Thursday, October 24, 2019

PT-2 "The Shield of Faith" (Eph. 6:16)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 10/24/2019 10:30 AM

My Worship Time                                                                  Focus:  PT-2 “The Shield of Faith”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                                 Reference:  Ephesians 6:16

            Message of the verse:  in addition to all, taking up the shield of faith with which you will be able to extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one.

            I have to say that the faith that John MacArthur is talking about is different than the faith that I thought the “Shield of Faith” was referring to.  He writes “But faith in God is immeasurably more reliable and more important than the practical, everyday faith by which we live.  And it is far from being simply ‘faith in something.’  Faith is only as reliable and helpful as the trustworthiness of its object; and Christian faith is powerful and effective because the object of faith, Jesus Christ, is infinitely powerful and absolutely dependable.  Christian faith never fails, because the One in whom that faith is places never fails.”  In my Bible reading this morning I was reading from the 7th chapter of Hebrews, a chapter that explains how Jesus Christ is our High Priest, and one of the differences between Him being High Priest and those from the line of Aaron is that Jesus Christ will never die again, therefore He is High Priest forever.  Knowing this can help my faith that is what we are learning about, “The Shield of Faith.”

            MacArthur tells the following story:  “When John Paton was translating the Bible for a South Seas island tribe, he discovered that they had no word for trust or faith.  One day a native who had been running hard came into the missionary’s house, flopped himself in a large chair and said, ‘It’s good to rest my whole weight on this chair.’  ‘That’s it,’ said Paton.  “I’ll translate faith as ‘resting one’s whole weight on God.’””

            We want now to move onto talking about the flaming arrows that were shot at the Roman Soldiers and how their thureos shield would quench them.  First of all we need to understand that the arrows that the enemies of the Romans, or any other nations army would wrap the tips of their arrows with cloth and then soak them in a flammable source and just before shooting them they would light the arrows and when the arrows hit they would splash fire all around setting on fire the clothes of those they were fighting against.  The Romans would soak their shields in water and so when the flaming arrows came at them the fire would most of the time be put out, doing no harm to them.

            The spiritual flaming missiles against believers that Satan shoots against us is mostly temptations as he continually bombards God’s children with temptations to immorality, hatred, envy, anger, covetousness, pride, doubt, fear, despair, distrust, and every other sin.  In my prayer list that I use most every day I put on the spiritual armor and when I get to the shield of faith I ask the Lord not to allow me not to add fuel to those fiery darts or missiles that Satan shoots at me.  To add fuel to those missiles is exactly what Satan desires for me to do.  I think of two examples from the life of David where Satan shot missiles at David and he then added fuel to those missiles.  In his sin against Bathsheba who was taking a bath on the top of her house David added fuel to this missile that Satan shot at him and he dwelt on her lusting for her.  In the other sin that we know that David sinned against the Lord he had just come from a great battle and was feeling good about himself and so Satan shot an missile at him tempting him to number the people of his great nation, which he did and 70,000 people died because of David’s sin.  Like I said in both cases David added fuel to those missiles that Satan shot at him and did not protect himself with the shield of faith.

            In today’s quotation from “Love in Action” we look at Acts 5:1-2.

But a certain man named Ananias, with Sapphira his wife, sold a
possession. And he kept back part of the proceeds,
his wife also being aware of it, and brought
a certain part and laid it at
the apostles’ feet.

I now want to continue quoting from Warren Wiersbe’s book “The Strategy of Satan.”

When God called Moses to go to Egypt to deliver Israel, Moses argued with God.  He protested that he was slow of speech and could not do the job.  Was this humility on Moses’ part?  Of course not!  It was pride; in fact, it was the worst kind of pride: false humility.  The person who is truly humble has these characteristics:  (1) he knows himself; (2) he accepts himself; (3) he yields himself to God; (4) he seeks to better himself that he might serve God better.  The humble man realizes that all that he has comes from God and must be given back to God.  John the Baptist said:

‘A man can receive nothing unless it has been given him from heaven.’ (John 3:27).

“And Paul echoed this truth:

For who regards you as superior?  What do you have that you did not receive?  And if you did receive it, why do you boast as if you had not received? (1 Corinthians 4:7).

“To boast of your gifts is a sin, because God gave them to you and you cannot take credit for them.  But to deny your gifts is also a sin.  We must accept our gifts and affirm our gifts to the glory of God.  We must not think more highly of ourselves than we ought, but neither should we think less of ourselves!”

            This last paragraph is seen in Romans 12:3 and after this verse in the book of Romans Paul goes on to teach about spiritual gifts, as it seems to me that Paul is trying to warn us the truth of humility before he writes about spiritual gifts so no one will get puffed up about the giving of gifts from the Lord.

It looks like we will be able to finish the quotations from Dr. Wiersbe’s book in our next SD, Lord willing.

10/24/2019 11:15 AM

No comments:

Post a Comment