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Writer's pictureMatt Beaney

#1125. Put the ‘earthly nature’ to death (20/8/24)

Welcome to this Come to Jesus Daily Devotional and our summer inspiration series. Today, we reflect on how we have a completely new life in Christ and yet we are to fight against the temptation to put on the practices of our old selves. 


To watch this devotional, follow the link below:



Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry.  Because of these, the wrath of God is coming. You used to walk in these ways, in the life you once lived.  But now you must also rid yourselves of all such things as these: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips.’ (Colossians 3:5-8) 

You’re sitting at home and you wonder if you imagined it…did I see something in the corner of my eye? Then, pandemonium breaks out with people screaming and climbing on chairs as they cry out, “A mouse, there, it’s run under the drawers!” Now you have to work out how you will kill it or get rid of it! 


This is like our Christian lives; Jesus has ‘raised us’ - renewed and forgiven - but we are still subject to the temptations of  our old lives (the ‘earthly nature’) and we must learn to recognise and ‘put to death’ such things because they don’t belong in our new life and home!


Yesterday, we saw that we are ‘raised with Christ’ (3:1). Our old self is dead and we are now a ‘new creation’. However, the exhortations in this letter are proof that we are still prone to temptation and sin. This is because we still have what Paul here calls ‘your earthly nature’ (v.5) and ‘old self’ (v.9) often this is termed the ‘flesh’ (sarx). This is what remains in us that is rebellious to God. Paul writes:

‘For the flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the flesh. They are in conflict with each other.’ (Galatians 5:17) 

Someone once compared this idea of refusing to listen to the ‘flesh’ to leaving the army. A man in the army was used to jumping to attention and obeying the sergeant major’s barking orders. However, one day he leaves the army and as he’s walking through the barrack gates, he hears the orders of the sergeant and he’s tempted to obey. However, it dawns on him that he’s no longer in the army and so is not under his authority. With this new understanding he walks away, ignoring the shouts of the sergeant that follow him through the gates.  


Likewise, we must learn to walk according to our new nature and put off and keep off what belongs to the old. This is a kind of civil war that is going on within us and as Christians, it’s vital that we ‘keep in step with the Spirit’. As we finish, here are two texts to meditate and pray out of: 

‘So I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.’ (Galatians 5:16)
‘Dear friends, I urge you, as foreigners and exiles, to abstain from sinful desires, which wage war against your soul.’ (1 Peter 1:11) 
 

Community group notes and study


1. Notices

It might be good to begin with notices. Please share from this week’s Church News. 


2. Icebreaker

How has God been speaking to you from His Word this week and how has this helped you? 


3. Worship together

Let’s begin our time together by lifting our eyes and hearts to worship our great God. Perhaps you have readings and songs that you would like to use together. Let’s be open to the gifts that the Spirit wants to give in order to encourage one another.


4. Study and pray together

Our message on Sunday, Inspired from Psalm 76:4, reflected on what it means for God to be ‘radiant light’. The Bible often uses light to speak of the appearance and ways of God; God’s light draws our attention to His holy and good nature, and, secondly, light speaks of His good ways that cast darkness out of our lives. Our message can be summarised as: God’s light restores worship and holiness. 


Please read Psalm 76:4


  • Did God speak to you about anything specifically from Sunday’s message?

  • What would you say are the main teaching points of this short section of  Psalm 76?

  • Why does God sometimes show His light (His glory) in a visible form? (See Luke 9:28-31 for example)

  • What does God’s light and glory teach us about His nature?

  • What does God’s light and glory teach us about His will for us?

  • What does 1 John 1:5-6 teach about the fruit that must attend anyone’s profession of faith?

  • Prayer - It might be good to pray for one another regarding anything that has come out of this challenging study.

  • SIV - Why is the pursuit of worship and holiness vital for us to be a light to this world? 

  • SIV - Do we have any stories of how we have ‘Served, Invested, and inVited’ recently?

  • SIV - Spend some time together talking and praying about who and how you are seeking to bring your community to Jesus.

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