Sin Enters

2 Samuel 11:1 And it came to pass, after the year was expired, at the time when kings go forth to battle, that David sent Joab, and his servants with him, and all Israel; and they destroyed the children of Ammon, and besieged Rabbah. But David tarried still at Jerusalem.

In a study on how believers who have a relationship with Jesus get caught up in sin, I looked to David’s sin with Bathsheba to discover what preceded that occasion. What I first discovered was that King David wasn’t taking care of kingdom business. It seems that if we are about doing kingdom business there is a protective covering which God provides while serving His will.

David was the anointed king, his role and responsibilities were easily seen and understood. Where do we fit in to God’s will? What are your roles and responsibilities? If you are a priest or pastor that is an easy answer. What about the rest of us? Where do we fit in God’s kingdom business? This is one of the most difficult and troublesome of questions within the body of Christ. Where do I fit in?

If you will accept the Word to be true for you as it is given to be understood in plain a text reading, then first begin with the moment of being born again. Being born in the spirit is likened unto being born of water because it is a new beginning to which you know nothing about this world you have just entered. As a baby from the womb of your mother the natural position is of helplessness. We are totally dependent on everything because we cannot help ourselves. We grow little by little, step by step, from one age to the nest.

If you are born again in the spirit while you are fifteen or twenty-five, or thirty-five or even sixty-five there is a refusal within the natural experience to recognize and accept total dependency. We fight to find our place within the body that says “I am forty years old, don’t treat me like a baby.”

The key to beginning the growth process is accepting that as a truth in kingdom life. Step one.

One thought on “Sin Enters”

  1. Oh, yes, TOTAL dependency! What a humbling concept. Thank you dear brother for reminding me “that in my flesh dwells no good thing”, and the aspect of “children” is that which characterizes the Kingdom of God–Luke 18:16. I am 79 years old and am happy and content to be called “child” of God and take the place along side my Savior Who was TOTALLY dependent.

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