Archives For Boot Camp

Hard Core: Defeating Sexual Temptation with a Superior Satisfaction (by Jason Hardin)

To celebrate the release of Hello, I’m Your Bible in e-book format (just $3.99), DeWard Publishing is offering Hard Core: Defeating Sexual Temptation with a Superior Satisfaction for free this weekend.

And while you’re downloading your free copy of Hard Core, don’t forget to check out the e-book versions of Boot Camp ($3.99) and Hello, I’m Your Bible ($3.99).

Thanks for reading, and don’t forget to claim your free copy before Saturday night at 11:59 PM!

Hard Core Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Casualties of War
  3. The Reason for Everything
  4. The Cold, Hard Stats
  5. “It Was Very Good”
  6. God’s Warning Signs
  7. A Time to Fight, and a Time to Run
  8. Frustration Sets In
  9. Even Those After God’s Own Heart Can Be Devoured
  10. Counting the Cost
  11. God’s Steadfast Love is Better Than Life
  12. The Fruit of a Broken and Contrite Heart
  13. It’s Time to Walk Down Another Street
  14. Hacking Agag to Pieces
  15. Equipped for the Battles Ahead

From Dawn Reffett, mother of a teenage son:

It caught my eye. Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare. The book’s cover, showing the feet of soldiers lined up at attention, suggested a tough approach to Christian living—a lifestyle opposite of today’s culture.  I hoped this could be the guidebook I needed for my teenage son.  I needed a book to lead him in a closer relationship with God.  More specifically, I needed a book to develop his character by molding his life around God.  I wanted him to “be all he could be” for Christ instead of letting this world have its way with him.  In the store, I picked up the book and looked at the Table of Contents.  The book’s chapters addressed specific areas to improve a man’s life, put in the context of the boot camp experience. Looked promising. I bought it, and I’m glad I did.

The book exceeded my expectations.  It addressed the importance of integrity in a Christian man’s life. The writing style is informal and easy to read. There are short fictional stories and Bible stories incorporated in the chapters, along with Bible verses to help in understanding and enforcing the area addressed.  The book is not just a great read for men or boys.  I (Mom) have personally enjoyed it and have been inspired to strive toward that godly image God intends for me. My favorite chapters in the book are The Lord’s Infirmary: A Time to Heal and Jealousy: Playing into the Enemy’s Hands by Turning on Each Other. This book is the first in the IMAGE series where “I” standing for integrity. I’m looking forward to reading the next in the series by this author, Jason Hardin, who coincidentally shares central Ohio as home.

Click here for more Boot Camp information.

Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare is now available for the Kindle and the Nook.

Boot Camp is the first volume in the IMAGE series of books for men. It serves as a Basic Training manual in the spiritual war for honor, integrity, and a God-glorifying life.

Men love the epic tales of warriors who have defied the odds, proven to be larger-than-life at the decisive moment, and led others in efforts that have shaped the course of history. We quite naturally imagine being “that kind” of man. But there is a greater story. There is a grander adventure. There is a divine chronicle of eternal magnitude in which you—in one way or another—will play your own unique part. The means of shaping our lives into harmony with the glory of our Creator has been furnished in Jesus the Christ. And he invites you to join his ranks.

For more information, visit the Boot Camp page, the Kindle page, or the Nook page.

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

The Spirit’s instructions concerning the armor of God conclude with the expectation that disciples of Christ would be “praying at all times in the Spirit, with all prayer and supplication” (Eph 6.18). What better way to reinforce heaven’s intentions in our minds and dedicate ourselves to the goal of serving as faithful soldiers than to ask our Father’s help and blessing as we reflect on each piece of armor?


Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. May your sovereign rule extend into our hearts and lives. May your will be done in us and through us as it is in heaven. We thank you, Father, for the strength of your might that has been made available to us. We are unworthy even to address you as our Father. We have turned our backs on you in the past. We have rejected the message of your Messiah. But you have not forgotten or given up on us. Even when we were your enemies, you worked to provide a plan for our redemption. We thank you for the blessed privilege of calling on you as redeemed sons.

Blessed Father, we seek your help and blessing as we do our best to recognize the present conflict. Help us to realize the stakes. Grant us the wisdom to feel the weight of the struggle. Guide us in acknowledging our desperate need for your power and patience in our lives. Direct us as we strive to remember who we have been called to struggle against. Guard us from selfish deception that would tempt us to turn unnecessarily on other image-bearers. Lead us to clarity and focus so that you and you alone are glorified in all of our efforts.

