THE LURE AND CURE OF LUST Based on Matt. 5:27-30
By Pastor Glenn Pease
Show me the man who has never looked at a woman with lust, and I'll show you
a man with a white cane who was blind from birth. None but a blind man could
get through life and not be captivated by God's crowning work of
creation-woman. Anyone with an ounce of artistic appreciation knows there
are few, if any, more appealing sites than a well formed female. This is not
the conviction of dirty old men only, but it represents the mind of men of
every age, place, and race; godly and ungodly alike.
Art Buchwald, the popular secular newspaper columnist, told of his
experience at a Washington dinner party. He had every intention of being a
perfect gentleman at this party, but the woman to his right wore a black net
pajama top with a neckline that plunged down, he says, to heaven knows
where, and the blouse was held up by only two tiny strings that looked like
they would break any minute. He writes, "God knows we've been sinners and
most men are trying to change their attitudes toward women. But when you
have nothing but bare backs and cleavage to stare at during dinner, how on
earth can any man keep his mind on Henry Kissinger?"
We could dismiss that as the struggle of the secular man, but it won't work.
The testimony of godly men through the ages is that the female body
stimulates their lust. Many women resent David for his lust after Bathsheba
when he saw her bathing, and for his foolish and sinful behavior that led
him into adultery and murder. Despicable as it was, most men do not despise
David, for they know in their hearts that in that same situation they may
have done the same stupid thing under the lure of lust. Many godly men have
done the same thing, and many who haven't know it is an ever present
possibility.
Charles Swindoll, one of the most popular preachers today, always makes sure
there is a desk between him and the women he counsels, for he writes, "I
simply recognize that being a man, temptation is always on the back burner
waiting to singe me." In his little booklet on Resisting The Lure Of Lust,
he writes, "Non-Christians and Christians alike wrestle with its pressure
and its persistence throughout their lives. Some think that getting married
will cause temptation to flee. It doesn't. Others have tried isolation. But
sensual imagination goes with them, fighting and clawing for attention and
gratification. Not even being called into Christian service helps. Ask any
whose career is in the Lord's work. Temptation is there relentlessly
pleading for satisfaction." Swindoll is saying, there is no escape from
lust. There is no place to go, and no something to become, that will take
you out of the range of the arrows of forbidden desire.
This goes for women as well. Jesus does not mention women lusting for men,
for at that point in history women did not have the power and freedom. They
were dominated by men. But whenever women have had the power and freedom to
be sexual aggressors they have exhibited the same lust as men. One of the
strongest examples of a lust led person in the Bible is that of Potipher's
wife. She admired the handsome servant her husband had brought into the
home, and one day when Joseph was home alone with her she said in Gen. 39:7,
"Come to bed with me." That is what you call the direct approach, and only
by the grace of God did Joseph escape her clutches.
We live in a period of time when the female is nearly, if not clearly, equal
with the male in sexual lust. This is no proof it is the end of hope for the
human race, however, for it has happened before. Martin Luther wrote of what
was going on at the University of Wittenberg in 1544. "The race of girls is
getting bold, and run after the fellows into their rooms and chambers and
wherever they can, and offer them their free love." Sex was not discovered
in the 20th century. It has been a major problem throughout the history of
mankind, and nobody escapes the power and influence of lust. Not everybody
idolizes it and make it a god, but everybody must reckon with its presence.
L. Nelson Bell, father-in-law of Billy Graham, and a great preacher and
author for many years in Christianity Today, wrote on the imagination and
its potential for lust. He wrote, "It is, even for the true Christian the
last frontier to surrender to the cleansing and redemptive work of the
living Christ." This is equivalent to saying, it is a never ending battle
for the Christian. Sometimes sickness, psychological handicaps, and old age
set people free from this conflict, but for the majority there is no
discharge from the war of the spirit with the flesh. Martin Luther said, "If
no other work was commanded than chasteness, we would all have enough to do,
so dangerous and raging a vice is unchasteness."
