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Blog Detail

Blog Detail

THE FLESH AFTER WE HAVE BEEN SAVED

When we receive Christ as our Savior, our sins are forgiven and we’re cleansed and saved. But what about our flesh? Is it repaired? Are we free from the lusts of the flesh once we’re born again?

The answer to these questions is hugely important to our Christian lives. After we’re saved, our flesh is exactly the same as it was before—it is still sinful and full of lusts. This is because when we received the Lord as our Savior, we were born again in our human spirit with the divine Spirit of God, but our flesh remains the flesh.

“That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” (John 3:6)

For as long as we live in this physical life, our flesh remains the same. It never improves, and it never changes, no matter how long we’re saved or how much we’ve grown in the Lord. Only when the Lord Jesus returns will we be rid of the flesh by God’s resurrecting and transfiguring our fallen body, as Philippians 3:20-21 tells us:

“We eagerly await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transfigure the body of our humiliation to be conformed to the body of His glory, according to His operation by which He is able even to subject all things to Himself.”

God’s full salvation promised in this word includes our fallen body. But for now, our flesh remains the sinful flesh.

Proper knowledge is crucial

Having the proper knowledge that even as believers our sinful flesh remains unchanged is essential, because it alerts us to the danger our flesh poses to us. Whether or not we know this can seriously affect us.

Let’s say we don’t know a particular substance is extremely toxic. Because we don’t know it’s so dangerous, we might be very casual, even careless with it and hurt ourselves as a result. But once we find out its true nature, we’ll be quite careful how we handle it in order to protect ourselves.

This illustrates how having proper knowledge of our flesh can help us believers, and how not having it can harm us. The danger to our spiritual life from our flesh is real. And unlike the toxic substance in the illustration, our flesh isn’t something apart from us that we can simply ignore; it’s part of us, ever present.

Satan’s strategy through the flesh of Christians

Satan’s strategy is to hide the truth about the flesh from Christians. He wants us to think that our flesh isn’t a problem once we’re saved, or that it has improved and is no longer a danger since we’ve been following the Lord Jesus for some time. He knows that if we think like this we’ll begin to drop our guard, and sin will result.

What do we mean “drop our guard”? What does this look like practically?

Let’s say we’re confident we won’t fall into a particular sin because we haven’t committed it in a long time, or we’re confident we would never commit such a sin because we never have before. What happens when we think we’re safe? Often, we’ll allow ourselves to be in certain situations that we don’t realize could stir up our flesh to overpower us.

Perhaps before we were saved we went to bars with our friends and drank. And let’s say now our coworkers or friends invite us out to a bar. We go, thinking, “I can’t be tempted to drink anymore, now that I’m saved.” We don’t realize our flesh hasn’t gotten any better, and it’s still just as strong as before. Our flesh overcomes our willpower, drawing us back into the same life we previously had. We learn too late that we’re still subject to the lusts of the flesh.

Or, using another example, we know that immorality such as fornication is sinful. But we may think, “Now that I’m a Christian, I definitely would never have a problem with that. My strong morals will prevent anything from ever happening.” So we repeatedly spend time alone with a member of the opposite sex, whether at work or elsewhere, because we think we’re immune to the lusts of the flesh. But eventually, through being alone together so much, we become less cautious, and in an unguarded moment, sin can be the result. We don’t realize our flesh is much stronger than our morals. The flesh doesn’t operate only in a certain type of person; it operates in everyone. Every human being has the lusts of the flesh, and every human being, including a Christian, is capable of any sin. Just being in the wrong environment can lead us into sin through the lusts of the flesh.

In this way Satan damages believers, over and over again, lulling them into not guarding against their flesh.

In the book of Romans, a book written to Christians, Paul clearly warns the believers to be on guard not simply against sin, but against sin hiding in their own flesh.

“Do not let sin therefore reign in your mortal body so that you obey the body’s lusts.” (Romans 6:12)

If we aren’t careful with our flesh, sin can reign even in a believer’s body. What a tragedy!

See the danger first

Seeing the danger of our flesh is the important first step in not letting sin reign. Our fallen, sinful flesh is like a wild animal that can never be tamed. Giving it the smallest amount of leeway can allow it to break free and cause great damage. Even things we see and hear can stir up our flesh. We really need to ask the Lord to show us the seriousness of our flesh and how to guard against it! If we give an inch to the flesh because we think we’re strong and can overcome it, or because we think we’re no longer subject to the lusts of the flesh, sin will be the outcome.

 

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COMMENTS

  • john sn 13-12-2018

    thank you so much for the good lesson

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