8 Characteristics of Believers Who Don’t Give Up in the Battle
Living for
Christ is hard—sometimes so hard that we’re tempted to wonder if it’s worth the
sacrifice. It is, of course, but difficulties sometimes cloud that truth. Based
on my years of studying spiritual warfare, here are characteristics of
believers who don’t give up in the battle:
- They’re solidly connected to a local
church. That is, they don’t just attend a
church; they participate in it. They’re involved in a
small group, and they serve in some capacity. They’re living for something
other than themselves.
- They have a devotional life, even if it’s
not perfect. They might be struggling
with consistency, but they’re working at it. They make time to read the
Bible and pray.
- They have somebody to walk with them. They
don’t fight the battle alone, because they have a Christian brother or
sister who stands with them. They share their burdens and their
struggles—which always lightens the load a bit.
- They choose to believe what the Bible
says. Even when they may not
“feel” like it’s true, they make the choice to trust Bible truths like “I
will not leave you or forsake you” (Heb. 13:5) and “greater is he that is
in me than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4).
- They rehearse God’s care in the past. It’s
easy to forget yesterday’s blessings when today’s hard, but those who
don’t give up fight hard to avoid that error. They continually remind
themselves, “God has never let me down in the past. He won’t now, either.”
- They trust that when they are weak, God is
their strength (2 Cor. 12:10). They
may not like the battle, but they learn from the apostle Paul’s prior
experience. Weakness doesn’t bother them, for they know God’s power is
most evident when they are weakest.
- They understand the witness of
faithfulness in the battle. They recognize that
somebody’s always watching them—and that their witness is most potent when
life is hard and their faith is stretched. Their faithfulness in the
valley catches the attention of the watching world.
- They cry out to God. There’s no pretense in their praying. They sugarcoat none of their words, and they follow no formula in their prayers. They know God’s big enough to handle their questions and their pain. He is, you know…
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