As one who has spent several years in bondage to sexual addictions believing that there is a way to live victorious over them, (There are way too many verses in the Bible that point to living a victorious life to believe otherwise.) as one who has spent the last several years seeking for answers and resources on freedom from sexual addictions, and as one who wants to spread the good news that living victorious over sexual addictions IS possible, I wanted to share something I recently encountered that is powerful in this area! I couldn't think of a better way to get people to go to this site and hear/read some of this for themselves than to just include a couple quotes from it to peak their interest.
Here are some quotes from John Piper's sermon and a link at the bottom where you can go to hear/read the entire sermon:
"My prayer for this conference, and for all of you one by one, is that you will see and savor the supremacy of Christ—married or single, male or female, old or young, devastated by disordered desires or walking in a measure of holiness—that all of you will behold and embrace the supremacy of Christ as the blazing sun at the center of your life, and that the planet of your sexuality, with all its little moons of pleasure, will orbit in its proper place."
"This is the blazing sun at the center of your solar system, holding the planet of sexuality in sacred orbit. This is the ballast at the bottom of your little boat keeping it from being capsized by the waves of sexual temptation. This the foundation that holds up the building of your life so that you can build with strategies of sexual purity. Without this—without knowing and embracing the supremacy of Christ in all things—the planets fly apart, the waves overwhelm, and the building will one day fall."
"Little souls make little lusts have great power. The soul, as it were, expands to encompass the magnitude of its treasure. The human soul was made to see and savor the supremacy of Christ. Nothing else is big enough to enlarge the soul as God intended and make little lusts lose their power."
"Therefore, the deepest cure to our pitiful addictions is not any mental strategies—and I believe in them and have my own. The deepest cure is to be intellectually and emotionally staggered by the infinite, everlasting, unchanging supremacy of Christ in all things. This is what it means to know him. Christ has purchased this gift for us at the cost of his life. Therefore, I say again with Hosea, let us know, let us press on to know the Lord."
Here is the link:
Sex and the Supremecy of Christ Part 2
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Saturday, February 25, 2012
"Pornography, adultery, homosexuality, etc. will never satisfy us, ever. The pornography industry makes its billions on customer dissatisfaction, and if we stay trapped there we'll always have a continual lust for more. It's like salt water, giving more thirst than satisfaction."
A quote from Setting Captives Free, Way of Purity course. This is a course I highly recommend for anyone struggling with a sexual addiction (Pornography, Self-gratification, etc.)
A quote from Setting Captives Free, Way of Purity course. This is a course I highly recommend for anyone struggling with a sexual addiction (Pornography, Self-gratification, etc.)
Saturday, February 11, 2012
I've found nothing more helpful in my life than consistently spending an extended amount of time in prayer every morning. Many people might write me off right there saying, "I'm not a morning person," "It doesn't matter when you have your prayer time," or, "Evenings work best for me." Ok. There may be some validity to what they're saying, but I still have found that spending an extended amount of time in prayer in the morning is invaluable in the struggle against sinful habits, not to mention the many other benefits that go with it.
Why morning? It takes discipline. It proves to you and to God that you are serious about this relationship and want it more than anything else. You are setting aside the first part of your day before the demands of the day claim your thoughts, energy, and time. It makes God the primary focus of your day right from the beginning. It makes sure that your time with God gets done. God is your top priority. He is before everything else - where He should be.
It's hard. I am a morning person and I find myself struggling at times to get up early enough to set aside this time. When the demands of my job or other things keep me up until 11:00 or later the night before, getting up at 4:30 or 5:00 becomes that much more difficult. I find myself having to stand up and walk around just to stay awake for the first part of my prayer time. If I sit down, it's too easy to just get comfortable and wake up an hour later with no time left but to get ready for the day and go to work.
It needs to be focused. Dick Eastman says, "To be effective our sixty minutes with God should be carefully arranged. Systematic prayer adds health to the devotional habit. Most tasks in life are accomplished systematically. In fact, without a systematic approach to life, many goals would remain unreached."
Eastman quotes Harold Lindsell in his book "The Hour That Changes the World" (from which the above quote came) as saying, "Prayer does not come naturally to men. It must be learned. Learning to pray...includes knowledge of the laws governing prayer as well as experience gained in the practice of prayer. Prayer must be nourished and cultivated if it is to grow."