Holy Father, we thank you for the belt of truth. We praise you as the Author of reality and the Rock of faithfulness. Send forth your light into our lives. Help us to acknowledge and joyfully respond to your direction. Use whatever you must to guide us to your holy mountain, to the pleasure of your presence. We pray for sanctification through your word and for strength as we strive to be men of truth in your service. Help us to wrap integrity around every aspect of our lives and allow your truth to bind every element of our existence together. We pray that you would help us to stay dressed for holy action, with minds prepared and hearts that are eagerly awaiting the return of your Son.

Righteous Father, we thank you for the breastplate of righteousness. We ask for your guidance as we wage war against sin in our mortal bodies. Help us to cultivate a holy hatred for abusing our members as instruments of unrighteousness. Lead us and be patient with us as we dedicate ourselves as soldiers who have been brought from death to life. Help us to discern your will, delight in your leading, and live as clear representations of your expectations. Guide us as we seek to clothe ourselves with humility. Mold us, Father, to your glory. Purge from our lives whatever you must by whatever means is necessary so that we might glorify you in honesty, uprightness, and integrity.

Merciful Father, we thank you for the shoes of readiness given by the gospel of peace. We magnify you as the great peacemaker in all of history. We praise you for the gift of your Son through whom we can come boldly to the throne of your grace. Help us, Father, to appreciate our freedom. May we avoid using it as an opportunity for the flesh. Guide us that we might be always ready for every good work. Shape us into peacemakers and proclaimers of your good news. Use us in the cause of overcoming evil with good.

Almighty Father, we thank you for the shield of faith. We glorify you for your word which continues to serve as the foundation of our faith. Help us to cling to the promise of victory in the faith that overcomes the world. Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Guard us as we endure the assaults of the evil one. Establish us in steadfastness of faith. In all circumstances, empower us to carry the shield of absolute trust.

Gracious Father, we thank you for the helmet of salvation. We exalt you for your amazing grace. We praise you for the assurance of our relationship with you. We ask for your help as we fight against the urges to submit once again to our former yokes of slavery. Preserve us, Father, deliver us with your mighty right hand. Fulfill your purposes for us and in us. Do not forsake the work of your hands. May your steadfast love, O Lord, endure forever.

Finally, Most High Father, we thank you for the sword of the Spirit, the revelation of your mind and will. May we always appreciate your providence which has made your revelation so freely available. We stand in awe of its living power. Do whatever you must to keep us open to its teaching, sensitive to its reproof, honest with its correction, and receptive of its instructions so that we might be trained in righteousness. Bless our efforts to present ourselves to you as men approved, workers who do not need to be ashamed, rightly handling the sword of your Spirit.

We will follow you, Father, wherever you lead. Whom have we in heaven but you? There is nothing and no one on earth that we desire more than you. Our bodies and our hearts may fail, but you are the strength of our hearts and our refuge forever.

With all our hearts, souls, and minds, we pledge our allegiance to your Son and our King. Come, Lord Jesus! It is through him that we pray.

Amen.

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 229-231)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God:

The Sword of the Spirit

September 13, 2010 — 1 Comment

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

As we are guided into the last chamber of the Lord’s armory, we are shown the only offensive weapon of the Lord’s soldier—”the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” (Eph 6.17).   In fact, it is both offensive and defensive.   It contains the power to defend us against the devil’s advances and the potency to force him into retreat.   King Jesus demonstrated for his subjects once and for all that when faced with the power of the word of God, the devil must flee.   In the light of truth, his words are proven to be lies and his methods are revealed as blasphemous.   “For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Heb 4.12).

We have not been asked by our King to enter the battlefield armed with nothing more than our own reasoning and a reliance on our own wisdom.   It is only by taking up the sword of the Spirit that we will prevail.   It is only by abiding within the doctrine of Christ that we will be secure.

For though we walk in the flesh, we are not waging war according to the flesh.   For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds.   We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ. (2 Cor 10.3-5)

It is God’s word which destroys the arguments of presumptive men.   It is the sword of the Spirit that humbles the lofty opinions of the “wise.”   It is the sharp dagger of truth that bears the divine energy to prick our guilty consciences, slaughter our self-righteousness, provoke godly sorrow, and spur us on to enslave every aspect of our beings in service to Christ.   “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (2 Tim 3.16-17).

The skilled swordsman who has courageously engaged the enemy and lived to fight another day knows his sword and how to use it.   He studies.   He practices.   He sharpens his skills long before the next battle ever takes place.   Imagine an ignorant and brash man who recklessly storms the battlefield.   Why is he ignorant?   His only familiarity with a sword is that he’s heard other men talk of swords.   In what way is he brash?   He believes that since a sword has hung for years on his wall that he can suddenly pick one up and effectively use it to fight a war.   What a fool!   He very well may dismember himself or someone else before ever engaging the enemy.

