
Article
MEN: Beware of Temptation
Men
and women respond to temptation differently. Women tend to flee temptation,
while men like to crawl away slowly and hope temptation will overtake them.
No
man sets out to succumb to temptation on purpose. Yet every day we learn of men,
Christian men, who fail. Unless a man remains perpetually vigilant, his own evil
desires carry him into temptation
and sin.
Six temptations men face:
-
Emotional neglect.
Men
are most tempted not to give their wives the thing they desire the most:
emotional connection and intimacy; the sharing of yourself at the deepest level,
and wanting to know the same level in your spouse. God commanded, Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church (Eph.
5:25). The Bible gives no similar instructions to wives because wives are
naturally drawn to an intimate love relationship. For men it must be
learned.
-
Lust.
Men
become sexually stimulated visually. When a man looks and lusts, that does
not mean he no longer loves his wife. He is engaged in temptation –
physical and spiritual. We live in a sexually over-stimulated culture in
which many men are drained of the spiritual energy needed to expose
temptation and the moral energy to resist it. The best way to resist sexual
temptation is to flee from it.
-
False gods.
You can have only one god. Most men
try to worship an idol and God. That, too, is impossible. Idolatry is the
error of giving worship or homage to any power or object other than God.
It’s either going to be Jesus Christ or something else. And whatever the
something else is, it will never satisfy (e.g. accomplishments, money,
pleasure, possessions, power, prestige, or position).
-
Money
and debt.
Men find money intoxicating. Jesus
named money as his chief competitor: No
one can serve two masters…You cannot serve both God and money (Matt.
6:24). Not only is man tempted to earn more money but also to borrow more
money than he can afford to repay. The
temptation is not to love God or
money. The
temptation is to love them both. To live debt-free within your means, with
Jesus as the god of your life, is the goal.
-
Whining.
The Bible tells of people who grumbled about the sufficiency of
God’s care. When men see others advancing more rapidly, frequently
resentments, jealousies, envy, and bitterness build up. Slights, perceived
and real, grind on his ego. The way to overcome the temptation to complain
is to accept your lot in life and get on with a positive outlook. Paul said,
I have learned to be content whatever
the circumstances (Phil. 4:11).
- Pride.
Stubborn
pride often keeps a man from humbling himself and admitting he’s wrong.
Temptation to pride comes in many disguises. The most common form is for a
man to look down with disdain on others. It is a sin of comparison in which
a man compares his [perceived] strength with another’s weaknesses. Equally
insidious is the temptation for a man to look up in disgust to others who
have it better or have accomplished more. Pride can even cause some men to
feel they are above talking about “touchy feelings,” and so emotionally
neglect their wives.
Patrick
Morley is a business leader, speaker, and
the best-selling author of seven books, including The Man in the Mirror, Walking with Christ in the Details of
Life, The Rest of Your Life, Devotions for Couples, and The Seven
Seasons of a Man’s Life.
www.crosswalk.com
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