The facts of life an history force us to recognize there is no moral
majority when it comes to lust. Before Jesus gave his Sermon on the Mount
there was a chance for a moral majority to exist on this issue. As long as
adultery was limited to an act of sex with a woman not your mate, the
majority of men could be innocent. That is still true today even in our
sexual revolution. The majority of mates are faithful, but Jesus changed the
rules in this passage. He thrusts the majority of the human race into the
camp of the guilty.
Jesus says that to look at a woman with lust, that is with a strong desire,
is to be guilty of adultery. That means the millions of men and women who
have overcome temptation, and have never been unfaithful to their mates, but
who have looked at others with lust are guilty of adultery. This is not a
pleasant message, and the result is, out of many thousands of indexed
sermons, there is not one that deals with this text. Jesus is being too
radical here. He apparently never read the book How To Win Friends And
Influence People. It is no wonder the Pharisees wanted Him out of the
picture. He just made the majority of the human race murderers by making
anger equivalent to murder, and now He makes the majority adulterers by
making lust equivalent to adultery.
Teachings like this totally shatter the whole foundation for legalistic
righteousness. You may be able to avoid a lot of sins by legalism, but Jesus
is saying you can't avoid sin. You can pretend you are really righteous
because you have never murdered, or gone to bed with another man's wife, but
Jesus takes away the facade and says, but look at the anger and hatred for
men that thrives in your breast; look at the lust that rages there. You have
cleaned the outside of the cup, but inside it is still filthy. You can plead
not guilty on the basis of the external evidence, but let the jury see the
movies of your mind, and you are hung. The law does not go deep enough, for
it only deals with acts. Jesus goes deeper, for He deals with attitudes.
The whole point of Jesus is, that external legalistic righteousness just
won't cut it. The Pharisees were destroying true religion by their hypocrisy
and external show. True religion, and a relationship to God that pleases Him
is one where men are honest about their sin, and seek His help to conquer
it. Jesus knew what He was doing when He destroyed all ground to stand on
for legalistic righteousness. He knew by these statements He was making
murder and adultery, for all practical purposes, universal. Jesus had just
described a stubborn man who refused to agree with his accuser. He could
only insist on his innocence. Now Jesus accuses practically everyone of
being guilty of adultery. The question is, will we be stubborn and fight
this accusation all the way to the judgment, or will we submit, and admit
our guilt? Jesus wants us to escape the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, and be
honest about our inner sinful nature.
A child misunderstood the seventh commandment, and recited it, "Thou shalt
not admit adultery." This was the problem with the Pharisees. They would not
admit to their guilt. This was David's problem. He refused to admit his
guilt. This is the problem with almost everyone. We refuse to admit that our
lust makes us guilty. When Jimmy Carter was president he confessed publicly
that he had lust. This was no surprise, but the fact that he admitted it was
the surprise. We do not like to admit that all of us are guilty. But that is
precisely what Jesus is forcing us to do. He knew that everybody gets angry
at sometime. He knew that everybody struggles with lust at times. We know He
knew this by the way He handled the situation with the woman brought to Him
who had been taken in the very act of adultery.
He said to all of those religious leaders, who in self-righteousness were
ready to stone her, "Let him who is without sin cast the first stone." Then
instead of leaping out of the way to avoid the flying rocks, He knelt to
write on the ground before the accused. He knew it was not a risky gamble,
for He knew they were men, and men do not live that long and escape lust.
Everyone of them walked away, and Jesus knew they would. For He knew they
were guilty, and He knew they knew they were guilty. Christopher Sykes was
right when he said, "Of the seven deadly sins, lust is the only one about
which all mankind (with very few exceptions), knows something from
experience."
Most everyone has had the experience of going to a restaurant with others,
and when they get their order, it looks better than you ordered, and you
often wish you had what they have. It is the grass looks greener on the
other side of the fence feeling. It is just a part of our human nature to
desire what we do not have. Lust is one of these desires. It starts at
puberty, and that is when most boys begin their battle with lust. The girl
next door, the attractive teacher, the objects of lust are everywhere. And
now in our culture there is the added temptation of movies, magazines, and
the computer. It is at this stage of the battle that boys see the female,
not as a person, but as a thing. If they do not control their sex drive, and
girls do not help them control it by resisting their advances, they may
never learn what love is, but spend the rest of their lives under the
dominion of lust.