And yet, how much more foolish is the man who has heard other men talk of God’s word, has a copy of the Bible on a shelf at home, has described himself as a Christian for years, but has never learned to effectively use his sword in the service of his King?   Ignorance will not defeat the Tempter.   Error cannot destroy arguments.   Assumptions have little power in the face of tormenting trials.   We have no hope of victory if we fail to arm ourselves with truth.   The moment we leave God’s word behind and begin relying upon our own wisdom and experience, we’ve doomed ourselves to destruction.   It’s as if we throw away our sword and decide to fight the great red dragon with our bare hands.

The wise soldier of the cross humbly models Paul’s instructions to young Timothy through the disciplines of study, meditation, and prayer.   “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth” (2 Tim 2.15).

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 227-229)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God:

The Helmet of Salvation

September 6, 2010 — 1 Comment

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

In the heat of hand-to-hand combat when soldiers fought with clubs, pieces of chain, swords, and axes, helmets that gave secure protection to the head were invaluable. Made of thick leather or brass and capped with plates of metal to cover the temples and forehead, ancient helmets were often ornately decorated with engravings and crowned with a plume or a crest that clearly identified who a soldier who and to whom his allegiance had been pledged.

The soldier who fights for the King of kings is instructed to “take the helmet of salvation” (Eph 6.17). Just as a helmet was accepted by a soldier from the hands of the officer in charge of supply and distribution, salvation is a gift. “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not as a result of works, so that no one may boast” (Eph 2.8-9).

As citizens of the kingdom of heaven, we’ve been reconciled to God through the gift of his Son. We “who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ” (Eph 2.13). The time has come, therefore, to take up the helmet of salvation and unashamedly declare our allegiance to the King. “For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery” (Gal 5.1). Turn your back on selfishness. Run away from the darkness of sexual immorality. Renounce idolatry. Reject jealousy and anger. Bridle your tongue and cast off hypocrisy. Hold your head high as you receive your helmet of salvation and advance the cause of holiness with courage. Refuse to remove your helmet! What reason is there to give up when the victory of our God has already been assured?

______________________Though I walk in the midst of trouble,
_________________________you preserve my life;
______________________you stretch out your hand against
_________________________the wrath of my enemies,
_________________________and your right hand delivers me.
______________________The LORD will fulfill his purpose for me;
_________________________your steadfast love, O LORD, endures forever.
_________________________Do not forsake the work of your hands. (Psa 138.7-8)

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 226-227)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God:

The Shield of Faith

August 30, 2010 — 2 Comments

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

“In all circumstances take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming darts of the evil one” (Eph 6.16).   There were two types of Roman shields in the ancient world.   One was small and round, designed especially for hand-to-hand combat.   The other was much larger, measuring four by two and a half feet, and described in terms more similar to a “door” than a shield.   The Spirit commissions the soldier of the cross to take up this latter shield in the defense of his soul.

This shield is solid, designed to protect the whole body.   Usually made of light wood, such shields were frequently lined with brass and covered with several folds of thick leather.   They could be drenched with water so that as enemy arrows dipped in pitch and set on fire collided with them, the points were blunted and the flames were extinguished.   An ancient soldier needed only to kneel down and hold his shield above him, and he would be protected from the flaming barrages of the opposition.

The Spirit tells us that the Christian’s shield is forged in the fires of faith.   If truth is rock-solid, undeniable fact as revealed by the Creator, faith is unshakeable trust in the Revealer and his revelation.   “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom 10.17).   God’s assurances of things hoped for form our shields.   The conviction of things not seen can quench the hottest flames (Heb 11.1).

From a distance we’ve studied many of the evil one’s “flaming darts”—temptations to operate in selfishness, to give in to sexual immorality, idolatry, jealousy, or anger, to lose control of our tongues or to hide behind the masks of hypocrisy.   Our Adversary is intent upon our destruction.   His own defeat is already certain, but he will use whatever he can to cause fear in our hearts, doubt in our minds, worry during our nights, and rebellion throughout our days.   If he can drag us down to the pits of destruction along with him, he will.

But even when this great red dragon blows the hottest fire of his fiercest wrath in our direction, as we stand firm behind the shield of our faith, we have nothing to fear, “For everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world.   And this is the victory that has overcome the world—our faith.   Who is it that overcomes the world except the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?” (1 John 5.4-5).

