didn\u2019t know <\/em>was wrong.<\/p>\nGod doesn\u2019t really hold these sins against us, for He constantly cleanses and purifies us from all sin anyway, but once He takes our sanctification to the next level and start pointing out new areas in our life He wants us to work on, it is our responsibility to purify our lives from these sinful activities, beliefs, or behaviors.<\/p>\n
Believe it or not, there are many sorts of activities in life that most people\u2014including Christians\u2014do not recognize as sinful. We all come to Christianity with a host of bad habits.<\/p>\n
And that\u2019s okay.<\/p>\n
God doesn\u2019t expect us to get rid of them all before we become a Christian, or even in the first few weeks, months, or years of being a Christian. He takes us just as we are, and works with us slowly over time. The process of sanctification is a life-long process.<\/p>\n
After we become a Christian, God begins to deal with us and some of our sinful ways of living, many of which most people don\u2019t even think of as being sinful. As we seek to follow Jesus on the path of discipleship, He begins to show us that some of the things we are doing are not really what we should be doing.<\/p>\n
Some of the behaviors God wants to purify from our lives might seem a little surprising, because we didn\u2019t even realize that what we were doing was wrong. \u00a0Almost everyone knows that murder and adultery are wrong, but there are many sinful condemned by Scripture which few people realize are wrong.<\/p>\n
Take money as an example. Many people, Christians included, think that the money they make is theirs to spend. Even though many Christians give a tithe, they assume the rest is theirs to keep, to do with as they please. But all money belongs to God, and He wants us to use money to love, serve, feed, and clothe others.<\/p>\n
Gossip and slander also are a normal way of life for most people. We like to hear the newest juicy tidbit of news about other people. We Christians even like to spread gossip under the guise of sharing a \u201cprayer request.\u201d We say things like, \u201cDid you hear about how Mr. and Mrs. Jones are going to marriage counseling? Yes, I heard they had a fight, and he went down to the local bar and had a few too many drinks. He ended up kissing a woman down there in front of everyone, and who knows what else they did\u2026 I wonder if they are going to get divorced. We should pray for them.\u201d This is not a prayer request. This is Christian gossip.<\/p>\n
Some of us have been engaging in these sorts of practices for years. Maybe even decades. And we never really knew they were wrong, because this is just how the world works. But eventually, through Bible study, prayer, a sermon, or the kind counsel of a Christian friend, we hear that a behavior we have always practiced is actually wrong and displeasing to God.<\/p>\n
When this happens, we must make the choice to purify our lives from such behaviors. James 4:8 says, \u201cDraw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your<\/em> hands, you<\/em> sinners; and purify your<\/em> hearts, you<\/em> double-minded.\u201d<\/p>\nWhen we draw near to God, He draws near to us, and His closeness to us ends up shining light into the dark corners of our life, pointing out dust and cobwebs we never knew were there.<\/p>\n
When God reveals to us that these behaviors are sinful, we are to cleanse our hands from such actions, and purify our hearts. In so doing, we will draw closer to God, and He will draw closer still to us. And of course, the process of purification will begin again.<\/p>\n
The process of purification is a never-ending cycle of becoming more and more like Jesus, and more like the person God wants us to be.<\/p>\n
So purification is different than confession. We purify our lives of sinful behaviors that we didn\u2019t know were sinful until God pointed them out to us. But we are to confess the sins we commit which we knew were sinful when we committed them.<\/p>\n
But what about when we engage in sinful practices that we know <\/em>are sinful, and which we practice for a long time?<\/p>\nIn other words, if we refuse to confess the actions we knew were sinful, or refuse to purify our lives from the sinful behaviors God revealed to us, what happens then? In this case, we continue to practice the sin. We will chase after it. It will become a pattern, a habit, or addiction, in our life. When this happens, there is only one way out: repentance.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Repentance (Luke 15:11-32)<\/h3>\n
One of the classic biblical stories about repentance is the Parable of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15:11-32. It is story about a father who has two sons. The younger son asks for his inheritance early, and then goes off to a far country to squander his inheritance on feasting and parties. He eventually finds himself living among the pigs, without food, shelter, or clothing, and decides to return home. When he returns home, his father throws a big \u201cWelcome Home\u201d party for his son.<\/p>\n
Most Christians think this is a story about how God welcomes non-Christians in His family. They think the prodigal son represents non-believer, and the party occurs when this person becomes a Christian.<\/p>\n
But that is not true to the story. The son was a son before he ever left home. He did not become a son by going home.<\/p>\n
