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Sun Tzu, the ancient author of The Art of War, believed the key to winning a battle was knowing both
your enemy and yourself. “If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will
also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”
When it comes to our battle with sin, we must know our enemy and ourselves. Our enemy, Satan, is
sinisterly active in our battle with sin (1 Peter 5:8). Satan tempts, deceives, lies, and devours.
But what about our relationship with sin? The lines between Satan’s actions and our own are, at times,
closely linked in the Bible. Satan filled Ananias’s heart to lie to the Holy Spirit (Acts 5:3). Satan can
tempt because of a lack of self-control (1 Corinthians 7:5). Satan can deceive us so that our thoughts are
led astray (2 Corinthians 11:3).
How does this interplay between Satan’s temptations and our actions work? If we want to understand
our enemy and ourselves, we must answer this question.
Itch Before Temptation
Perhaps our best guide for understanding how temptation and action work together is James 1:14: “Each
person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own desire.” While the emphasis on ourselves
instead of our enemy may surprise you, James teaches an important fact about how sin works by telling
us that desire comes before temptation. It is not temptation by itself, but our heart’s desire for
something that leads us into sin (James 4:1–2).
You can’t be tempted to do something you don’t desire. I can’t tempt you to eat a bowl of gravel. No
matter how much I wave it tantalizingly in front of your face and woo you with sweet words of
seduction about its texture and taste, you won’t find it tempting. Why? Because you have no desire to
eat gravel.
We can only be seriously tempted by what we desire. Temptation, then, is not something that happens
to us; it is something that happens within us. As James says, our own desires lure and entice us into sin.
Our desires are our chief tempter. This should be a huge wake-up call for us. The way to fight sin is not
mainly by trying to resist temptation. The most effective way to fight sin is by changing our desires.
Sinful desires, then, must come from a sense that we lack something. Why would someone abuse or
oppress another person? Because they lack a sense of power or authority. Why would someone overwork
at the expense of their family? Because they lack a sense of purpose or achievement. Why would
someone cheat on their spouse? Because they lack a sense of fulfillment. Temptation is the offer sin
makes to your desires to fill in the places that are empty.
But why do we choose sin over something else to fill in those places we lack? Why would we do what
Isaiah 55:2 clearly advises against: “Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your
labor for that which does not satisfy?” The answer gets us to the root of all sin.
When we don’t believe this truth about God’s provision, we sin through anxiety. The chain reaction
Jesus assumes in his teaching on anxiety can be traced as follows:
Unbelief: We don’t believe in God’s provision (“O you of little faith”).
Lack: We lack a sense of security and safety (“What shall we eat?”).
Desire: We desire to feel protected and in control (“Gentiles seek after such things”).
Temptation: Sin tempts us to figure out how we’ll fix it ourselves (“Do not be anxious”).
Sin: We commit needless worry (“Which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his
span of life?”)
Consider the sin of anxious worry Jesus talked about. How do we stop being anxious? Well, it’s not just
by saying no to its temptations. It is by changing what we believe about how God provides. Remember
that since God cares for the “birds of the air” (Matthew 6:26) and the “lilies of the field”
(Matthew 6:28), he will care for you who are “of more value” sparrows (Matthew 6:26). We don’t fight
anxiety by trying to stop being anxious. We fight anxiety by “seek[ing] first the kingdom of God and his
righteousness,” knowing that everything else we need “will be added” to us (Matthew 6:33).
The more we put our faith in the truth of who God is for us in Christ, the more he fills in the places
within us that are lacking. As he does this, the Holy Spirit creates new desires within our hearts
(Romans 8:1–11). These new desires cut temptation’s legs out from under it and lead us away from sin
and toward holiness.