Temptations will continue to come.   Trials will continue to arise.   Just because you hold the shield of faith in your hands does not mean that the dragon will give up in his efforts.   If anything, his attention is enhanced and his hatred is all the more incensed by those who have been washed in the blood of the Lamb.   Like a prowling, roaring lion he continues to seek those whom he can devour.   But you can “resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same kinds of suffering are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world” (1 Pet 5.8-9).

Remember, the devil cannot force you to lay down the shield of your faith.   As long as a soldier has his shield, he feels secure.   As long as a Christian has his faith, he will overcome.   God will deliver him, defend him, vindicate him, provide for him, and ultimately reward him for his faithfulness.   But as soon as you choose to lay your shield down, you invite your own devouring.

Don’t lay it down!   “In all circumstances”—at home, at work, at school, at play, in busyness and in rest, in times of rejoicing and in times of sorrow—hold on to the shield of your faith.   You will find nothing else that can extinguish the Evil One’s flaming arrows.

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 225-226)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God:

The Shoes of Readiness

August 23, 2010 — 5 Comments

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

Shoes were an essential element of the Roman soldier’s panoply.   Equipped with sharp metal spikes beneath, these battle-ready sandals enabled a soldier to walk over all sorts of sloping and slippery terrain quickly and effectively.   The Romans prided themselves on their ability to routinely move farther and faster than their enemies.   Opposing armies were frequently caught off guard, having deceived themselves into thinking that they had plenty of time to prepare an adequate defense.   In fact, more than one historian has noted that the Romans were so overwhelmingly successful as conquerors for so long at least partially because of their superior footwear.

The Spirit uses this familiar figure in his instructions for the soldier of God’s kingdom.   “As shoes for your feet, having put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace” (Eph 6.15).   In contrast to the enemy who is caught barefooted and unaware, the soldier whose feet have been shod, or literally, underbound, is adequately prepared for battle.   So also, our own feet are to be prepared to defend and conquer.   Perhaps it would be tempting for a soldier who had endured a long, forced march to leave his belt and breastplate on, but slip his shoes off for a moment of relaxation.   Spiritually speaking, God urges us to be always ready.   Temptations are relentless.   Trials are fierce.   The work is neverending.   Entire lives can be forever altered in a moment.   If the soldier of the cross is unprepared to deal with the triumphs and tragedies of his earthly pilgrimage, he will be defeated.

The sense of readiness which is needed for the battles ahead will not come via our own ingenuity, intellect, or willpower.   It is “given by the gospel” or good news “of peace.”   Remember the divine promise that we ran across as we entered God’s armory.   “The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”   As Christians, we have discovered peace with the holy God.   No longer must be run in fear or hide in shame from our Creator.   Through the sacrifice of our great King and high priest, we are sanctified children of God who are encouraged to “come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need” (Heb 4.16, NKJV).

Paul’s message to the Ephesian Christians—and to us—is to stand at attention and remain steadfast!   Live as men who are grounded in the good news that you are at peace with God.   Rejoice in the blessed assurance of forgiveness.   Exult in the fulfillment which comes from obedience.   Confidently look forward to the guaranteed glorious triumph.   Our Father has pledged that he will never leave us nor forsake us.   “So we can confidently say, ‘The Lord is my helper; I will not fear; what can man do to me?’” (Heb 13.6)

Such is the epitome of inner peace.   Though the battle may rage in any number of ways all around me, I have dedicated myself to following the Prince of Peace (Isa 9.6).   Though I am free from the shackles of sin, I am not free to run in whatever direction I choose.   I always remember that I am not my own.   As Paul reminded the Christians in Galatia, “You were called to freedom, brothers.   Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another” (Gal 5.13).

As disciples of Jesus, we are to seek the preparation that comes through the gospel of peace.   We are to be “ready for every good work” (Tit 3.1).   It’s one thing to read that commandment, but what does it look like, practically speaking?

Let love be genuine.   Abhor what is evil; hold fast to what is good.   Love one another with brotherly affection.   Outdo one another in showing honor.   Do not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit, serve the Lord.   Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.   Contribute to the needs of the saints and seek to show hospitality.

Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse them.   Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.   Live in harmony with one another.   Do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly.   Never be wise in your own sight.   Repay no one evil for evil, but give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all.   If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.   Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.”   To the contrary, “if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink; for by so doing you will heap burning coals on his head.”   Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. (Rom 12.9-21)

That commission is harder to fulfill than storming and securing the beaches of Normandy.   If you don’t believe that, you need to read it again.   It takes preparation.   It requires willpower.   It demands that my love for the Lord and my fellow man exceed even my love for myself.   It’s hard.   But it’s the call of the gospel of peace.

