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Beverly Carradine
 You're here » Articles Main Index » Beverly Carradine » SOUL HELP Chapter 5 ~ The Uses of Temptation

SOUL HELP Chapter 5 ~ The Uses of Temptation
By Beverly Carradine

      ONE of the features of a probationary state is the fact of temptation. It
      may come directly from an evil spirit, or from a pleasing object. It maybe
      felt as a brooding horror upon the soul, or approach with a promised
      delight to the body. In its assault upon the citadel of a man's life, the Will,
      temptation travels upon various routes. Its form is seen moving upon the
      emotions of the heart, along the sensations of the body, and endeavoring to
      steal its way up the channels of all the senses, and every appetite known
      to the race. It has been a wonder to many why God should permit
      temptation to come to immortal creatures, who if they prove faithless and
      fall under the attack, make shipwreck of happiness and character, and
      finally if sin is continued in to the end, are ruined forever. The wonder
      grows when in full recognition of the momentous consequences of yielding
      to the evil suggestion and movement, the Bible says: 'Count it all joy
      when ye fall into divers temptations.' The Scripture does not say fall
      under, but 'into.' Just as it does not say, Blessed is the man who is
      tempted, but who 'endureth temptation.'

      Moreover it is remarkable that the apostle was writing to Christians when
      he said these things. The verse reads, 'My brethren, count it all joy when
      ye fall into diverse temptations.' Evidently there is a moral use of
      temptation to the Christian. It is this fact we call attention to; not to the
      necessity of temptation as a feature of moral probation on earth; but to the
      use of these strange and perilous influences upon the soul of the child of
      God.

      God of course does not and can not tempt, but He allows us as His people
      to be tempted. Why does He permit it? What is the advantage and good
      which He expects to come out of it and which in many cases is
      undoubtedly derived?

      One is the knowledge of self.

      Very many Christians do not know themselves, and never would but for
      temptation. The Scripture says the children of Israel were led about in the
      wilderness for forty years, that they might know what was in their heart.
      In like manner through the probings, motions and assaults of temptation
      we are made to see the barely suspected evil, and the vulnerable place in
      our nature and character.

      Peter never dreamed at first that he was capable of denying the Lord, but
      under circumstances of testing in which we find involved man fear,
      self-interest and self-protection, he went down. Saul, the king of Israel,
      had a new heart and started out humble enough, but temptations to pride
      and self-will soon came in sufficient number and force to show him he was
      not really as lowly as one would have supposed when he was found
      'hiding in the stuff.' David, in spite of his beautiful psalms and leaping
      before the ark of God, had a weak place in his character and there was
      most likely to fall. In due time the circumstance came which revealed the
      vulnerable spot. He got to know himself under the sad power of
      temptation.

      In war a battery is often placed upon a hill and the guns trained upon the
      surrounding woods. It is called 'feeling for the enemy.' This is what
      temptation does; it discovers for us the hidden foe of the heart.
      In dental matters, when a man has an uneasy feeling in a tooth, the nerve
      of which he thought had been killed, he places himself under treatment.
      The dentist has a number of drills and very fine, sharp, needle-like
      instruments which he uses to discover the little particle of nerve matter
      which may have been left. When he finds it, the patient in the chair
      instantly knows it without being told.

      So we may honestly think we are sound and all right in the spiritual life. It
      is the province of temptation under the overruling power of God to find
      and touch the remains of the carnal nature, and the weak places of the
      moral character. If the man is not thoroughly sound, by and by the drill
      and probe of the Tempter will reach him.

      This does not mean necessarily a fall into sin. Far from it. Many are thus
      tempted, stand self-revealed in some unsuspected weakness and yet do
      not fall into transgression. Nevertheless they get to know themselves,
      which is a great gain and triumph in itself.

