Ten Minute Bible Talks Devotional Bible Study - How to Fight the Devil | The Life of Solomon | 1 Kings 11

Episode Date: July 12, 2021

Does temptation seem overwhelming? Or maybe you don’t recognize when you’re being tempted. Get a page of the devil’s playbook from https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/staff/keith-simon/ (Pastor Ke...ith Simon) to help guard yourself in this episode on https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Kings+11&version=NIV (1 Kings 11) as we continue our series on The Life of Solomon.  Interested in more content like this? Check out https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/how-to-live-with-the-consequences-of-sin-david-in-22-2-samuel-15/ (How to Live with the Consequences of Sin) and https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/can-we-trust-jesuss-promises-learning-to-follow-jesus-luke-21-5-38/ (Can We Trust God’s Promises?) Like this content? Make sure to leave us a rating and share it with others, so others can find it too. Use #asktmbt to connect with us, ask questions, and suggest topics. We'd love to hear from you! To learn more, visit ourhttps://www.thecrossingchurch.com/ ( website) and follow us onhttps://www.facebook.com/TenMinuteBibleTalks ( Facebook),https://www.instagram.com/thecrossingcomo/ ( Instagram), andhttps://twitter.com/tmbtpodcast ( Twitter) @TheCrossingCOMO and @TenMinuteBibleTalks. Outline 0:15 - https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Peter+5.8&version=NIV (1 Peter 5.8): spiritual adversary 1:10 - https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Kings+11&version=NIV (1 Kings 11): Solomon’s adversaries 4:45 - https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/how-to-live-with-the-consequences-of-sin-david-in-22-2-samuel-15/ (How to Live with the Consequences of Sin) 6:00 - How to protect ourselves from sin 7:50 - Deception: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2+Corinthians+11.3&version=NIV (2 Corinthians 11.3) 10:10 - https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/can-we-trust-jesuss-promises-learning-to-follow-jesus-luke-21-5-38/ (Can We Trust God’s Promises?) 11:00 - Subscribe. Rate. Share. Social Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/TenMinuteBibleTalks ( https://www.facebook.com/TenMinuteBibleTalks) Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/thecrossingcomo/ ( https://www.instagram.com/thecrossingcomo/) Twitter:https://twitter.com/tmbtpodcast ( https://twitter.com/tmbtpodcast) Passages 1 Peter 5.8: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Peter+5.8&version=NIV (https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Peter+5.8&version=NIV) 1 Kings 11: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Kings+11&version=NIV (https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Kings+11&version=NIV) 2 Corinthians 11.3: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2+Corinthians+11.3&version=NIV (https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2+Corinthians+11.3&version=NIV)  Related How to Live with the Consequences of Sin: https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/how-to-live-with-the-consequences-of-sin-david-in-22-2-samuel-15/ (https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/how-to-live-with-the-consequences-of-sin-david-in-22-2-samuel-15/) Can We Trust God’s Promises?: https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/can-we-trust-jesuss-promises-learning-to-follow-jesus-luke-21-5-38/ (https://www.thecrossingchurch.com/podcasts/can-we-trust-jesuss-promises-learning-to-follow-jesus-luke-21-5-38/) Your support makes TMBT possible. Ten Minute Bible Talks is a crowd-funded project. Join the TMBTeam to reach more people with the Bible. Give now.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Tim Minna Bible Talks, where we connect the Bible to your life and the time it takes to get to work. My name is Patrick Miller. And I'm Keith Simon. We have a spiritual adversary, a spiritual enemy. 1-Peter 5-8 says, be self-controlled and alert. In other words, be watchful, be on guard, keep your eyes open. Why? Well, it goes on to say, your enemy, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion,
Starting point is 00:00:34 looking for someone to devour. The word devil literally means adversary. And so what we're told is that our adversary is prowling around, sneaking up on people, kind of like a roaring lion would stalk its prey. And our adversary is looking for someone to devour. And that someone might be us unless we are self-controlled and alert like Peter warns. us to be. So the biblical reality that we have an adversary that wishes to do us harm is lingering in the background of 1st King's Chapter 11. So a quick refresher in case you got lost in the story,
Starting point is 00:01:19 God installed Solomon as king after his father David dies. Solomon asks God for wisdom, and God grants wisdom and wealth and other blessings too. Solomon develops into a great leader who builds the temple and a palace, but after a while, his heart turns to worship idols instead of God. Now, up to that point, God had been putting choices in front of Solomon and telling him the consequences of the choices he'd make. He kept saying to Solomon, look, choose to submit to the Lord. Don't rebel. But now that Solomon has turned away from God, the language has changed. Instead of saying, if you walk with me, if you obey me, now God is saying, since you haven't, hear the consequences. 1 Kings 1111.
Starting point is 00:02:11 So the Lord said to Solomon, since this is your attitude and you have not kept my covenant, my decrees, which I commanded you, I will most certainly tear the kingdom away from you and give it to one of your subordinates. 1 Kings 11 tells us the story of two adversaries God raises up against Solomon and both adversaries are raised up as a consequence of Solomon's sin. Here's 1st Kings 11 14. Then the Lord raised up against Solomon an adversary, Haddad, the Edomite from the royal line of Edom. The Edomites were descendants of Esau, and ever since the time of Jacob and Esau, there had always been bad blood between these two groups. So First Kings 11 tells the story of Haddad how during one particular fight between the Edomites and Israel, this boy had fled to Egypt, where he grew up in Pharaoh's court. Haddad had it good in Egypt, but he never forgot how the Israelites had attacked his people. and Haddad wanted to return to the area to get revenge.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Now, why does the Bible tell us this story about Haddad? I think it's because he wants us to see that this adversarial relationship and the problems Haddad is causing is directly related to Solomon's sin. Our sin always has consequences. Sin always eventually makes you miserable. Sin steals your joy. Sin saps your spiritual energy. sin pulls you away from God.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Sin pulls you away from the good life that God has for you. But there's more to it than that. The story of Haddad in Egypt follows the same outline as the story of Israel in Egypt centuries earlier. So God had delivered Israel out of slavery in Egypt. And now God has delivered Haddad out of Egypt. He's raised him up to oppose Solomon. Later in the chapter in verse 23, it tells us that God raised up another adversary against Solomon. His name is Rezan, and he was in the north.
