2013 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



June 25, 2015

Good good morning, dear ones.

Sure is a pretty one. And any minute my pretty wife will appear to join me to enhance the pretty. Pretty nice!

I will need to make a dash into Portland to pick up some special clips that will assist putting the Accord back together—needed by the guy we have slated to do the body and paint work. We will deliver the car to him tomorrow morning.

Oh—here she comes—“Miss America!”—my favorite lady. Time to go.

Love, Dad/Ray.


25 June
Luke 22:39-65
Focus: "Pray that you will not fall into temptation.” Luke 22:40.

Temptation is a fact of life in this fallen world. It is like an essential negative attraction that confirms an essential positive choice. Our ancestors, Adam and Eve, set themselves, along with their offspring, on a course of negative consequence to their “falling into temptation” (Romans 5:12). Without the redemptive grace of God, we would all be in hopeless trouble.

Notice that Jesus does not say, “Pray that you will not be tempted.” And He is not prescribing a blanket prayer heavily laden with a request like, “Lord, please keep me from falling into temptation.” Rather, I think He is prescribing a principle of Christian victory that could be paraphrased this way: “Maintain prayer (close personal relationship with God) as a preventive measure against temptation.”

Allow me to extract a phrase out of verse 44: “…being in anguish, he prayed…” That too can be made into a standard to live by. Temptation has the subtle deceptive influence to draw us away from a close relationship with our Lord. Typically temptation influences us to pray less. But this standard directs us to pray more. So the practical rule could go this way: “WHEN FACING THE TEMPTATION TO ANGUISH, INCREASE PRAYER.”

Psalm 19:14 is a good example of a prayer to pray and principle to pursue: “Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my strength, and my Redeemer.” I would argue that you and I can hardly go very far off course in the direction of falling into temptation and evil while sincerely praying this quality of prayer. It’s an attitude of heart and mind that acknowledges, “I am entirely transparent before you, my Sovereign Maker and Lord, and I am entirely foolish to think I could hide anything from You. With all the sincerity I can muster I affirm my desire to bring every thought and idea within me into ‘obedience to Christ’ (2 Corinthians 10:5). But I can’t do it by myself—I need Your grace, discernment, and strength.”

Peter is presented in this reading as a real-life example of this principle. He had to be an emotional basket case by the time he followed the procession into the courtyard of the High Priest where Jesus was held under arrest and abused. Talk about anguish! Jesus had just rebuked him for getting out his sword with the intent of taking on the whole mob. But now?—what does he do?! I’ll guarantee he wasn’t doing much praying. So it was easy to “fall into temptation.” He fell three times—plunk, plop, splat! Then the rooster crowed. But, thank God, he didn’t stay there. He finally did the right thing and went out and wept—and prayed.

“When you feel you are free from temptation, be most on your guard.”