2007 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



5 May 10
    Hey there, hi there, ho there...Mouseketeers...I mean, special people.
    Well, I have a 9am appointment and better keep moving.  It's presently 8:09am.
    I mention below the cat and the mouse.  I'm sure you've heard this before...but do you know why the cat ate the cheese?  So he could croutch beside the mouse hole with BAITED breath.
    Be blessed.  Love and prayers.  Dad/Ray

5 May 2010
Passage:  1 Peter 5
Focus:  “Be self-controlled and alert.”  1 Peter 5:8


            There is much in this chapter that is worthy of our attention, but I think I will settle on the exhortation from Peter to “be self-controlled and alert.”  Why is this advice important to Peter?  Because he recognizes something that many people, even some believers, don’t—“your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”
            Have you ever observed a cat stalking a mouse?  While the mouse is watching and alert, the cat is dead still.  But when the attention of the mouse is shifted to something else like eating or sniffing around, and he wanders a little too far from his protective hole, that’s when the cat moves in closer.  He’ll keep that approach up till he is within striking distance.  At that point the mouse is no match for the cat.  The same tactic is used by humans when hunting deer or any other kind of game.  It’s a strategy I have used countless times while spear fishing when stalking certain types of fish.
            The point is that Satan is no match for us as long as we are self-controlled, alert, and strong in the Lord.  But when we shift our attention from that focus and priority, when self is allowed to go out of control, becoming careless and distracted by other things that are in conflict with the Word, we make ourselves vulnerable and are no match for Satan.
            It is very good to know that we are given the option to successfully “resist him” (v. 9).  How?  By “standing firm in the faith.”   What do we mean by this faith?  It’s the great assurance that Christ within is our personal Savior, Security, and Sovereign.  It includes the belief that apart from a close relationship with Him there is no hope of winning over Satan and his devices.  Believe it…and live it.  We’re talking about the key that guarantees a life of Christian victory and sets one apart from the weak and wimpy version thereof.
 
“God wants you to be a victor – not a victim.”