      We recall the grave look of older Christians when they have sometimes to
      listen to the swaggering, boastful talk of young Christians. These younger
      followers of the Lord have mistaken the cannon-shooting of the Fourth of
      July for the siege of Vicksburg. They have been in the battle of Lexington,
      but know nothing of the fearful trials of Valley Forge. So they talk and so
      the older Christians listen, grave, thoughtful and oftentimes silent
      altogether. The young fledgling has the floor or rather the barnyard, and is
      talking about the great upper air currents, when he has never been higher
      than the hen-house in which he was born. He speaks indignantly about
      certain things, and tells us what he would do under such and such
      circumstances, and what should be done to parties who had said and done
      certain things. Meanwhile older Christians listen silently and often
      pityingly. Not that they tolerate sin, or would do wrong or have done
      wrong; and they have been higher than the hen-house, and felt the blast
      and rush o f spiritual wickedness in high places against them. They have
      been far away from the barnyard with its simple history and relationships,
      and met a bear in a cave, struggled with a lion in the woods, and had a
      battle with a giant in the mountains. They killed them all, but they know
      what the paw of a bear is, the strength of a lion's jaw, and the awful
      power of a giant. They have gone through experiences, and obtained
      self-illuminations, and drank cups, and borne burdens, which add ten years
      to one's life in a single day. In other words they have got to know
      themselves, and in this discovery of self are now better able to meet the
      onsets of the world, the flesh and the devil.

      A second benefit is compassion for others.

      Those are very tender and beautiful passages in the Word which speak of
      Christ having been tempted in every respect yet without sin, and of His
      being touched with a feeling for our infirmities, and having compassion on
      the ignorant and on them who are out of the way. He can feel for us,
      because He has been assaulted by the power of Hell, and knows our
      anguish in like conditions.

      As we study men who have gone astray or lapsed in any way in the
      spiritual life, we notice that nothing touches them more deeply and is more
      potent as a human instrumentality in lifting them up and bringing them
      back as genuine compassion.

      Another fact that strikes me is that it is very hard to understand and feel
      for people in certain mental and moral conditions when we have never
      been there, or realized any temptation to be there.

      If a person could be raised in a state of seclusion from the world and not
      brought in contact with any of its forms of sin and sorrow, such an
      individual would make a wretched comforter and adviser in this
      heartbroken world. So not to feel certain forces of evil to beat upon the
      heart for admittance, is to make certain classes of our fellow beings perfect
      mysteries to us. We would not know how to counsel, cheer or otherwise
      assist them.

      A woman who never lost a child makes a poor comforter to the bereaved
      mother next door. It is the woman who has seen the life go out of first one
      and then another of her little ones, whose voice moves and very touch
      brings comfort and strength.

      An unconverted preacher knows not what to say to the weeping penitent
      at the altar. So in the matter of temptation, ignorance of its changes,
      phases and forces would make one a failure as a sympathizer and helper of
      men in this world.

      A number of times in life, the writer has felt in his breast a perfect surge of
      what he recognized to be Satanic influence, to do something desperate. He
      never dreamed for an instant of yielding, but the dark, awful pressure of
      those moments has been the means of creating a very tender, pitiful feeling
      in his soul for Christians who have been similarly assailed.

      Again we recall a time in our early ministry when we were on our way to
      speak with an eminent preacher on the subject of a peculiar and distressing
      trial in the life, when we were distinctly and profoundly impressed by the
      Holy Spirit not to go to him, but to another person altogether. The last
      one, it is needless to say, understood the case and gave the help needed.
      The first one we see today would have frozen and discouraged the soul
      from lack of sympathy and appreciation of the case. A man not tempted
      in certain lines would stare with cold wonder at the confessions of a visitor
      who came to get instruction and direction about a matter of which he knew
      nothing. But if he has been tempted himself, there would not only an
      understanding attention be given to the confession, but a most pitiful and
      compassionate attention. He himself has not sinned, but he can see why
      and how the other man did. He remembers the tug and pull at his own
      heart, an hour when he wrestled not with flesh and blood but with
      principals ties and powers in high places, and when Satan with a troop of
      dark spirits tried to beat down the door of the will and get possession of
      the life. Hence it is that he listens with patience and pity, and is able to
      give helpful counsel to those who have been bewildered, saddened and hurt
      by the devil.