Starting point is 00:04:25 Rezan and his men were engaging in guerrilla warfare, not completely different than what happens in many parts of the world today. So on one level, this story is about politics and military might. It's the normal kind of stuff you'd find in foreign relations, in any time period and in any part of the world. On another level, this story is about God raising up spiritual enemies as a consequence of Solomon's sin. We know that because First Kings tells us that God is the one who is behind all this. He's the one who is orchestrating it.
Starting point is 00:05:01 It's wise for us to see that sin has consequences in our life. Because I'm afraid that we gloss over sin too quickly. We move by sin far too much. easily. We're not sobered or convicted by sin like we should be. At least most of us aren't. I'm not. We say things like, yeah, God will forgive me. It's not that big of a deal. My job is to sin. God's job is to forgive. Sometimes we even think that the greater our sin is than the greater God's grace is, and maybe God likes it that way. It is true. It's precious truth that in Jesus, God forgives sinners, that is good news. But that doesn't mean that sin doesn't have real effects. It doesn't
Starting point is 00:05:48 mean that sin doesn't do real damage in our life. Remember 1st Peter 58? We have a spiritual enemy, an adversary, who prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. How will we defeat our spiritual enemy? How will we protect ourselves from his attacks from being devoured. One of the bloodiest days in the Civil War was the Battle of Antietam. It happened in 1862 and it lasted 12 hours. There were 10,000 Confederate casualties and even more on the Union side. Though military historians called this battle a draw, the reality is the Union won. And the reason we think of it as a win for the Union is because a very mediocre general, a guy named George McClellan, was able to end the career of Robert E. Lee, the Confederacy's greatest general. In fact, he caused Lee to retreat back
Starting point is 00:06:47 across the Potomac River. So how did the mediocre General McClellan defeat the military genius Robert E. Lee? Well, two union soldiers had found a copy of Lee's battle plans and had delivered them to McClellan before the engagement. It turns out you've got a lot better chance against your enemy if you have your enemy's battle plans before the battle even begins. Imagine if a football coach had the opposing team's playbook, the opposing team's game plan before the game actually began. There'd be some advantages to that. So in some respects, we are in a similar position to General McClellan. We're no match for our adversary. We're told to be wary of Satan. But his plan, Satan's plans, have fallen into our hands by way of the Bible, we have Satan's war plans. And when you open up his plan,
Starting point is 00:07:45 what you find is that Satan's main weapon against us is deception. 2 Corinthians 113, the apostle Paul says, but I am afraid that just as Eve was deceived by the serpent's cunning, your minds may somehow be led astray from your sincere and pure devotion to Christ. So what is it that Paul thinks will lead us away from Jesus? What are Satan's strategies to pull us away from Christ? And that strategy is deception. Satan is a liar. In fact, Jesus says that Satan, our spiritual enemy, is the father of lies. So what does Satan want to deceive us into doing? Or how does he want to trick us or what lies does he tell us? Well, he tells us, just like he told Eve back in the garden, that God is not good, that God cannot be trusted, that God is withholding something from us,
Starting point is 00:08:49 that sin will make us happier, sin will bring joy to our life. In fact, Satan told Eve that there would be no consequences for sin. Remember, he said, you will not surely die when you eat the fruit. See, Satan wants us to believe that the good life is found apart from God. That is his lie. That is his deception. That is his strategy. And unfortunately, it works too often. It worked in Solomon's life. He was able to deceive Solomon so that Solomon began to worship idols instead of the true God so that Solomon chose to walk away from God, thinking that, disobedience would bring him joy in life. But even in the midst of God's judgment against Solomon, there is still mercy.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Verse 13, yet I will not tear the whole kingdom from him. So what God is saying here is that even though Solomon has rejected God, even though he has chosen to walk away from God, still God will not tear the whole kingdom from him. but instead will give him one tribe for the sake of David my servant and for the sake of Jerusalem which I have chosen. See, God remembered that he had promised David an everlasting kingdom ruled over by one of his descendants. And because God always keeps his promises, he preserved the royal lineage through the tribe of Judah. Jesus is the son of Solomon and therefore the heir of David's throne. Jesus is the one who came to give his life to pay for our sin. He is the one who came, who through his death and resurrection defeated all of his spiritual enemies and all of ours as well. So while there are
Starting point is 00:10:45 always consequences to our sin, God always extends mercy toward those who will receive it. This passage is a warning and a promise. Turn from your sin. and find grace and mercy in King Jesus. Thanks for listening. If you've enjoyed this content, please subscribe and give us a rating. That helps others find this podcast more easily. Also ask yourself who you could share this podcast with. Texting an episode to a friend or family member is a great way to help them grow spiritually.
Starting point is 00:11:19 If you want to go deeper, check out our show notes for book recommendations.

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