Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and
pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul. 1 Peter 2:11.
Many regard this text as a warning against
licentiousness only; but it has a broader meaning. It forbids every injurious
gratification of appetite or passion. Every perverted appetite becomes a
warring lust. Appetite was given us for a good purpose, not to become the
minister of death by being perverted, and thus degenerating into "lusts,
which war against the soul." Peter's admonition is a most direct and
forcible warning against the use of all stimulants and narcotics. These
indulgences may well be classed among the lusts that exert a pernicious
influence upon moral character. {Mar 81.1}
Let none who profess godliness regard with
indifference the health of the body, and flatter themselves that intemperance
is no sin and will not affect their spirituality. A close sympathy exists
between the physical and the moral nature. The standard of virtue is elevated
or degraded by the physical habits. Excessive eating of the best of food will
produce a morbid condition of the moral feelings. And if the food is not the
most healthful, the effects will be still more injurious. Any habit which does
not promote healthful action in the human system degrades the higher and nobler
faculties....Indulgence of appetite strengthens the animal propensities, giving
them the ascendancy over the mental and spiritual powers. {Mar 81.2}
The strength of the temptation to indulge
appetite can be measured only by the inexpressible anguish of our Redeemer in
that long fast in the wilderness. He knew that the indulgence of perverted
appetite would so deaden man's perceptions that sacred things could not be
discerned. . . . If the power of indulged appetite was so strong upon the race,
that, in order to break its hold, the divine Son of God, in man's behalf, had
to endure a fast of nearly six weeks, what a work is before the Christian! Yet,
however great the struggle, he may overcome. By the help of that divine power
which withstood the fiercest temptations that Satan could invent, he, too, may
be entirely successful in his warfare with evil, and at last may wear the
victor's crown in the kingdom of God. {Mar 81.3}
No comments:
Post a Comment
~ Would love to hear from you~