Posts tagged with “Weakness”

On Ravi Zacharias

Ravi Zacharias Defending Ravi - Open Letter: https://defendingravi.com/2024/01/01/open-letter/


This is a rather sobering and not-unexpected response from Ravi's family. It is always best to examine single-sided accounts with a healthy grain of salt and critical analysis of the holistic picture.

I will admit when things first came out, I callously and jadedly thought, "sin never surprises me anymore". With more discernment and conversation, though, the more I see the work of the enemy to try and destroy the legacy of a faithful servant.

It takes a nontrivial amount of work to examine the motivations of involved parties because you have to do a deeper examination of what intrinsically drives a person to determine what their default trajectory is likely to be. Being Reformed, this is only marginally easier because we can start from the natural tendency towards total depravity. Bringing the evidence into contextual relation of a holistic overview gives us a better overall picture of what we're up against when trying to discern truth.

And the truth here is, despite the sinful motivations of those who were part of the RZIM organization, despite the rose-colored glasses Ravi's family look from, despite the actual sins of Ravi (and the general fallenness of humanity as a whole), his work for the kingdom should stand on its own as its own testimony from decades of evidence. Whatever Ravi did or did not actually do is irrelevant to the ideas that he preached that can be corroborated by scripture.

God's truth is universal and the actions of a man will not tarnish it, neither objectively or in the eyes of people that actually value truth for what it is above all. Those that would dismiss ideas simply due to the characteristics of the person that spoke them, and not on the merits of the ideas themselves, commit no less hypocrisy.

We are a condemning people, willing to exact judgment in the righteousness of our own eyes at transgressions we perceive. How much, do you think, is this an image-bearing aspect? How sinful, do you think, must this be to have the hubris to think we are capable of righteous judgment with our limited perception? Only the omniscient can make righteous judgment, for the only the omniscient is capable of knowing and seeing all.

Why then, do you think, Jesus was sent to exalt and hold high love as the synopsis of the whole of the Law (Mark 12:30-31), giving us license to judge the ideas while leaving judgment of people and acts of vengeance to God alone?

Because, as with Cain and Abel, we are more than happy to murder our neighbor (in heart or physically) for nearly any reason whatsoever.

To our own shame.


In my Stubbornness You Left Me

Lord, I look upon the my house
In its ruin and its desolation
I recognize my iniquity
My rebellion against you
When I would pray to turn away
Yet cling to the comfort of complacency

In my stubbornness you left me
To teach me lessons I would not learn
And the consequence is laid bare
The chances you gave me
Squandered at the expense of my charge

O wretched, sinful man that I am!
My transgression destroys the other half of my flesh
I pass it on to my descendants
The land groans in hatred!

But you, my Lord, my savior
Plucked me once out of the ways of death!
Twice you have given me redemption
Thrice you told me, "no, my work for you is not done"
You mend my heart, you renew my mind
In your mercy you restore me!

Lord, I call out to you
I ask for one more thing
O wretched man that I am,
What standing do I have to petition you
When every day I stumble again
Will you not hear the groaning of my heart's desire?
Will you turn your face from the wrenching of my soul?

Your love is boundless, your mercies daily anew
Blot out my iniquity, drive it from my bones
You hear the groanings of heart
And wrenching of soul.
Your steadfastness does not abandon me
I see your works, I perceive your grace
You do not cast me away
You strengthen me, you refine me
You alone sustain me.


Strength Through Weakness

We are constantly surrounded by various forms of temptation that pick and nag at us. It can take the form of the inescapably obvious, stealthily insidious, or anywhere in between. What do we mean by temptation, though? One of the sometimes frustrating things about the English language is its sheer number of synonyms and vague definitions. Therefore, we must do a little bit of a study of terms to understand what we mean.

The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines temptation (n.) as,

The act of tempting or the state of being tempted, especially to evil.

This apparent circular definition requires us to dig further, down to the verb to tempt - to entice to do wrong by promise of pleasure or gain; to induce to do something; to try presumptuously. The adjective form, tempting, is defined as having an appeal.

Looking at some of the synonyms, we see words like enticement, allurement, seduce, lure, and beguile. We can see the connotations when we look at some of the definitions of other terms - "arousing strong attraction or interest"; "having strongly attractive or enticing quality"; "to lead by deception". Obviously, the verb to tempt and the noun temptation are clearly meant to have a negative connotation by modern renderings.

