Silas
Faithful Servant
It is a mercy to recognize the tension you feel between the life you have and the life you long to live. That ache you call guilt is not merely shame; it is the Holy Spirit pressing on your conscience, awakening a hunger for wholeness. You have turned another year, and the desire to love your body and honor the Lord with it is a gift worth heeding, not a burden to crush you.
The battle you describe is real, and it runs deeper than willpower. Scripture shows that we are creatures of body, mind, and spirit, and the unregenerate person is driven by whatever the body craves. But the life Christ gives flips that order. The Spirit takes the lead, and through Him the mind and body are brought into obedience. That is what Paul meant when he said, “I discipline my body and keep it under control.” He was an apostle, yet he knew the fight. He compared the believer to an athlete training for a race. Ancient runners denied themselves comforts for a crown of pine boughs that would wither. We endure a different kind of training, not for a corruptible wreath, but for an incorruptible crown. The sacrifices and daily choices are the path toward that reward.
It helps to understand that your body is not the enemy, even when it craves things that harm it. The issue is control. From the garden onward, the enemy has sought to dominate the human will, twisting good desires into chains. Whether through tobacco, sugary foods, endless stimulation, or neglect of movement, the aim is the same: to keep the mind subdued by appetites so that the spirit grows dull. But the Son sets captives free. The man among the tombs who could break chains with supernatural strength found himself sitting, clothed and in his right mind, when Jesus spoke. That is a picture of the restoration God intends, not merely white-knuckled abstinence, but a mind restored to reason and peace under His authority.
You asked for strength and discipline. Keep asking. Keep asking when the craving rises. Keep asking when you are tempted to cancel the gym membership instead of walking through the door to use the equipment. Do not despise small beginnings. Perhaps you step on a treadmill for ten minutes simply because you have offered your body to the Lord for that ten minutes. That is discipline. It is not about punishing yourself; it is about cooperating with the One who says, “I am the Lord who heals you.” He cares about what you eat and how you treat the frame He fashioned. The old covenant laws around sanitation and diet were not arbitrary. They revealed a God who is deeply concerned with the health of His people. Junk food is not a modern loophole. Living on fast food and stimulants while asking God for a strong body is like praying for a harvest without ever planting a seed.
Let the fear of high blood pressure become a warning bell that leads you to wisdom, not despair. The relationship between soul and body runs both ways. Inner turmoil and constant guilt can alter body chemistry, while physical stagnation and poor nourishment can darken the mind. The apostle John prayed for his friend Gaius that he would prosper and be in health even as his soul prospered. That was not a blanket promise that every believer will never be sick, for many of the most faithful saints have walked through severe illness. It is a beautiful way of acknowledging that spiritual vitality often overflows into physical choices, and wise physical choices create space for the soul to breathe.
Victory over deeply ingrained habits rarely comes in one dramatic moment. I have seen people plead with God for years over a quick temper that flared before they could think. After seasons of crying out, they found a quietness that could only be explained by the Spirit’s work. The pattern is the same: persistent prayer, small acts of obedience, and the refusal to believe the lie that you will always be a slave. When you fall, do not wallow in self-hatred. Confess it, receive the forgiveness you have already asked for in the name of Jesus, and take the next practical step, not tomorrow, but today.
Your body is a dwelling place for the Holy Spirit. That truth is not a club to beat you with; it is an honor to walk in. So keep the gym membership, not for the tanning bed, but to move the limbs God gave you. Put something nourishing into your stomach at the next meal. Pour out the energy drink for a glass of water. When the cigarette calls your name, speak the name of Jesus instead, and walk away for five minutes. You are not alone in this. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead lives in you, and He will give you the self-control that your flesh cannot manufacture. Run to win. The righteous Judge holds out a crown that will never fade.
The battle you describe is real, and it runs deeper than willpower. Scripture shows that we are creatures of body, mind, and spirit, and the unregenerate person is driven by whatever the body craves. But the life Christ gives flips that order. The Spirit takes the lead, and through Him the mind and body are brought into obedience. That is what Paul meant when he said, “I discipline my body and keep it under control.” He was an apostle, yet he knew the fight. He compared the believer to an athlete training for a race. Ancient runners denied themselves comforts for a crown of pine boughs that would wither. We endure a different kind of training, not for a corruptible wreath, but for an incorruptible crown. The sacrifices and daily choices are the path toward that reward.
It helps to understand that your body is not the enemy, even when it craves things that harm it. The issue is control. From the garden onward, the enemy has sought to dominate the human will, twisting good desires into chains. Whether through tobacco, sugary foods, endless stimulation, or neglect of movement, the aim is the same: to keep the mind subdued by appetites so that the spirit grows dull. But the Son sets captives free. The man among the tombs who could break chains with supernatural strength found himself sitting, clothed and in his right mind, when Jesus spoke. That is a picture of the restoration God intends, not merely white-knuckled abstinence, but a mind restored to reason and peace under His authority.
You asked for strength and discipline. Keep asking. Keep asking when the craving rises. Keep asking when you are tempted to cancel the gym membership instead of walking through the door to use the equipment. Do not despise small beginnings. Perhaps you step on a treadmill for ten minutes simply because you have offered your body to the Lord for that ten minutes. That is discipline. It is not about punishing yourself; it is about cooperating with the One who says, “I am the Lord who heals you.” He cares about what you eat and how you treat the frame He fashioned. The old covenant laws around sanitation and diet were not arbitrary. They revealed a God who is deeply concerned with the health of His people. Junk food is not a modern loophole. Living on fast food and stimulants while asking God for a strong body is like praying for a harvest without ever planting a seed.
Let the fear of high blood pressure become a warning bell that leads you to wisdom, not despair. The relationship between soul and body runs both ways. Inner turmoil and constant guilt can alter body chemistry, while physical stagnation and poor nourishment can darken the mind. The apostle John prayed for his friend Gaius that he would prosper and be in health even as his soul prospered. That was not a blanket promise that every believer will never be sick, for many of the most faithful saints have walked through severe illness. It is a beautiful way of acknowledging that spiritual vitality often overflows into physical choices, and wise physical choices create space for the soul to breathe.
Victory over deeply ingrained habits rarely comes in one dramatic moment. I have seen people plead with God for years over a quick temper that flared before they could think. After seasons of crying out, they found a quietness that could only be explained by the Spirit’s work. The pattern is the same: persistent prayer, small acts of obedience, and the refusal to believe the lie that you will always be a slave. When you fall, do not wallow in self-hatred. Confess it, receive the forgiveness you have already asked for in the name of Jesus, and take the next practical step, not tomorrow, but today.
Your body is a dwelling place for the Holy Spirit. That truth is not a club to beat you with; it is an honor to walk in. So keep the gym membership, not for the tanning bed, but to move the limbs God gave you. Put something nourishing into your stomach at the next meal. Pour out the energy drink for a glass of water. When the cigarette calls your name, speak the name of Jesus instead, and walk away for five minutes. You are not alone in this. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead lives in you, and He will give you the self-control that your flesh cannot manufacture. Run to win. The righteous Judge holds out a crown that will never fade.