Marlyn Monroe said, "I hate being a thing." She was a sex symbol, and a
symbol is a thing. She never really felt loved as a person, but only used
like a thing. If only youth could see that lust controlled can lead to love.
But lust unleashed and freely expressed leads to becoming locked into an
immature relationship of the sexes. Some men never know love for the person
of a woman because they are locked in on lust for women. Women can never be
equal to them, for women are things, and only objects of gratification.
Quick sex does not build love, it destroys it. It is sex controlled that
builds love.
Once a man has robbed himself of the power to relate to a woman as a person,
he has robbed himself of the potential of love. He will be reduced to a life
on the level of lust where self-centered pleasure is all that sex will ever
mean. I have read of preachers who have been locked in at this level, and it
is tragic, for they cannot love over half the human race. They can only
lust, and life is so much tougher a battle without love for persons to help
you in the fight against lust. It is one of life's great paradoxes that
those who let lust have its way, and have sex whenever, and with whomever,
lose the highest value of sex. Those who control lust, and prevent
promiscuous expressions of it by keeping it exclusive, come to enjoy sex on
the highest level as God intended. Lust is the wrong use of that which
rightly used is love.
It is important that we do not develop negative attitudes on sex because of
our battle with lust. The papers recently revealed that many of the sex
offenders in our culture are not strange freakish people, but respectable
professionals. They are people like teachers, pastors, doctors, and
policemen. You can count on it, they are also people who repressed their
lust, they refuse to admit the reality of it in their lives. Had they been
honest about their lust they may have been able to prevent its dangers. The
same thing has happened all through history. Many Christians leaders of the
early Catholic Church did not want to admit that Mary had sex like any
normal married woman, and so they developed the doctrine of her perpetual
virginity. The other children in the home were cousins and not hers they
said.
If artificial insemination would have existed then, the church probably
would have made it a sin not to have babies that way. They could thereby
eliminate sex even for marriage. This suppression of sex, and glorification
of the non-sexual priest and nun led to lust overflowing its banks in a
flood of immorality. The hypocrisy of pretending to be non-sexual beings has
never been an effective weapon against lust. The bleeding Pharisees were
called that because they frequently ran into walls and fell down injuring
themselves, because they tried to avoid looking at women. This only made
them more lust conscious then their non-bleeding brothers.
If we go back to the Puritan leaders who burned so many witches at the
stake, we see that it was a time of sexual suppression. People were
pretending sex did not exist. They put cloth over the bare legs of the
tables even, and a book written by a woman was not permitted to be set along
side a book written by a man. Witch burning became a popular pastime, for
the respectable leaders of that society. It was because the witches had to
be examined nude, and then they were burned at the stake nude. This was a
motivation to find more and more witches to examine. Their refusal to deal
with their lust honestly produced very dishonest and cruel expressions of
it. Women are just as degraded when sex is suppressed as when it is too
openly expressed. Balance is the only way to wisdom.
What is lust? It is a good thing gone to an extreme. The word for lust is
epithumeo. It is a word used for all kinds of strong desire both good and
bad. Desire is not evil in itself. It is a normal part of life. Lust is a
desire to satisfy the sex drive outside of the boundaries that God has set.
He set boundaries, not because He is a killjoy, and does not want men to
enjoy His gift, but because limitations is what gives value to His gift. Sex
without boundaries is like a river without boundaries. It is no longer a
beautiful and beneficial gift of nature, but it is a beastly judgment of
nature that floods and destroys. We all have cars and other things with
engines that warn us about overfill. Too much of a good thing is a bad
thing, and that is what lust is. It is too much of a good thing. Lust is to
sex what gluttony is to the enjoyment of food. It is the sex drive trying to
go beyond its rightful limits, and when it does it destroys rather than
build.