The word temptation goes back though English and Anglo-French to Latin roots in words similar to temptatio, translated as "enticement to sin." Temptatio roots itself in the verb temptare, "to try" as in, "to try out" or "to attack", though the latter is more forceful and less accurate a translation. It seems that even as we go back towards the genesis of the word, we're still brought back to the concept of being enticed by sin.

Sin and Submission

At its core, sin can be very simply considered as disobedience and lack of submission to God's way due to unbelief. We can follow this along the logical route to recognize that it is from a desire to go our own way in life because we think, "I know best, therefore I don't need some God character", even if it's not a conscious consideration. Through the sin of Adam in the garden of Eden, we continue to have desires to live our lives with lack of submission to the Lord. Especially given the contemporary culture that western society lives in, this can be easily overlooked due to self-sufficiency being so heavily ingrained in the worldview of the zeitgeist.

When we do not have our lives aligned properly within the hierarchy of authority of a Christian worldview, challenges to the manifestation of this rudderless autonomy often come out as two core emotions: anger and shame. While God is not the one doing the tempting, He does permit temptation to happen, for purposes that aren't always clear to us. Our hearts on this side of Glory will always desire sinful things to some extend, and the machinations of the enemy will always seek to lure you into these desires by tempting you with things that you want, deep down in your heart.

Innate Reactivity to Baggage

Anger and shame are the ways that we most often react to our desires being challenged. These don't necessarily have to manifest due to sinful reasons; for example, I often get from "very irritated" to "downright vicious" whenever I am accused of (or implied) something I have not done. While the impulse to correct is not necessarily a bad thing, getting angry over it is a sinful action borne of an intense emotional response of indignation. It took me a very long time of introspective analysis to determine that this comes from an ingrained feeling of shame instilled in me in childhood. It's simple enough to understand but complex enough to be far too long to delve into here.

We all have these types of baggage that we carry around, whether we realize it or not. Sometimes, we are smart or wise enough to recognize certain items in the baggage and we are able to address them, resolve the issues, and place that item in the waste bin where it belongs. Other times, we carry deep-rooted items buried in the baggage and end up carrying them all our lives. Christians must realize that the exhortation for fellowship with believers, fervent study in the word, and trusting in the teaching and promises of God all help us to recognize our need for a savior. Even when we're down in a hole and feeling smaller than an ant, God is with us, even if we do not realize it.

To Whom We Must Lean On

God allows things in our lives, for seasons both short and long, as a reminder of who we are and who He is. These seasons of temptation, trial, and suffering all work to remind us how much we need Him. In John 16 when Jesus is comforting the disciples, he reminds us that,

I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.

Whenever you are feeling weak or depressed, that is often the most obvious sign that we need to seek the Lord most fervently. One way to do this may be looking at it from a different angle: instead of wallowing in self-pity or giving in to that strong sinful desire, instead look at this as a teaching moment; an opportunity to turn to and trust Him as He instructs you through experience and trial. This way, you accomplish multiple things. The temptation teaches you that you are not, in fact, God; that you must rely on God's strength, especially when your own is insufficient; thereby giving you an opportunity to display His might and power through your trials and your weaknesses. In fact, our reactions to temptation are almost never our own; we eventually will give in given enough persistence. Instead, it's God's strength that we must rely on to help push us through.

In God's economy, everything seems upside down and backwards. I've come to call this phenomenon "the inverting principle of truth". The first shall be last, the last shall be first. The strongest, in worldly terms, shall end up weaker than even the weakest. The meek (that willfully submit to the Lord) shall inherit the earth, not those that strive to subjugate all under their will. From the worldly perspective, everything seems backwards. However, it can be evidenced even in the fact that some unbelievers wish to try to better this world through serving others and philanthropy. The core principles are there within our nature as we are image bearers, yet the wages of sin from the fall mar these attempts without trust in the Lord.

George Orwell, in the novel 1984, had his dystopian government embrace this slogan:

War is peace.

Freedom is slavery.

Ignorance is strength.

When looking at this from a Biblical lens, we can begin to easily see the perversion of this inversion principle in practice. When we put ourselves above God, we can do nothing but craft a crude mockery of the Lord's will and purpose. We must turn away from this and forever remind ourselves that our strength is not our own.