I know this might not be a very inspiring post, but sometimes what we need is not inspiration, but just a healthy dose of discipline. Get at it! Prayer is valuable. God asks us to pray. Prayer makes a difference, not only in our lives, but in the lives of others. What a privilege that we can have access directly to God through prayer! Why would ne not take advantage of this and give ourselves to the school of prayer. We could be and should be changing the world through our prayers.
I just picked up a copy of Dick Eastman's book, "The Hour That Changes the World." I borrowed it from a friend several years ago and it changed my life when I started applying the principles from it to my prayer life. Now I'm reading it again and gaining new ideas and challenges to apply to my prayer life. It is very exciting and invigorating! I highly recommend it. You can find it for a reasonable price on Amazon or other online bookstores.
Why morning? It takes discipline. It proves to you and to God that you are serious about this relationship and want it more than anything else. You are setting aside the first part of your day before the demands of the day claim your thoughts, energy, and time. It makes God the primary focus of your day right from the beginning. It makes sure that your time with God gets done. God is your top priority. He is before everything else - where He should be.
It's hard. I am a morning person and I find myself struggling at times to get up early enough to set aside this time. When the demands of my job or other things keep me up until 11:00 or later the night before, getting up at 4:30 or 5:00 becomes that much more difficult. I find myself having to stand up and walk around just to stay awake for the first part of my prayer time. If I sit down, it's too easy to just get comfortable and wake up an hour later with no time left but to get ready for the day and go to work.
It needs to be focused. Dick Eastman says, "To be effective our sixty minutes with God should be carefully arranged. Systematic prayer adds health to the devotional habit. Most tasks in life are accomplished systematically. In fact, without a systematic approach to life, many goals would remain unreached."
Eastman quotes Harold Lindsell in his book "The Hour That Changes the World" (from which the above quote came) as saying, "Prayer does not come naturally to men. It must be learned. Learning to pray...includes knowledge of the laws governing prayer as well as experience gained in the practice of prayer. Prayer must be nourished and cultivated if it is to grow."
I know this might not be a very inspiring post, but sometimes what we need is not inspiration, but just a healthy dose of discipline. Get at it! Prayer is valuable. God asks us to pray. Prayer makes a difference, not only in our lives, but in the lives of others. What a privilege that we can have access directly to God through prayer! Why would ne not take advantage of this and give ourselves to the school of prayer. We could be and should be changing the world through our prayers.
I just picked up a copy of Dick Eastman's book, "The Hour That Changes the World." I borrowed it from a friend several years ago and it changed my life when I started applying the principles from it to my prayer life. Now I'm reading it again and gaining new ideas and challenges to apply to my prayer life. It is very exciting and invigorating! I highly recommend it. You can find it for a reasonable price on Amazon or other online bookstores.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Christ Lives Where Self Dies
“It is only when the last entrenchment of self-will has been
surrendered that there can be a complete resurrection unto life. But when we
are ready to say, “There is nothing that would dishonor Christ that I will not
forsake, nothing that would bring glory to Him which I will not render or
perform; I will give myself and all I have into His hands for time and for
eternity; I will follow Christ whithersoever He goes,” Christ will not be long
in taking full possession. With all His blessings He will enter our hearts,
purging us from our evil, and so revealing himself to our inner consciousness
that henceforth, in an unbroken line of deep, calm receptiveness, we may
possess, and know that we possess, an indwelling Saviour.”
Thomas Cook
Friday, January 13, 2012
I Can Be Holy
“He who knows all my sins, who understands all my weaknesses
and unworthiness, He commands me to “be…holy.” He from who all my help must
come—He who knows that I can do nothing of myself, that in Him alone I have
redemption—He commands me to “be…holy.” Then it must be possible. He has found
out a ransom, He knows a cleansing power that is equal to the work, or he would
never have spoken to my poor soul, saying, “Be ye holy.” Dark as it may be
before me, impossible as it may seem to cleanse one so impure as I, yet “with
God all things are possible.” And even in the case of a poor worm of earth,
“all things are possible to him that believeth.”
Let me
no longer doubt; so long as the command is on record, and I am compelled to
believe it is spoken to me, I must—I will believe that it is possible for even
me to be holy.
~Jesse T. Peck
Thursday, January 5, 2012
"Sin's greatest strength is the fact...that it comes incognito. In a thousand clever ways it disguises itself. It masks itself behind excuses, rationalizations, circumstances, and the influence of others. The cross strips the mask away and shows sin for the vicious monster it is, the utter, stark, rebellion against the love of God which is its real nature."
~W. J. Purkiser
~W. J. Purkiser
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