in our failures. If you are a born-again Christian, you
are a supernatural person in Christ. You are a partaker of the divine nature,
and have the unfailing access to the indwelling Lord. You are able to overcome
the world. These aren't mere words. This is the reality of Christian experience.
In James 4:7-10, God uses a series of exhortations that tell us how to shake off
discouragement, and really overcome the trials and temptations that surround us.
That passage reads:
Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.
Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you. Cleanse your hands, ye sinners;
and purify your hearts, ye doubleminded. Be afflicted, and mourn, and weep: let
your laughter be turned to mourning and your joy for heaviness. Humble
yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up.
There are six guidelines here. Let's look at them one at at time.
1. SUBMIT YOURSELVES TO GOD We are God's servantts. Although our Lord is
gracious enough to regard us as His friends, His brothers, His sheep and so on,
our attitude should always be that which God Himself tells us to have in Luke
17:10: "We are unprofitable servants: we have done that which was our duty
to do." Remember, we were hell-bound sinners whom Jesus graciously redeemed
by going to the cross. He purchased us with His own blood. We belong to Him
totally. Since Christ is the Lord of our life, we do not have our own agendas.
We just submit to whatever He wants for us. A servant strives to discover what
his master wants and then does it. We may not understands why, but with a
childlike trust, we simply obey.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION We know that we have been given a new life in Christ
and God is in the process of transforming us into the image of His Son, bringing
every part of our lives under His way. We are being changed, and change is often
painful. As a means to strengthen our faith, God sends a host of trials into our
lives to chasten us. Instead of being resentful or discouraged by such
chastening, we need to surrender to God totally. We can trust Him to take full
charge of our life because the Bible assures us that God works all things
together for good to them that love Him.
2. RESIST THE DEVIL There are so-called Chritians who live worldly life
and blame it on Satan, saying, "The Devil makes me do it." Indeed, all
unbelievers are ruled by Satan. Not so, however, for the child of God. The Bible
assures us in I John 4:4 that "greater is he that is in you, than he that
is in the world." With God the Holy Spirit indwelling us, Satan can never
make us do anything. When a believer rebels against God, he merely succumbs to
his own sinful nature. To be sure, Satan does try to attack Christians. He walks
about like a roaring lion, seeking someone he may devour. He blinds the unsaved,
so he can turn his vicious attention upon
believers. Hence, God tells us in Ephesians 6:11: "Put on the whole armour
of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil." The
armour of God comprises every aspect of our salvation. Only when we are so
fitted are we equipped to resist the devil.
DIVINE EXAMPLE. We should resist the devil the way our Lord did when He
was tempted by the devil at the beginning of His earthly ministry. Satan
challenged Him in the three main areas of human weaknesses-the desire for
physical thing, for fame, and for power. And in all cases, Jesus rebuked the
devil by applying the word of God to the situation. Our text says, "Resist
the devil, and he will flee from you," and that was precisely what Satan
did after the Lord has resisted him. We can count on his fleeing from us too
when we stands firm in the word of God.
3. DRAW NIGH TO GOD How does one on earth draw near to God who is in
heaven? or one thing, Jesus says, "For where two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them' (Matt 18:20). So, go to
the fellowship of His true people, and there you will find Him. In these
end-time days, particularly notable is Hebrews 10:25: "Not forsaking the
assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one
another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching." Secondly,
Jesus Himself is the word of God. He speaks to us through the Bible. Another way
to draw near to God, therefore, is to spend time to read and study the
scriptures and meditate on them. Better yet, learn from those teachers and
preachers who are gifted to search out spiritual truths hidden from the surface.
Again, there is a promise attached to this command, "...and he will draw
nigh to you." As we get to know God more and more, our personal
relationship with Him will become increasingly intimate. Finally, of course, we
draw night to God by praying to Him. God knows what we are going to say even
before we open our mouths. Nevertheless, God commands us to pray without ceasing
because our prayers express in action our enormous love and praises for Him,
our heartfelt desire to communicate with Him, and our continuing need to seek
His strength and guidance.
4. GET CLEAN The second half of verse 8 says, "Clean your hands, ye
sinners, and purify your hearts, ye double minded." A Christian is a cleansed
man. His sins have been forgiven and he has been adopted into the family of God.
Why then is this verse telling us to wash our hands and purify our hearts? For
the answer, lets look at a remark Jesus made on the eve of His crucifixion. The
Lord started to wash the feet of the disciples saying, "If I wash thee not,
thou hast no part with me" (John 13:8). Peter than said, "Lord, not my
feet only, but also my hands and my head". Jesus answered in verse 10:
"He that is washed needeth not save
to wash his feet, but is clean every whit: and ye are clean, but not all."
You see, when we become saved we are given a new, resurrected soul that does not
sin. But we still live in a body that has a sinful nature. And just as our feet
are made dirty by contacting the earth, our body is contaminated by interacting
with the world. So, although we have become saved, we still need to be
repeatedly cleansed. Elsewhere in the Bible, we are told to mortify the deeds of
the body. Incidentally, a double-minded person is one who thinks that he can
live a Christian life and still love the world. If you have such an atatitude,
your heart needs to be purified.
5. BE AFFLICTED, MOURN AND WEEP The command of verse 9–"Be
afflicted, and mourn, and weep; let your laughter be turned to mourning, and
your joy to heaviness" –seems to be at odds with those passages in the
Bible that repeatedly tell us to rejoice. But they are talking about different
stages of our conversion. Before we become saved, we lived a worldly life that
gave us temporary joy and laughter as we indulged in all kinds of ungodly
behavior. But Jesus says, "Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand." (Matt. 4:17). To repend is to acknowledge that we have been living a
wicked and unholy life, but now want to do things God's way. We don't want the
kind of wordly joy and laughter anymore. Nowadays, we sing in the hymn
"Beneath the cross of Jesus" of the wonder of "my own
worthlessness." It was when we first thought of our worthlessness that we
became afflicted (that is, we endured deep sorrow); we mourned and we wept.
Thankfully, as Christ promises in the Beatitudes, "Blessed are they that
mourn: for they shall be comforted" (Matt 5;4), we were comforted when God
saved us and gave us a new life in Christ. With that new life and new hope, we
rejoice now and for evermore.
6. HUMBLE YOURSELVES Christ, being found in the fashion as a man, humbled
himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. For us to
be Christ-like, God wants us to humble ourselves in His sight. Even as our Lord
thought it not robbery to be equal with God, we should all the more be willing
to part with all the things and pleasures that the world entices us with. God
wants us to come to Him with empty hands. We are God's servants and every
servant humbles himself. Every day we ask the Lord as Paul did on the road to
Damascus, "What shall I do, Lord"" (Acts 22:10). That is where
humility begins. The Christian pours contempt on all his pride; he becomes
increasingly willing to be where God wants him to be, and do what God wants him
to do, for as long as God wills. And for all such men who humble themselves the
promise is that "he shall lift you up."
ILLUSTRATION: I trod on some blue twine as I was briskly
walking to the Post Office the other day and down I crashed, the mail in my hand
flying everywhere. Immediately a young man approached me and asked whether I was
all right. I told him I had apparently twisted my ankle and he helped lift me up
and gather back my mail. Though embarrassed, I was thankful to him
because I couldn't have stood up on my own at the moment. God always knows when
we are down, and God knows how to lift us up. Did he not do it that first great
definitive time in salvation? He will go on lifting us up throughout our lives.
by Geoff Thomas