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Attempts at Honesty

Reflections on the interplay of the Bible and Culture

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Archives for 2018

How to Help People with a Substance Abuse Problem through the Bible

Posted on August 8, 2018 Written by Patrick Bailey Leave a Comment

This is a quest post by Patrick Bailey. If you would like to contribute a post to Attempts at Honesty, please read the guest post guidelines and get in contact with me if you feel that you can work within those guidelines to submit a post.

Note that there is a link in this post to direct those who struggle with addiction to a recovery center. I am not qualified to assess the quality of the care provided by the facilities represented there so the existence of the link does not imply an endorsement by Attempts at Honesty.


At the library, you’ll find multiple books on how a person can recover from a substance abuse problem.

I think this is ironic and also a little sad. Alcoholics, drug addicts, and those who suffer from some form of substance abuse are generally incapable of helping themselves. In fact, it will take a good, hard jolt to make a person with a substance abuse problem admit to this.

On the other hand, there is an army of us Christians for every single one of our brothers or sisters who needs help.

I think that any article that deals with helping those with a substance abuse problem should actually talk to the people around them. It is we who have the Christian duty to help those who have stumbled. Perhaps I too need a bit of a jolt.

“Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way, you will fulfill the law of Christ” (Galatians 6:2).

The Bible speaks of helping each other as Christ’s law. Helping each other is a concept my parents taught my brothers and I growing up. My nephews and nieces have likewise learned this even from when they were toddlers. I believe when a person is suffering from substance abuse, this when he or she needs the most help.

“Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up” (Galatians 6:9).

Of course, it probably won’t be easy. I remember when I was younger, lots of times I would shrug off help and criticism. This was the case even though I’d already realized that I was in the wrong and knew I needed help.

Truth be told, now that I am an adult, it is still difficult for me to acknowledge mistakes and accept help. I imagine the same is true for people with a substance abuse problem. They too are ashamed to accept assistance.

It is not unlikely that this person whom we have gone the extra mile to help will turn us away, mock us, and find other ways to hurt us in general. This is the time when we need to ask God for Job’s patience.

“Better a patient person than a warrior, one with self-control than one who takes a city” (Proverbs 16:32).

This is one of my favorite verses from Proverbs. Who would ever have realized that patience would be such a strong weapon?

I believe the most important and helpful manifestation of this patience, is getting to know the individual that needs our help. We should take the time to understand the best way to approach the situation to be truly effective.

“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you” (Matthew 7:7).

And even as we acknowledge that the individual needs help, we must also accept our limitations.

Substance abuse is not something that will go away easily. While our love and compassion can set a person on a better path, there are organizations who have studied ways of treating this effectively, where you can receive Christian help for alcohol addiction. I believe it is part of our Christian duty to lead those with a substance abuse problem to this path.

“A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for adversity” (Proverbs17:17).

And through all this, let us stay with this person God has given us to aid in steering back to the right path. We should strive to be the light to that helps the individual stay confident and trusting in God’s love.

Filed Under: Bible Reflection

The enemy’s best tool

Posted on July 23, 2018 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

Church leaders have the opportunity to deprive our great enemy of his best and most effective tool. What is that tool? It is us when we are more concerned about our own glory and reputation than we are of God’s glory and reputation. When we make decisions and say things that misrepresent God, we are an apt tool in the enemy’s hand.

I am reminded of the answer to Question 1 of the Westminster Shorter Catechism. “The chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy him forever.”

There are 1,440 minutes in every day. Think about yesterday and tally up how many of them were spent in promoting your own agenda, increasing your own comfort, or increasing your own reputation. Then add up the minutes that were used in active contemplation of how to best reflect God’s glory to a world that so desperately needs a glimpse of it.

I am guessing that I am not alone in finding this exercise shows me that I have much to repent of.

It is time that the church ditch the corporate model of the strong leader that pushes his agenda. What would the church look like if, instead, we followed the model of a leader who actively demonstrates a life of continual repentance and dependence upon God?

What is at stake is God’s reputation. When we misrepresent God, people get hurt.