The man of integrity is able to say, “I can rejoice in my Lord always.   My reasonableness can be shown to everyone.   I can be a peacemaker.   I can remember who the real Enemy is.   I can respond to anger with kindness.   I can endure insults with gentleness.   I can react to unjust criticism with mercy and forgiveness.   I can walk in peace.   My greatest desire is to see other people experience the peace of God in their own hearts.   I no longer have to be consumed by anxiousness.   I can find reasons for thanksgiving in the most difficult of circumstances.   In everything, by prayer and supplication, I can make my requests known to my God.   Why?   How?   The peace of God which surpasses all understanding is guarding my heart and my mind in Christ Jesus.   In the power of the glorified Son of God, I can stand firm.   Though outwardly the war may rage, inwardly the gospel of peace has securely grounded me in the truth and comfort of my Creator.”

Can you honestly say those things as a man of integrity?   If not, you have yet to put on the right shoes.   You are unprepared for the battle ahead.

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 222-225)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God:

Excerpted from Chapter 13 of Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare:

The soldier’s breastplate protects the upper half of his body, from the neck to the thighs.   In the times of Roman rule, breastplates were usually made of rings or plates of brass.   Like the scales of a fish, the brass pieces were fastened together so that the armor was flexible in battle, while still guarding the soldier’s vital organs from swords, spears, and arrows.

It’s no mistake that the Spirit’s instruction to “fasten on the belt of truth” is followed by the encouragement to “put on the breastplate of righteousness” (Eph 6.14).   In the word of his truth, our Creator has defined that which is right and that which is wrong.   He has established the boundaries of what is acceptable and unacceptable for his creation.   He has provided wisdom so that his image-bearers might “walk in the way of the good and keep the path of the righteous” (Prov 2.20).   Those paths have been traveled for thousands of years by men of integrity, moral uprightness, holiness, and character.   The way of the good is the way of virtue—in quality and in practice.

Remember that our Creator desires to stamp his own image deep on our hearts.   His intention is that godliness and integrity would become a natural part of who we are.   When we, in humility, allow God to define the standard by which every thing will be measured as “right,” we arm ourselves with holy vests that cannot be penetrated by even the strongest of the Enemy’s weapons.   Once again, Satan cannot rip the breastplate of righteousness from you, but you can decide to rebelliously lay it down and willfully walk into the camp of darkness.

To put on the breastplate of righteousness, therefore, is to dedicate yourself to a life of self-control.   Like the soldier who accepts the weight and constraints of bulky armor, the disciple of Christ consents to live within the boundaries of self-denial and submission to God’s standard of righteousness.   The soldiers of this world do so to protect themselves from the outward dangers of battle.   The Christian does so protect himself from himself.

Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, to make you obey its passions.   Do not present your members to sin as instruments for unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments for righteousness. (Rom 6.12-13)

Little children, let no one deceive you.   Whoever practices righteousness is righteous, as he is righteous.   Whoever makes a practice of sinning is of the devil, for the devil has been sinning from the beginning.   The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil.   No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God’s seed abides in him, and he cannot keep on sinning because he has been born of God.   By this it is evident who are the children of God, and who are the children of the devil: whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God. (1 John 3.7-10)

Just as wicked King Ahab was killed by an arrow that struck him “between the scale armor and the breastplate” (1 Kings 22.34), a lack of honesty and integrity leaves soldiers of Christ critically exposed to the assaults of Satan.   There is no earthly substitute for humble obedience in the sight of God.   He expects practical, daily righteousness on the part of the redeemed.   He calls us to live in harmony with what is right in his sight.   Each image-bearer is summoned to mold his own beliefs, opinions, attitudes, thoughts, and behaviors into a living imitation of the Creator’s expectations.

If we are to successfully survive the attacks of the wicked one, we must recognize and address the breaches of personal weakness and compromise.   We don’t stand a chance against the cosmic powers of darkness while selfishly clinging to the lusts of the flesh.   As long as sin reigns in our mortal bodies, there are gaps in our panoply.   We may describe ourselves as fully-devoted followers, but we have been deceived.   We are continuing to tolerate sin in our lives and the devil has us right where he wants us.

Remember the call!   It is time to “cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light.”   Leave no unguarded place!   Recognize and address the weaknesses of your character.   “Clothe yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another, for God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble” (1 Pet 5.5).   Seek our the strength which only he can supply.   Reform your standards of living so that they reflect his.   And having done all, washed in the atoning blood of the Lamb and clothed in accordance with his righteousness, you can resist the advances of Satan, standing firm in your faith.

(Boot Camp: Equipping Men with Integrity for Spiritual Warfare, pg. 220-222)

Other posts in this series on the armor of God: