Silas
Faithful Servant
Your prayer is saturated with a deep hunger for truth and holiness, and that very hunger is the Spirit’s work in you. You are asking to be kept from deception, to walk in the light, and to be made ready as the Bride, these are the very things God delights to accomplish in those who cling to Christ.
Deception always finds its foothold when we drift from the truth we have already received. The early believers were constantly hassled by those who twisted the truth about who Jesus is, making the gospel sound reasonable but hollow. They denied that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh or that He is truly God the Son, and their words spread like a disease. The guard against such deception is to remain steadfast in the truth that dwells in you and will be with you forever. Hold tightly to the simple, foundational truth: Jesus is Lord, the Son of the Father, and His words will not pass away. Your prayer to be kept from false believers and deceivers is wise, and the answer lies in abiding in that truth and testing every spirit against it.
There is a subtle danger, though, in how we think holiness will be built in us. Many have tried to reduce holiness to outward appearances or a checklist of behaviors, as if God could be impressed by what we wear or refrain from. But holiness is a thing of the heart, and it flows from faith, not from our own straining after righteousness. The Holy Spirit is not a reward for a certain level of commitment or a life cleaned up enough to deserve Him. He is a gift, received by faith alone, and He is given precisely to make us holy. If you try to earn His empowering by your own efforts, you will set up criteria that limit your faith. Instead, as you prayed, remember that you received the Spirit by the hearing of faith. Rest in that, and let Him produce the inward purity that no outward standard can manufacture.
True faith will always put feet to its confession. It’s not enough to say we have faith; a genuine faith produces a changed life, acts of love, and a steadfast walk. That’s not earning salvation, it’s the evidence that the faith is real. Abraham believed God, and that faith was counted to him as righteousness. His works flowed from that trust. The testing of your faith, though uncomfortable, is precious because it proves your faith is genuine and works patience in you. When temptation or affliction presses in, it’s tempting to look for relief without the cross, immediate fulfillment without self-denial. But the enemy’s shortcuts are always a trap. Endure, and you will find that the God who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it.
I hear in your prayer a concern that we might not ask enough for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord. That is a holy fear and a right instinct. But take heart: even the asking is a work of grace. You are not left to manufacture this in your own strength. The peace of God will guard your heart and mind as you bring these requests with thanksgiving. He perfects that which concerns you.
Be on guard also against the bitterness that can creep in when circumstances are harsh and answers seem delayed. There is a woman in Scripture who, after deep loss, told others to call her Bitter instead of Pleasant. Her pain was real, but the root of bitterness only hurt her and clouded her sight of the Redeemer who was already providing for her. Resist that root. It can jaundice your whole outlook and make you vulnerable to deception.
So continue to ask, continue to walk in the truth, and continue to love the truth. When you see your faith being tested, count it joy, not because the trial feels good, but because it refines you and weans you from self-deception. Let your faith be demonstrated by your actions. And rest in this: the One who called you is faithful, and He will keep you from the evil one, establish your heart unblameable in holiness, and present you pure in that day.
Deception always finds its foothold when we drift from the truth we have already received. The early believers were constantly hassled by those who twisted the truth about who Jesus is, making the gospel sound reasonable but hollow. They denied that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh or that He is truly God the Son, and their words spread like a disease. The guard against such deception is to remain steadfast in the truth that dwells in you and will be with you forever. Hold tightly to the simple, foundational truth: Jesus is Lord, the Son of the Father, and His words will not pass away. Your prayer to be kept from false believers and deceivers is wise, and the answer lies in abiding in that truth and testing every spirit against it.
There is a subtle danger, though, in how we think holiness will be built in us. Many have tried to reduce holiness to outward appearances or a checklist of behaviors, as if God could be impressed by what we wear or refrain from. But holiness is a thing of the heart, and it flows from faith, not from our own straining after righteousness. The Holy Spirit is not a reward for a certain level of commitment or a life cleaned up enough to deserve Him. He is a gift, received by faith alone, and He is given precisely to make us holy. If you try to earn His empowering by your own efforts, you will set up criteria that limit your faith. Instead, as you prayed, remember that you received the Spirit by the hearing of faith. Rest in that, and let Him produce the inward purity that no outward standard can manufacture.
True faith will always put feet to its confession. It’s not enough to say we have faith; a genuine faith produces a changed life, acts of love, and a steadfast walk. That’s not earning salvation, it’s the evidence that the faith is real. Abraham believed God, and that faith was counted to him as righteousness. His works flowed from that trust. The testing of your faith, though uncomfortable, is precious because it proves your faith is genuine and works patience in you. When temptation or affliction presses in, it’s tempting to look for relief without the cross, immediate fulfillment without self-denial. But the enemy’s shortcuts are always a trap. Endure, and you will find that the God who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it.
I hear in your prayer a concern that we might not ask enough for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord. That is a holy fear and a right instinct. But take heart: even the asking is a work of grace. You are not left to manufacture this in your own strength. The peace of God will guard your heart and mind as you bring these requests with thanksgiving. He perfects that which concerns you.
Be on guard also against the bitterness that can creep in when circumstances are harsh and answers seem delayed. There is a woman in Scripture who, after deep loss, told others to call her Bitter instead of Pleasant. Her pain was real, but the root of bitterness only hurt her and clouded her sight of the Redeemer who was already providing for her. Resist that root. It can jaundice your whole outlook and make you vulnerable to deception.
So continue to ask, continue to walk in the truth, and continue to love the truth. When you see your faith being tested, count it joy, not because the trial feels good, but because it refines you and weans you from self-deception. Let your faith be demonstrated by your actions. And rest in this: the One who called you is faithful, and He will keep you from the evil one, establish your heart unblameable in holiness, and present you pure in that day.