      A third benefit accruing from temptation is humility.

      To go down under the Tempter brings condemnation, self-abasement and
      gloom. To be tempted without yielding brings to the mind and heart a
      much better state of things. Humility is a beautiful plant to flourish in the
      soul, and God is pleased to allow temptation to be one of the means for its
      development. The conviction after many and varied temptations is certain
      to be wrought in the mind, that but for the grace of God we would have
      been overwhelmed a thousand times. If this does not make the soul feel
      lowly, then what effect is produced?

      The emotion of grateful, humble joy which swept through the heart of a
      preacher in England, when he saw a drunkard staggering before him, and
      said, 'There goes John Newton,' but for the grace of God, is the feeling of
      a man who has come successfully out of heavy temptations, under which
      many of his fellow creatures have fallen. He is glad but also humble,
      remembering who saved him, and how he was saved.

      A fourth result of temptation is increased prayer and watchfulness.

      A truly saved man learns to distrust himself. The strongest in the kingdom
      becomes more and more cautious, and realizes the need of supplicating as
      not all do, 'Lead us not into temptation.' How full of significance in its
      very position in the prayer is the next sentence, 'But deliver us from evil.'
      So truly is it the case with many that temptation ends in evil, and so
      properly self-distrustful becomes the very saintliest in the kingdom of
      Christ, that while recognizing the good which can and does come from
      temptation, yet the child of God very naturally and properly dreads each new
      and powerful temptation, and thinks with thankful joy of the life and
      world where no such things exist forever.

      Hence the discovered weakness of human nature, and the power of Satanic
      influence drives the Christian to renewed and redoubled watchfulness and
      prayer.

      It is said that a man is no stronger than his weakest point. If this is so,
      then truly all of us have need to watch and pray. Not to do so is to invite
      the world and the devil to take possession of us.

      A fifth result is increased ability to help others.

      It is a blessed thing to be able to assist immortal beings as they struggle
      through a thousand difficulties, discouragements, and besetments along the
      path of duty to heaven and eternal life. Happy indeed is the man who can
      speak the word which will put hope again in the sickened heart, and
      strength in the faltering feet. There are such people, and we have
      invariably observed that they are individuals who have been tossed about
      in many a spiritual storm, and walked in furnaces of fiercest moral trial.

      If the reader will turn to the biographies of the most devout men he will be
      struck with their description of sore temptations, and dreadful personal
      attacks of Satan upon their souls, which would have swept them from
      their feet, but for their steadfast looking to Christ and calling on God.
      Concerning the preeminent usefulness of these men, history leaves not a
      shadow of doubt. To such Christian characters we would rather go for
      help in time of great spiritual trial than to any other class of God's people.

      When the writer felt the call to preach over twenty years ago, and with the
      call came all those bewilderments of mind, heart and conscience which
      Satan brings to confuse a man, he did a very foolish thing when he went
      for advice to a friend who was an unconverted man. How could a natural
      mind understand the things of God? The counsel he gave was of course
      absurd and could not be followed.

      Equally great will be the failure to obtain information, comfort and
      strength in times of deep spiritual gloom from some converted people.
      They have not been where you have been. They have not prayed, suffered
      and achieved enough in the Christian life to bring the devils in great awful
      rushes of darkness down upon them. The words Gethsemane, Gabbatha
      and Golgotha only refer to historic sites to them. So they do not know
      what you mean when you speak of soul travail and spirit desolation.

      Some temptations told to one of these rocking-chair, or hothouse plant
      kind of Christians would fairly take the breath from him or her, and he
      would think you had never been regenerated.

      Who of us have not heard the following expressions from the
      canton-flannel and catnip-tea kind of religious character, as he or she
      speaks to a faithful and successful worker in the gospel:

      'What! You tempted!'

      Just as well might one say to a captain or colonel who led the charge in a
      great battle:

      'What! You shot at!'

      Yes, of course he was shot at; and one hundred more guns were pointed at
      him than at any single soldier in the ranks; and the numerous bullets were
      fired because he was a captain or leader.

