Self-control is in short supply. The problem in our
culture is an over-supply of everything else: food, drink, drugs, guns, sex,
clothing, cars, casinos, toys, television, technology. We can indulge ourselves
in every way imaginable--and in many cases, ways we cannot imagine.
All of us, if we are honest, lack self-control in some area.
I don’t get enough exercise, my tongue flaps when it shouldn’t, I drink too
much coffee, and my daughter knows not to leave a bag of Jax Cheese Twists
anywhere near me.
Self-control is the equivalent of a dirty word in the
contemporary lexicon: not to be mentioned. “If my behavior does not harm you, then what business is
it of yours?” But, a lack of self-control has a ripple effect. My tongue-flapping may hurt someone’s
feelings, too much caffeine may cause me to be irritable or anxious, and the
Jax incident, combined with lack of exercise, leads to the need for new pants,
which leaves fewer dollars for necessities.
There are extreme cases of self-control gone awry, such as
the co-worker who starts shooting up the office. Whatever the triggers over
time may have been, in the end he allows his baser impulses--rage, resentment,
hopelessness--to fully rise to the surface and explode.
There are also daily events that don’t make the news: the
woman at the stoplight who honks her horn angrily because traffic is not moving
quickly enough for her. The child at the grocery store who, denied a favorite
candy, has a meltdown. The mother who later does a line or smokes a joint or
has four glasses of wine to deal with stress. The lonely twenty-something who
is trying to eat her way to peace. The husband who secretly watches porn on his
laptop.
But all of these--anger, indulgence, addiction--if allowed
to build and continue, will eventually leak and cause unhappiness, relationship
problems and worse.
Vincent's Word Studies of the New Testament describes the Greek meaning of the word for
self-control as “holding in hand the passions and desires”(vol. IV, p. 168,
available online here).
God is good and wants us to enjoy His goodness. Evil seeks
the opposite. Jesus declared, “The thief's purpose is to steal and kill and
destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life” (John 10:10,
NLT). He gives us the ability to “hold in hand” the temptation to lie, to lash
out, to overeat, to self-medicate, to overspend, to commit violence.
The fruits of the Spirit--which we have been writing about
for several weeks--are displays of God’s goodness in our lives. When we exhibit
self-control--over our tongues, appetites, desires, and temptations--we are
serving God and helping others to know there is a richer, more satisfying way
to live.
1 comment:
Kerry...
In one word...excellent
( even though it made me look inward lol)
Linda
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