Think about this question: How many people have you met that were hurt by the actions of a church leader who misrepresented God by driving his own agenda? I have met many who have legitimate complaints about how they were treated by a pastor or church leader. How many of them have walked away from the church and are unwilling or reluctant to return?

The stakes are high. We, who are called to be church leaders, need to be aware of our tendency to go wrong and humbly seek God on a moment by moment basis. Otherwise we will go wrong and people will get hurt.

Take the tool out of the enemy’s hand.

Filed Under: Church Leadership

On the pursuit of pleasure

Posted on July 3, 2018 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

MeatloafI am not the first to make the point that idolatry can entail taking good things and making them into ultimate things. Or to put it another way, we should not confuse means and ends.

I was thinking about this with reference to physical pleasures. Too often, the response of the church to the danger of making pleasure a god in our life is to put rules in place to deny those pleasures. Churches have spoken out against many things to keep us from the danger of having pleasure as our goal in life.

One danger of a focus on restricting pleasure is that by doing so, we may feed our inner Pharisee and cause us to look down on others who are less disciplined.

The problem is that pleasures are so . . . pleasurable. We like the comforts in life and they make life interesting. While I assume that you could survive with only eating meatloaf, green beans and potatoes every day, limiting the diet to these would surely reduce anticipation of delight from the meal.

Jesus tells us in Matthew 6 that God delights to give us what we need, pleasures included. But a warning is needed: there are illegitimate pleasures that are forbidden to us by Scripture. For example, while consuming alcohol is not condemned in Scripture, drunkenness is. There are other “pleasures” that we are to avoid. The good news is that the legitimate pleasures are more numerous than those that are forbidden.

How then can we keep the pleasures from being a cause for idolatry?

The answer lies in how we enjoy the pleasure. I can enjoy the legitimate pleasures without idolatry when I enjoy them as an act of worship. When I accept the pleasures as a gift from God and enjoy them as such then I am less prone to idolatry.

I like to eat. I like to eat good food and I very much enjoy having a variety in my diet. Using food as an example, It would be possible to arrange my whole existence around food. I could spend a majority of my time planning my eating and focus my existence on finding new and interesting foods.

Or, I can accept any opportunity to eat as a gift from God. I can enjoy the really great food when it is available or I can enjoy more pedestrian fare if that is what is in front of me.

The difference is not in what is eaten but the motivation for eating it. The fundamental question is this: “Who gets the glory?” Am I so focused on the food that I do not give glory to the God who made the food possible?

The same question applies to any legitimate pleasure we could pursue.

Filed Under: Christian Life

Martyn Lloyd-Jones again on Prayer

Posted on July 1, 2018 Written by Mark McIntyre Leave a Comment

The Assurance of our SalvationMartyn Lloyd-Jones said this about prayer in a sermon on John 17:

“Our whole idea of prayer is false. We think of prayer only as guidance and requests. Now if you were to put that into practice in human relationships you would regard it as insulting. No, the thing the saint wants to know above everything else is that all is well between his soul and the Father. There is nothing the saint delights in more than to know God as his Father. He likes to maintain the contact and communion, to assure his heart before God and in the presence of God. The saint is in this difficult world, there are temptations from the outside and the whole world  is against us, and the saint is tried – sometimes he almost despairs. So he goes to God immediately, not to ask this or that but just to make certain that all is well there, that the contact is unbroken and perfect, that he can assure his heart and know that all is well.”

This quote was found in The Assurance of Our Salvation (Studies in John 17): Exploring the Depth of Jesus’ Prayer for His Own which is a collection of Lloyd-Jones’ sermons on John 17.

Jesus tells us that we are to approach God in a childlike way. What is more childlike than to look to our father to assure us that everything will be OK?

Life as a flawed human in a flawed world is often difficult. But, for the Christian, we have the assurance that God will see us through to the end. I don’t think it is possible to over emphasize what Paul tells us in Philippians:

“I am sure of this, that he who started a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 1:6, CSB)

We have been told this, but we have a patient Father who is willing to tell us over and over again that he is with us and all will be well.

Filed Under: Prayer, Quotation

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