The deeper you fall into a pit, the longer it takes to climb back out. There’s an ever-present theory that someone must hit rock bottom before they can start their climb back up toward the light, but some people fall for years and still never hit bottom.
Some people imagine the shackles of sin to be like modern-day
handcuffs where you click them on, and that’s all there is to it until someone
shows up with a key and unlocks them. Given what the Bible says about sin and
how it slowly chokes its victim, a more apt comparison of the shackles of sin
would be a boa constrictor that continues to tighten its grip on its victim
until all the air has been squeezed out of its lungs.
Corrupt thoughts lead to corrupt actions, corrupt actions
lead to a corrupt life, and the more one practices the sin that has latched
onto them, the harder it becomes for them to resist or combat it. Eventually,
they stop trying. Eventually, it becomes who they are and not what they do on
occasion, and their entire life revolves around an unquenchable need for more
of the thing they know somewhere deep down is destroying their life.
I don’t cry when I see puppies or kittens. I cried when my
daughters were born, once when my grandfather died, and once when my mom died.
To the best of my recollection, that’s the sum total of all the times I shed
tears, so I’ll never be mistaken for the most empathetic person ever to walk
the earth. That said, if you want to have your heart broken, watch some videos
of the zombie people in San Francisco, New York, Philadelphia, or pretty much
every major city. These individuals likely had families, jobs, and homes at
some point but whose sin so thoroughly routed them that now they stumble about,
hollow-eyed and mechanical, looking for their next fix.
That is the end goal of sin. Make no mistake about it; no
matter how pleasurable it may seem in the moment, sin is committed to your
destruction.
There are instances when, whether through the strength of
will and awareness or family intervention, the shackles of sin release their
hold, but they are never taken off. They’re still there, hanging off the wrists
and neck, just waiting to tighten their grip anew. True freedom can only be
found in Christ. It is He who removes the shackles; it is He who sets the
captive free. Anything else is just temporary, an illusion, a respite from the
burden that will be doubly burdensome once it returns.
Sin doesn’t make you better; it makes you wax worse and
worse, not only being deceived but setting about to deceive others. Misery
loves company, and there’s no more miserable a place than the mire of sin.
2 Timothy 3:13, “But evil men and impostors will grow worse
and worse, deceiving and being deceived.”
The reason this occurs is apparent. The next iteration of
impostor and deceiver must one-up the previous one. You can’t just say you had
a dream or a vision of heaven; that was old school. Now you have people
claiming they were teleported to heaven from a port-a-potty and got to give God
their two cents as far as what He should do with His creation.
Evidently, God’s looking for input from ditzy Irish cat moms
who couldn’t quote a scripture verse to save their lives but have made so many
trips to heaven and back that if God offered frequent flier miles, they’d never
have to pay for a plane ticket again.
It may take two to tango, I don’t know, I never have, but it
does take two willing participants to deceive and be deceived. There must be
one party who plays the role of the deceiver and one party who, although not
knowingly, plays the part of the deceived.
Those being deceived usually share certain traits that open
them up to the possibility of being deceived. No matter what nation or
continent they hail from, the commonality of their nature is so absolute that you’d
think they grew up under the same roof.
That’s the thing about deception; it needs a crack, a
crevice, an open window, or a door that is ajar. Deception requires an entry
point, an opportunity to do its work, and if a believer is adequately equipped,
deception has no means of entering in.
It usually begins with dissatisfaction with what is and a
desire for more. It’s not that Christ is not sufficient; it’s that they are not
satisfied with Christ alone. Yes, the Bible encourages us to desire spiritual
gifts, but astral projections, grave-sucking, past lives, alien spaceships,
third eyes, and conjuration are not the gifts Paul was referring to.
We’re mixing up some strange brews and calling them
authentic, grade-A, Holy Spirit-certified experiences. The purpose of all this
isn’t to be entertained by parlor tricks; it’s to call men to repentance. If
the entertainment value is a ten, but the conviction is a zero, you’re likely
being bamboozled or on your way to being bamboozled.
Deceivers and imitators will never insist on your freedom or
tell you how to be free. The best they can do and the most they can offer is temporarily
distracting you from the reality of your imprisonment and the weight of your
shackles. Momentary exultation is not transformative. Meeting Jesus is.
If all they did was guess your zip code, pull a rabbit out of a hat, or tell you that your grandma’s name was Eunice, all you did was waste an evening and are nowhere closer to being free. If, however, the message of the cross was presented and Jesus was glorified, if you heard that whom the Son sets free is free indeed, then it was time well spent.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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