      An illustration arises in my mind. It is another scene in a barnyard. A
      young bantam is sitting on top of a chicken coops giving a lecture to some
      old motherly hens about how to avoid contracting the disease called the
      'pip.' An old rooster with one eye gone is half dozing and half listening
      from under a neighboring hayrack. At times his head is turned thoughtfully
      to one side, and again his remaining eye scans the heavens for a hawk. He
      lost his eye in a fight with an owl one night; and most of his tail feathers in
      a struggle with a mink; besides he has run miles and miles in his life to save
      his carcass from the dinner pot. He has had many battles and victories in
      his line for years, and has a glorious right to crow, and does crow. But the
      bantam lecture seems to be too much for him this afternoon, and as he
      listens he appears to be too full for utterance. But my! how much more he
      knows about things in particular as well as in general than the little Bantam
      Theologue and Preacher on the coop. The 'gaps' and 'pip' do not been so
      dreadful to him who had two dogs, a mink and a darky all after him in one
      night. In a word, for perfect information about hawks, eagles, owls, weasels
      and other enemies of the barnyard, it would be better to go to the
      old rooster than to the young bantam.

      Ever since the writer has been a Christian he has felt that the battle-scarred
      veterans of the cross, the men and women who have had frequent and
      awful fights with Satan, were the best counselors, and so he always went
      to them, and invariably realized help and comfort. Many and varied
      temptations had prepared them to be helpers indeed.

      There are some Christians of a bandbox and lavender style of piety, and
      they are preachers of a feminine make-up as to constitution, temperament
      and habits of life, and are perfectly powerless to assist certain classes of
      their fellowmen, because utterly unfamiliar with their peculiar trials and
      temptations.

      As to soul edification and life deliverance give me the Christian to talk to
      who has fought the owls, hawks and weasels of hell and ran many a time
      to save his soul from the black dinner pots of the devil.

      All this being so, we can see the deeper, fiercer and more varied the
      temptations are which come into one's life; and the man does not fall
      under them, but 'endures' them, the more is he fitted to become a kind of
      human high priest among men. Like his Lord he is touched with pity for
      others, has compassion on the ignorant and on them who are out of the
      way, and finds himself a consoler of human sorrow, a helper of the weak
      and tempted, and a blesser of his race in many ways every day that he
      lives.

      A sixth benefit from temptation is a constantly increased spiritual
      strength.

      Of course we do not mean temptation that is yielded to, but endured,
      resisted and overcome.

      With every trimuph in this line comes not only a sweet and delicious
      inward joy, but a realization of growing power. In this manner we go from
      strength to strength in no way can we more quickly come into greater
      measures of spiritual vigor than by victory over temptation. It is the
      gymnasium where moral muscle is developed, or the campaign experience
      which makes the veteran.

      We read that David first killed a bear, after that a lion, and later still a
      giant. So it is still; we begin with small victories, but we grow mightier
      with every triumph and finally get to slaying giants easily.

      Under such a progressive life, the things which moved us a few months or
      years ago cannot do so now. Plains are traversed, rivers crossed and
      mountains climbed we once thought impassable and insurmountable. A
      wall is leaped over, a troop is run through or overcome, Satan's attempted
      bonds are snapped like thread, and the head fastened to the wall is jerked
      triumphantly away carrying pin and beam with it.

      Suppose it was so, that the strength of every conquered athlete should go
      into the victor: then by and by who could stand before him! And suppose
      that the physical force of every animal slain would go into the body of the
      hunter and slayer; what a marvel of physical power the man would
      become, and nothing could withstand his onset.

      Something like this takes place in the spiritual life. The force of the thing
      conquered becomes in a deep wonderful sense our own; and with every
      new triumph we advance still farther with increasing strength, until finally
      with bears, lions and giants conquered and dead behind us, and filled with a
      blessed sense of victory over every new foe, and all foes, we cry with
      John, 'This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.' and
      'who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is
      the Son of God?'

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