For
all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the
eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. I John 2 v 16
The word “lust” is an excessive uncontrollable
desire that can control and drive a person instead of the person being in
charge and control of his desires. Our bodies have some legitimate needs like
food, drink, clothing, comfort and sexual satisfaction. Our minds too
have some legitimate need of a sense of security, recognition and satisfaction.
But when we crave more than our need, each desire becomes
lust. The Word describes three different types of lust: lust of the
flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life. While legitimate and
natural desires and needs are from the Lord God for He has wired us and made us
in His image, our desire to possess in excess of what God had intended and
willed for us is lust. The world feeds our lusts by feeding our disbelief
and our insecurities.
Satan desired to be equal with God. This
is the pride of life. He tempted Eve and Adam stating that if they disobeyed
God and ate of the fruit of knowledge, they would be like God and live
forever. Pride of life causes us to disbelieve God and to believe satan
and the world. We are deceived by our own excessive desire. Instead when
we submit our lives, our desires, plans and all that we are to God and
accept whatever His will is for us, we have the opposite quality- the humility
of life. We are deemed to be humble before God and He will lift us
up. Lust destroys us from within while love sustains us.
The lust of the flesh prompts us to desire to
consume and possess more than we need to. The lust of the eye causes us
to covet that which is not ours. The world and its systems condition
people to desire more than they need and to desire what they do not need as
well as to desire that which is forbidden by God or that which is harmful to us
in terms of eternity. While Gautama Buddha described all desire as evil,
the Word of God describes desires as natural and necessary but when the desire
is excessive, unnatural and not under the control of the person, only then it
becomes evil and destructive. When our desires are submitted to the Lord,
disciplined by the Word and controlled by the Holy Spirit, these are of
the Father and not of the world. We in turn become people who are
in the world but not of the world. When we have a relationship with
God as our loving, generous as well as capable Father, we will not be
affected by the sense of insecurity that afflicts the world. He knows
what we need and He will supply it according to His
generosity. Trust in Him keeps the inner lust and pride in
check and keeps chipping away at such as these. Love replaces lust as love is
of the Father and not of the world.
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