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What we are taught
to seek or shun in prayer, we should equally pursue or avoid in action.
Very earnestly, therefore, should we avoid temptation, seeking to walk
so guardedly in the path of obedience, that we may never tempt the devil
to tempt us. We are not to enter the thicket in search of the lion.
Dearly might we pay for such presumption. This lion may cross our path
or leap upon us from the thicket, but we have nothing to do with hunting
him. He that meeteth with him, even though he winneth the day, will
find it a stern struggle. Let the Christian pray that he may be spared
the encounter. Our Saviour, who had experience of what temptation meant,
thus earnestly admonished His disciples--"Pray that ye enter not
into temptation."
But let us do as we will, we shall be tempted; hence the prayer "deliver
us from evil." God had one Son without sin; but He has no son without
temptation. The natural man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upwards,
and the Christian man is born to temptation just as certainly. We must
be always on our watch against Satan, because, like a thief, he gives
no intimation of his approach. Believers who have had experience of
the ways of Satan, know that there are certain seasons when he will
most probably make an attack, just as at certain seasons bleak winds
may be expected; thus the Christian is put on a double guard by fear
of danger, and the danger is averted by preparing to meet it. Prevention
is better than cure: it is better to be so well armed that the devil
will not attack you, than to endure the perils of the fight, even though
you come off a conqueror. Pray this evening first that you may not be
tempted, and next that if temptation be permitted, you may be delivered
from the evil one.
February
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