In the two previous parables of Luke 15, the lost sheep belonged to the shepherd before he went looking for it, and the lost coin belonged to the woman before she swept her house clean. It is the same with the lost son. The father doesn\u2019t adopt a son he never had before. The son rebels and leaves and then returns. In this way, the son represents a Christian who went off into sin, and lived in sin for a very long time.<\/p>\n
And at the end of the stories, Jesus says that there is great rejoicing in heaven when one sinner repents. Who is the sinner Jesus has in mind? It is the sinful Christian.<\/p>\n
The sinner who has turned away from the path of discipleship and decided instead to live in sin and rebellion against God. This sinner still remains a Christian, a son, but they are in a far off land, away from the light, love, joy, and fellowship that is found in the father\u2019s household. But when the wayward Christian returns, God throws a party.<\/p>\n
How is this return accomplished? Through repentance. The son journeyed to a far country, then when he realized that his sinful rebellion wasn\u2019t good, enjoyable, or satisfying, he turned away, repented, and started the journey back. He was headed one way, and then he repented and started heading the other way. This is repentance.<\/p>\n
It is for those Christians who have refused to confess their sin when God points it out to them, and have ignored God\u2019s revelation about purifying their lives from sinful behaviors. Instead of follow God\u2019s guidance, they continue to follow sin. But eventually, the find themselves wallowing in the mud with pigs. Once they realize how wrong they were, and how right God was, they can then begin the journey of repentance back toward God.<\/p>\n
But this journey doesn\u2019t happen overnight. If we spent a decade walking into the woods, we won\u2019t get out in an hour. The journey back toward God will often take less time than the journey away, for after all, when the son was still a long way off, the father ran to meet him.<\/p>\n
When God sees us coming back, He will run to meet us as well, so that He might walk with us, and even carry us, on the return journey. But the return journey of repentance must be made. Only through learning from our mistakes and journeying back toward obedience to God will we learn to avoid more mistakes in the future.<\/p>\n
And the return doesn\u2019t happen in an hour. If it took us 20 years to journey into the woods, we won\u2019t get out in 20 minutes. Thankfully, it won\u2019t take 20 years to get out of the woods, for the Father, when He saw his son returning from a long way off, ran out to meet him.<\/p>\n
God is watching for our return, and when we turn, and begin to journey back toward fellowship with Him, He casts aside all dignity, and runs with haste to meet us on the road, carrying and helping us when we are tired and weary from the journey. But we must journey back, if we are to return to fellowship in the family.<\/p>\n
And the return journey requires repentance. It requires us to take the time, energy, resources, and locations that we used to use to aid us in our sin, and transforming or redeeming such items to be used in the pursuit of godliness and holiness. We turn away from our habits of sin and turn toward developing habits of righteousness.<\/p>\n
Repentance is turning away from patterns and habits of sinful rebellion, and beginning to take the journey back toward God.<\/p>\n
Conclusion<\/h2>\n
So the three elements of spiritual CPR can be summarized in this way: Confession is for those one-time sins we knew were sinful, but which we committed anyway. It keeps sin from setting its hooks and claws into our lives.<\/p>\n
Purification is for those one-time or long-term sins we commit, which we didn\u2019t know were sinful until it is pointed out to us through Scripture, the convicting work of the Holy Spirit, or a good friend.<\/p>\n
Repentance is for breaking free from the sinful habits or behaviors we have practiced for a very long time which we knew were sinful, but which we practiced anyway. Repentance is needed when sin has hooked into us deeply, and we need the careful hands of the Great Physician to cut the sin out of our bodies, and the healing touch of the Holy Spirit to restore our life and health. Repentance is often a long process, but it is the only way to recover from sinful habits and patterns.<\/p>\n
Together, confession, purification, and repentance allow us to practice spiritual CPR in our lives as Christians. Such practices keep our lives free from sin and on the path of righteousness that God wants for us.<\/p>\n
Righteousness keeps us healthy and strong as soldiers of Jesus Christ so that we can fight against wicked forces in spiritual warfare. Righteousness keeps our lungs breathing in the pure air the indwelling Holy Spirit, our heart focused on the desires of God, and our belly fill with the meat of the truth of God\u2019s Word.<\/p>\n
We take up and put on God\u2019s breastplate of righteousness by removing our filthy clothes stained with sin and replacing them with His practical righteousness. When we get the breastplate of righteousness on, when we get it firmly in place, it becomes much easier to protect our heart.<\/p>\n
Only in this way will you protect your life from the deadly and suffocating consequences of sin. Only then will we be able to stop the fiery darts that the devil shoots our way.<\/p>\n<\/a>Do you want to learn about spiritual warfare and how to put on the full armor of God?<\/strong> If you want to defeat sin and gain victory in your life over temptation so you can better follow Jesus, take my course on the Armor of God as it is explained in Ephesians 6:10-20. \r\n\r\nThis course costs $297, but when you join the Discipleship group<\/a>, you can to take the entire course for free.\n