There are many good people in the world who want to live and let live, to be a 
help to their neighbors, they are morally upright, but they live with a serious 
problem: they are victims of an addiction.

 

It may be the addiction of drugs; or the captivity of alcohol.

 

In some cases (and these too are serious) they are addicted to food and their 
weight problem is out of control. All kinds of addictions assail us humans; we 
seek the solution to our problem.

 

Come January 1, these dear people believe that a New Year’s Resolution may help 
them; so they “resolve” in the next twelve months to rise above their addiction 
and conquer it.

 

They promise themselves and often their family, “I’m going to lick this problem 
in this New Year!”

 

They are utterly sincere, and their hearts are right; they mean well and the 
Lord pities them. They just need to know the truth and to act on that truth, 
for Jesus said, “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” 
(John 8:32). The truth is not the value of our own promises to do and to be 
good; our own promises are like “ropes of sand,” they look good and our friends 
and loved ones hope that they will hold; but they don’t.

 

The problem with making promises to God is that wonderful “I” that makes the 
promises. “Our beloved brother Paul” again sees through the problem; he says 
that our “carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law 
of God, neither indeed can be” (Rom. 8:7). The solution: stop relying on that 
“wonderful I” and begin relying on the Lord’s promises.

 

Making promises to God is not the answer because our promises are the “Old 
Covenant” that “genders to bondage,” says “our beloved brother Paul” in 
Galatians 4:24. The New Covenant in contrast is believing God’s promises to us.

 

A New Year’s Resolution is not the solution; a New Year’s choice is.

 

A prayer to pray may go like this: “Father in heaven, thank You for giving me 
another New Year; thank You for loving me so much that you gave Your Son to me 
to be my Savior; yes, I do believe—but “help Thou mine unbelief.” Those are the 
words of the distraught father in Mark 9:24 whose son was devil afflicted; 
Jesus had promised him “all things are possible to him that believeth.”

 

The poor father set the stage for all of us: “Lord, I believe” he responded; 
but then immediately begged for forgiveness, (as must we) for he added, “help 
Thou mine unbelief.”

 

A New Year’s resolution is not your solution; a New Year’s choice and a New 
Year’s prayer, is.




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