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Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Overcoming the Enemies in Your Life


By Thomas Denegre

We know how David overcame Goliath (1 Samuel 17). In a similar way, one woman, through Christ, overcame a South American tribe’s culture of death into life.

In the jungles of Ecuador, 33-year-old Elisabeth Elliot watched in horror as a dead man floated down the river with eighteen spears embedded in him.  The dreaded Auca tribe, known for their savagery and killings, had infiltrated her host’s village.  Filled with mixed feelings, Elisabeth made contact with the tribe she planned to evangelize with the Gospel.  Two years earlier, her husband Jim Elliot and four other missionaries were speared to death by the same tribe when they tried to evangelize to them.  Just as David was going to confront Goliath (1 Samuel 17), Elizabeth was going to confront her own foe.  Yet, her mission was not to destroy her enemy but to save them.

In the end, Elisabeth befriended the tribe and by modeling the virtues of Jesus she won many of them over to Christ.  Taken back by her character of humility, compassion, forgiveness, kindness, courage, and openness, 20% of the tribe received Jesus as their Lord. 

When she arrived in 1959 six out of ten Auca men died before the age of forty-five from homicide.  The Auca’s were a savage people and killing was an accepted form of behavior.  Within a few years the homicide rate dropped to 10% and the tribe’s population increased from 600 to 2,000 people.  The tribe changed their name from Auca to Waorani, meaning they are “the true people.” Clearly, the acceptance of Christ in these people’s hearts changed the culture of the tribe from death into life.  As Jesus once said, “The thief comes to steal, kill, and destroy, but I have to come to bring life, and bring it abundantly.” (John 10:10).

So, how do we overcome our great enemies in life?  More importantly, how do we love our enemies when they want to kill us?  As Abraham Lincoln famously said, “Do I not destroy my enemies when I make them my friends?” Elisabeth Elliot, who wrote the book, “End of the Spear,” gives us the lessons to conquer our enemies.  Here are just few things I learned that you can apply to your life today, that can make a difference.

The prophet Hosea once said, “my people are destroyed from lack of knowledge.” (Hosea 4:6) Or, as one of Murphy’s Law states, “if all else fails read the instructions.” As God plainly instructs us, we are called to plant and grow His Word in our heart and mind to prosper in all things.

Based on my own experience with prison ministry and mentoring immature Christians, the lesson is simple.  In John 15, Jesus is the source of life, truth, and the way while we receive and apply this source of love and life to others. Jesus said, “If you live in life-union with me (Jesus) and if my words live powerfully within you—then you can ask whatever you desire, and it will be done.  When your lives bear abundant fruit, you demonstrate that you are my mature disciples who glorify my Father!” (John 15:7-8 TPT)

By being in life union with Jesus and knowing his Words, I’m given the power, authority and strength to love, forgive, and care for others.  Not only does it change my life, but it changes those around me.  Today, the wardens of Ohio prisons are demanding more prison ministries to its inmates because it changes lives and changes the culture of a prison.  Just like the Auca tribe, the blessings of God are bestowed to those who hear, believe, and do his word.

To have the courage to face your enemy requires a large faith, confidence, and trust in the Lord. Elisabeth was soaked in the word and it gave her the strength and compassion to encounter her enemy.  It was not her facing the enemy, but Christ inside her that did.

Three things matter most in our faith journey. One is knowing the word of God. Two, is visualizing it working, and three being obedient to His Word.  As St. Paul said in Romans, “So, faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ.” (Romans 10:17).  Equally important is visualizing the hope of God in your heart. “For the heart is the wellspring of Life.” (Proverbs 4:20)

You have to conceive the Word, then you believe what it says, and then you’ll receive its promises. God calls us to meditate on the word to conceive its blessings as it is written in Psalm 1.  For it says,

How blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked,
Nor stand in the path of sinners,
Nor sit in the seat of scoffers!
But his delight is in the law of the Lord,
And, in His law he meditates day and night.
He will be like a tree firmly planted by streams of water,
Which yields its fruit in its season,
And its leaf does not wither;
And in whatever he does, he prospers. (Psalm 1:1-3)

Yes, God prospers us when we own the Word of God in our heart and mind! I learned that by meditating on the Word in my heart God has prospered me with a rich life with Jesus in the Kingdom of God, and a blessed life with my wife, family and friends. Through humility I opened my heart to his love and his teachings.  By seeing how Jesus works in the Word, I can manifest these blessings from my mind’s eye into reality.  It is the same way Elisabeth was able to convert the tribe from a culture of death to Life, and the same way you can do it too.

Finally, you will always encounter doubts when facing difficult circumstances.  The way out is simple; never trust your own reasoning based on earthly teachings, never trust the reasoning of an unbeliever, and never trust the reasoning of a Christian who does not know or honors the Word of God.  Rather, through the Holy Spirit, always trust in the Word of God and the counsel of like-minded Christians. Just as Elisabeth trusted God in the jungles of Ecuador, you too can trust God to change your life and those around you.

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