On a murky planet in a
galaxy far away, Jedi Master Yoda is training Luke Skywalker to become a Jedi
knight. In the Star Wars movie, The
Empire Strikes Back, Luke is learning how to become a force for good in a
world dominated by an evil emperor and his hatchet man, Darth Vader. When Luke
whines and complains that the training is too hard, Yoda replies that it is
Luke’s impatient attitude and quickness to give up that are holding him back.
Yoda tells Luke that the dark side is “easier and more seductive.” The Bible
confirms this truth that “the gate is wide and the road is easy that leads to
destruction, and there are many who take it” (Matthew 7:13).
Luke is stuck in the
Avoidant Worrier personality pattern, blaming Yoda for what he is dodging. It is his pattern of
complaining and sulking that prevents him from sticking with the training. He
attempts to manipulate Yoda by pouting to let himself off the hook. “It’s too
hard,” is one of the standard ploys of someone stuck in the Worrier pattern.
Luke is trying to avoid growth. He expects Yoda to reject him. Yoda confirms
his expectations by getting fed up and critical of him.
"It's too hard." |
Every one of us sins like
this, stuck in some form of manipulative personality pattern, whether we’re willing
to admit it or not. The apostle John challenges every living person with the
words, “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is
not in us” (1 John 1:8). The sin of manipulation causes you to relate to God
and others in a way that seems right to you, but backfires in the long run.
Sin’s effects are described in Scripture as the crooked path: “Those whose
paths are crooked, and who are devious in their ways” (Proverbs 2:15).
Self-will, the root of sin, says,
“I’ve always been this way and don’t intend to change. I don’t need forgiveness
because I haven’t done that much wrong. I certainly don’t need a Savior to
change me.” There are two problems with this position:
- You are blind to your self-centeredness.
- You think God’s solution for sin and evil is not necessary, because your good intentions and will power are enough.
REDEMPTION AS THE CURE FOR SIN
To what degree are you free to become what God intends,
and to what degree are you held responsible for your attitudes and behavior?
Luke Skywalker is responsible for the attitudes inherent in his Worrier
pattern: passive aggressively blaming Yoda for what he is unwilling to face in
himself. Were someone like Luke to acknowledge his blame-shifting and ask for
God’s help, he could find himself on the road to more responsible behavior.
While sin pervades human nature, the situation is far from hopeless, for “where
sin increased, grace abounded all the more” (Romans 5:20).
In an act of infinite love, God solved the sin
problem by the offering of Christ’s death in the place of all people. “God
proves his love for us in that while we still were sinners, Christ died for us”
(Romans 5:8). Christ’s atonement for sin is an objective, transcendent act of
God that exists beyond the realm of human manipulation. And Christ’s resurrection
is God’s promise made real that you are offered Christ-like wholeness when you
surrender to God’s sovereign power.
People can appropriate new life in Christ anytime, anywhere.
“If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart
that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9). Surrender
to Christ allows you to say and mean: “I bear true guilt for wrong attitudes
and behaviors—some of which I’m aware and some I’m not. I confess my need for
God’s forgiveness and help. I ask to receive the righteousness of Christ.”
Accepting Christ into your heart does not mean you
don’t sin any more—rather, it means you can freely discuss your sins with God,
inviting his help and wisdom for gradual growth that occurs over your lifetime.
Alister
McGrath points out, “Forgiveness does not necessarily mean that sin is
eliminated—it means that the threat sin poses to man’s relationship to God is
eliminated. There is all the difference in the world between being sinless and
being forgiven.”
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