Love is willing to be limited, and become exclusive, and make a commitment
for better or worse. Lust wants no part of confinement, and it says for
better only, and when the pleasure fades it moves on. The self is all that
matters in lust. The other is only an object to be used. Lust oriented sex
is strictly a me me me affair, and not an us experience. It is not true that
everything you most enjoy in life is a sin. It is the excess of what you
enjoy that is sin. Eating is no sin; sex is no sin, and anger is no sin. It
is the excess of these that become sin. Few will argue about the lure of
lust, and its power in our lives, but many question the cure, for it sounds
like such bitter medicine.
Jesus takes a very radical approach to solving the problem of lust. The fact
that you seldom see a one eyed, one handed man is evidence that the solution
is nowhere nearly as wide spread as the problem. Only a few in history have
considered that Jesus meant for us to literally gouge out our right eye and
cut off our right hand. If you took it literally, the whole world would
become a center for the handicapped. Normal people with both eyes and both
hands would become freaks that we could only see in side shows.
The strongest Bible literalists do not take this solution literally, because
it is obvious self-mutilation. This would not solve the problem at all. The
whole point of Jesus is that sin is an inner problem, and so an external
solution would not touch it anymore than cleaning the outside of the cup
would make the inside clean. A literal obedience to Christ here would still
leave you with a left eye, left handed man, and I have never read any study
that even hinted that lefty's are not as lusty.
Origen, the great church father, realized the cutting off of a hand and
gouging out of an eye was of no real value, and so he solved his lust
problem by castration. He remained a great preacher and theologian, but his
solution was not acceptable, and it was condemned by the church as out of
the will of God. As universal as lust is the universal agreement is that
Jesus does not want us to fight lust by literal self-surgery. But because we
are not to take Jesus literally, does not mean we are not to take Him
seriously. Jesus is using radical language to get our attention focused on
the importance of being very serious with this matter of lust.
How do we deal with it? The answer of Jesus in these radical words is in
essence-prevent it. Not the lust, for that is inevitable, but the
consequences of lust can be prevented. It parallels the issue of anger and
murder. You can't avoid anger, for it is part of life, but you can control
it and prevent it from destroying yourself, and your relationships to
others. So it is with lust. You can't avoid lust, but you can prevent it
from hurting your life, and the life of others. Luther said, "You can't stop
the birds from flying over your head, but you can stop them from building a
nest in your hair."
That is what Jesus is saying here. We have a choice, and we are to choose to
control those things which cause lust to lead us into dangerous actions.
Whatever causes you to sin is the culprit you focus on, and you prevent that
cause from having its effects. You don't let life just happen to you. You
take control and chose what life is going to be.
If the eye gate is the gate that leads you to lose control, you have the
responsibility to cut off that channel of temptation. You will not be
relieved of that responsibility just because the world is full of
pornography, and sensual TV and movies. You have a choice, and you are
accountable for your choices. If you choose to open that gate and let lust
lead you into sin, you were just like the stubborn man in the previous
paragraph, and like him you will have to pay the bitter price for your
stubborn rejection of Christ's advice.
The same principle applies to the touch gate. If your lust is stimulated by
touch to the point of losing control, and yet you still touch members of the
opposite sex in ways that promote it, you are deliberately toying with the
fire that can consume you. Jesus says to cut it out. Cut off any activity
that opens up the possibility of your lust to go out of control and do its
deadly damage. Seeing and touching are the two most common ways that people
are led into acts of immorality, and that is why Jesus focuses on the eye
and the hand. People vary as to their sensitivity in these areas. There are
Christian men who can go into houses of prostitution and witness to the
women. This is rare, but the point is, some can do dangerous things without
losing control. This does not mean it is an activity that most can be
involved in. Each person must know what their limitations are when it comes
to lust.
I am not responsible for you, nor you for me. I must know where I face risk,
and make choices that cut off those things which lead me to lose of control.
If a man gets turned on by taking his secretary out to lunch, he has a
responsibility to cut it out. If the secretary gets turned on by it, she is
to cut it out. The point is, everybody knows when lust is being stirred up,
and at that point one is responsible to sacrifice the lesser for the
preservation of the greater. That is the principle in Jesus' solution. You
lose an eye or a hand to save the whole body.
