The great King David had fallen from his dizzy height of honor into the 
dreadful pit of adultery, and then gone further into sin by a deed of murder to 
cover it up.

 

He felt that he was lost forever. His nights were filled with tears. He says, 
“Day and night Thy hand was heavy upon me: my moisture is turned into the 
drought of summer” (Psalm 32:4).

 

It’s vivid writing: he thinks of a killer drought when every drop of moisture 
is dried up; that’s his heart!

 

People sometimes misunderstand the story of King David. They know that the Lord 
still loved him and forgave him his sin, and they read into the story the wrong 
idea of a license to sin. They say, “King David was forgiven his sexual sin; 
now go ahead and do it, don’t worry, the Lord will forgive you, too.”

 

But that’s the wrong way to read David’s story. Yes, the Lord forgave him; but 
let us note, David came within a millimeter of losing his soul forever. He 
cries out in anguish, “My sin is ever before me. ... Cast me not away from Thy 
presence; and take not Thy Holy Spirit from me” (51:3, 11).

 

David actually tasted the horrid anguish of being in hell forever. There is 
nothing worse to experience than being forsaken by the Lord. How would one feel 
being dumped on the moon all alone forever?

 

David tasted that; he’d had enough. Never again did he want to transgress the 
holy law of God.

 

No, don’t do that evil deed that your lustful heart craves. Satan can never 
force you to do it; and remember that the temptation to do it is not the sin of 
doing it. But Jesus says that the deed can be done in the heart if it is your 
choice to do it when the opportunity comes.

 

Here’s where the little Book of Titus comes into focus:

 

“The grace of God [not craven fear!] ... teaches us to say ‘No!’ to ungodliness 
and worldly lusts” (2:11, 12; NIV). The battle with the sin of lust is won in 
the heart by choosing “in Christ” to be loyal to Him, learning how to say “No!” 
Satan has to depart; you are the boss. The Lord Jesus has set us all free from 
sin. “Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, 
and be not entangled again ...” (Gal. 5:1).

 

Sometimes standing still is great progress.



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