A concern for God’s glory should be the first and most
significant motivation for entering an accountability relationship. However, if
we continue the analogy of the rat infested house I think we will see some
additional ways that accountability relationships can be a very practical help
in our struggles against sin.
When you confess to a close friend (one who has proven himself
faithful, and who you trust to handle the information you share
about yourself with grace and discretion) that your house is infested with rats,
your friend might surprise you with his response. For example, he might say, “Me
too!” This can be very encouraging, and it has often been my experience that in sharing my "big ugly" that I have learned I am not alone. Paul, writing in 1
Corinthians 10:13, says that “no temptation has overtaken you that is not
common to man.” One of Satan’s tricks is to make you think you’re the only one
with rats in the attic, but Paul makes it plain that those areas where we
struggle are “common to man.” In other words, you’re not alone. However, as
long as you labor under the impression that yours is the only rat-infested
heart in the neighborhood Satan will continue to draw you into a double life
where the sin you habitually harbor and act upon is hidden away in a secret
place. Over time the gulf between who you are in reality and who you are trying
to appear to be will widen to into a shocking and unsustainable chasm. Much of
the power of sin is broken when it is spoken out loud to a brother or sister
who will receive that confession with love and grace. Satan’s modus operandi is
always to get you alone with your sin, and God’s strategy is to draw that
struggle out to be shared within the context of loving community (1 John
1:7-8).
So your friend might say, “me too,” and if he does you will
be greatly encouraged. Or he might say, “I know exactly what you’re going
through. I used to have rats.” And that is even more encouraging for now you know a more enduring victory can be achieved. As you listen to his story, you will gain some hard-won
perspective and expertise in the matter at hand which you can bring to bear in
your own efforts to kill rats. Or perhaps your friend knows nothing of rats and
has no personal experience with them, but he is a true friend who loves you
sincerely. If that is so, he will most likely respond compassionately by
offering to come over after work, and with flashlight in hand go up into the
attic with you to see what can be done about this problem, and by this you will
have gained some much needed support and help. Every time I have shared sin
with a carefully chosen accountability partner I have received one of these
three responses- “Me too,” “I used to struggle with that,” or “how can I help?”
And each time it was a blessing and a help to me in my efforts to fight sin.
3 comments:
Well said Josh!
That is so good- it should be published!!!
If you think of the command to "Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other that you might be healed." in James 5;16, what is the inverse of that?
I love the insight into the fact that we can't share our victories if we can't share our defeats- and of how that brings God glory, as well as encouragement to others.
"And they overcame by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimonies."
In those testimonies is overcoming power- of course only through the Forgivng Power of His shed blood!
Traveling the globe and encountering things beyond the realm of your immediate thoughts and possibilities is going to be quite an eye-opener. A mind and heart opener.
Be thankful to be born in a "TRUE GOD-LOVING NATION," for much of the world sadly do not know him inspite of what "any official statistics" may say otherwise.
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