That is the principle behind surgery, and behind the prevention of sin. It
is a law of life. The lizard, or the lobster, will lose a tail or a claw in
order to escape with their life. A part of the forest will be deliberately
burned in order to save the whole forest. The chess player will sacrifice,
not only his pawn, but even more valuable pieces to save his king. Jesus
says pay the price necessary to escape the price you will have to pay if you
let lust have its way. Give up part of your life to preserve the whole. Many
a man has enjoyed his flirting with another woman, and so he refuses to give
it up. The price he pays is sometimes the last penny. It cost him his
family, his home, and his reputation. All that he most treasured in life is
lost because he would not sacrifice a part. They refuse to give up the part,
and ended up forced to give up the whole. We are not talking about dirty old
men, but about godly people.
The Bible makes it clear that those who stand must beware lest they fall.
There is nobody immune to the dangers of lust. Charles Swindoll tells of his
experience.
"I remember a conference I addressed. I was getting on the
hotel elevator-alone as usual-and two women followed me on.
I smiled and said, "Hi," punched my floor, six, and said, "What
floor would you like?" They said, "Oh, six would be fine." suddenly felt a
little flattered. But it was remarkable what happened between the first
floor and the sixth. I had a momentary fantasy, but then God pulled a shade
between the three of us, and on that shade I could read as clear as day-"Be
not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever
a man soweth, that shall he also reap." If we let God protect us,
He will. God pulled the shade right when I really needed it."
He chose to cut out a fraction of his life to preserve the whole. He
sacrificed the temporary for the sake of the permanent. He gave up the shiny
case, but kept the diamond. Honestly about your lust is what Jesus demands
of us. It is because this gives us the edge over the enemy. We know where we
are, and we know our weakness, and so we know when we are under attack.
Honesty enables you to fight the enemy on your home field. If you wait until
your lust devises a plan, and you are involved with a forbidden partner, you
may be at the point of no return. You avoid this by recognizing your sin
does not begin in the motel room, but in your heart. If you fight it there,
you can prevent the motel scene from every happening.
We do not know if Jesus had lust or not. The Bible says He was tempted in
all points like we are, yet without sin. It is matter of debate, and there
is no certainty, but if He did, we know He conquered it in His mind, and
prevented it from leading to any sin.
The Christian does not escape sin in his heart. He is not innocent at all,
for in his heart he hates, and he lusts, and he knows he is guilty of murder
and adultery, but he keeps his sin on a level where the forgiveness of God
covers it all, and no permanent damage is done. Once the anger or lust is
allowed to become acts of sin they can still be forgiven, but then even the
grace of God and the blood of Christ cannot remove the scars, and all the
evil consequences that may result. David was forgiven, but he suffered the
scars of his fall for the rest of his life.
Those who fall are not necessarily more lustful than those who do not. Many
who live a lifetime of faithfulness to their mates have a strong sex drive,
and they face the battle of lust equally as strong as those who yield. What
makes the difference? It is the wisdom of obeying their Lord. They build on
the rock, and so they are ready for the storm. They are not better, but they
are wiser. They know Jesus is right, and so they heed His counsel, and they
pay the price of obedience. They know this is the best deal that can be
made.
Only you can prevent forest fires the signs use to say. Jesus is saying to
us all: Only you can prevent the fires of lust from burning out of control.
Sex was designed by God to build lives, and not destroy them, and so cut
off, and block out, and make the sacrifice necessary to limit lust to where
you can control it. The lure is real, but so is the cure, and when you keep
them both in balance, sex can play a very positive role in your life, and
not be a source of offense to God or man.
How was all this suppose to be helpful by being pronounced guilty? It is
good because it eliminates the basis for hypocritical righteousness. You
don't have to pretend you are not a sinner, and not affected by the sensual
world. You are guilty of lust, and you know it, and God knows it, and Jesus
knows it. Now we can get down to the serious business of preventing this
acknowledged power from doing damage to lives and relationships. Love says,
because I have lust, and it can hurt people that I love, I must take serious
the matter of keeping it under control. Love make wise choices to cut out
those things that are high risk. The lure of lust will fail when we have our
focus on the love that will prevail.
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