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Spiritual strength and courage are needed for our
spiritual warfare and suffering. Those who would
prove themselves to have true grace, must aim at
all grace; and put on the whole armor of God,
which he prepares and bestows. The Christian armor is made to be
worn; and there is no putting off our armor till we have done our warfare, and
finished our course. The combat is not against human enemies, nor against our
own corrupt nature only; we have to do with an enemy who has a thousand ways of
beguiling unstable souls. The devils assault us in the things that belong to
our souls, and labor to deface the heavenly image in our hearts. We must
resolve by God's grace, not to yield to Satan. Resist him, and he will flee. If
we give way, he will get ground. If we distrust either our cause, or our
Leader, or our armor, we give him advantage. The different parts of the armor
of heavy-armed soldiers, who had to sustain the fiercest assaults of the enemy,
are here
described. There is none for the back; nothing to defend those
who turn back in the Christian warfare. Truth, or sincerity, is the girdle.
This girds on all the other pieces of our armor, and is first mentioned. There
can be no religion without sincerity. The righteousness of Christ, imputed to
us, is a breastplate against the arrows of Divine wrath. The righteousness of
Christ implanted in us, fortifies the heart against the attacks of Satan.
Resolution must be as greaves or armor to our legs; and to stand their ground
or to march forward in rugged paths, the feet must be shod with the preparation
of the gospel of peace. Motives to obedience, amidst trials, must be drawn from
a clear knowledge of the gospel. Faith is all in all in an hour of temptation.
Faith, as relying on unseen objects, receiving Christ and the benefits of
redemption, and so deriving grace from him, is like a shield, a defense every
way. The devil is the wicked one. Violent temptations, by which the soul is set
on fire of hell, are darts Satan shoots at us. Also, hard thoughts of God, and
as to ourselves. Faith applying the word of God and the grace of Christ
quenches the darts of temptation. Salvation must be our helmet. A good hope of
salvation, a Scriptural expectation of victory, will purify the soul, and keep
it from being defiled by Satan. To the Christian armed for defense in battle,
the apostle recommends only one weapon of attack; but it is enough, the sword
of the Spirit, which is the word of God. It subdues and mortifies evil desires
and blasphemous thoughts as they rise within; and answers unbelief and error as
they assault from without. A single text, well understood, and rightly applied,
at once destroys a temptation or an objection, and subdues the most formidable
adversary. Prayer must fasten all the other parts of our Christian armor. There
are other duties of religion, and of our stations in the world, but we must
keep up times of prayer. Though set and solemn prayer may not be seasonable
when other duties are to be done, yet short pious prayers darted out, always
are so. We must use holy thoughts in our ordinary course. A vain heart will be
vain in prayer. We must pray with all kinds of prayer, public, private, and
secret; social and solitary; solemn and sudden: with all the parts of prayer;
confession of sin, petition for mercy, and thanksgiving for favors received.
And we must do it by the grace of God the Holy Spirit, in dependence on, and according
to, his teaching. We must preserve in particular requests, notwithstanding
discouragements. We must pray, not for ourselves only, but for all saints. Our
enemies are mighty, and we are without strength, but our Redeemer is almighty,
and in the power of his mighty we may overcome. Wherefore we must stir up
ourselves. Have not we, when God has called, often neglected to answer? Let us
think upon these things, and continue our prayers with patience.
(Eph 6:19-24)
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