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Singled Out for Him: Remaining Morally Pure

Nancy Leigh DeMoss

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In today's world, we are bombarded with sensual advertisements and entertainment urging us to fulfill the natural lusts of our flesh. The temptations that confront us today are really not so different from those that faced the first man and woman in the garden or our Savior in the wilderness. 

 

We are encouraged to indulge our natural, fleshly appetites, and assured that there will be no negative consequences-only happiness and fulfillment. We are duped into thinking that our deepest and most critical needs are physical and sensual rather than spiritual. We are led to believe that God's laws are outmoded, irrelevant, and unreasonable-that He really doesn't understand us or have our best interests at heart. And we are encouraged to fulfill our God-created desires in ways that bypass the laws He has built into the universe.

 

What we are not told is that the one making those appeals to our flesh is our archenemy-that he is a deceiver, a defiler, and a destroyer. We are not told that what he presents as the way to freedom and happiness is actually the pathway to bondage, misery, and destruction.   

 

Lack of moral discipline is one of the greatest disqualifiers of those who run the Christian race.  On the other hand, a commitment to moral purity is essential to experiencing the fullness of blessing that God intends for us.  Jesus said, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God" (Matt. 5:8).  The Apostle Paul makes it clear that the will of God for every believer is that we be morally pure, that we abstain from every form of immorality (1 Thess. 4:3f).

 

I have made only a few vows in my life. A vow is a sacred, binding commitment to God. It is not to be made lightly, for it cannot be broken without serious consequences. There is no vow that I take more seriously than the vow to be morally pure. Although I grew up in a godly home, have had the best possible training, and have been graciously protected by God, moral purity is not something I take for granted. I believe it would be foolish to assume that anyone is ever beyond sinning against God in this realm. 

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