Satan uses quite a collection of weapons against the godly. His attacks are
highly specialized. He always uses "the effective weapon of choice." His
objective is always the same: in each situation, do as much damage as
possible. He does not use the same weapon against every godly person.
Godly individuals exist in a variety of different circumstances. Satan
rarely attacks anyone with a weapon he knows will be ineffective. His
purpose in the attack is to create distressful temptation and struggle.
Never doubt Satan's ability to choose an effective weapon! Peter was one of
Jesus' "inner three" apostles. God revealed to him that Jesus was the
Christ (Matthew 16:17). Even the other eleven did not understand that
truth! Peter was the confident champion of Jesus the Messiah. The last
night of Jesus' earthly life, Jesus told Peter that Peter would deny Jesus
that night (Matthew 26:34).
Impossible! Peter was certain death itself could not make him deny Jesus
(Matthew 26:33,35)! Yet, before daylight, Peter said, not once but three
times, that he did not know Jesus (Matthew 26:75).
How could "the impossible" happen? Did Satan use alcohol, drugs, a
seductive woman, greed, or jealousy? No. In that situation, those were
ineffective weapons. Ineffective weapons would strengthen Peter, and that
was not Satan's goal! Satan used an effective weapon, a weapon Peter
regarded stupid and ridiculous. He was strong! He was sacrificial! He
paid great prices to follow Jesus!
Satan's weapon? Complacency. "Oh, no! Peter's situation was highly
volatile--the last supper, the garden, the prayers, the betrayal; Jesus'
arrest, trials, and humiliation! Those circumstances were too volatile for
complacency!"
A form of complacency thrives in volatile situations. In volatile
situations, it is a powerful form of temptation. It counts on volatile
situations to make it effective.
What form of complacency is that? The complacency that convinces you
strength comes from faith in yourself. The form that convinces you the
present situation does not equal your past performance. The form that
convinces you that you are "right." The form that makes it easier to pass
judgment on the moment instead of opening your mind to consider the
complexity of the situation.
Peter was certain he was strong because of his commitment and conviction.
Peter was certain he was equal to the situation because of his past
performances. Peter was certain he understood God's will, and it did not
include Jesus' death. So, in the certainty complacency produces, Peter
judged the moment instead of opening his mind.
It always is easier to judge the moment than to open our minds and
hearts--and think. It always is easier to pass judgment than it is to see
and deal with complexity.
Link to other Writings of David Chadwell