Its Desire Is
For You!
Brent
Densford
Genesis
4:1-10 is a passage familiar to even the most remedial of Bible students. Cain
and Abel are born to Adam and Eve, Abel offers a more praise-worthy sacrifice
to God, and you know the rest... Cain slays Abel out of anger. But, despite our
familiarity with this story of domestic dispute, jealousy, and murder; I
believe we many times overlook a powerful verse that chronicles a brief
conversation between God and Cain that takes place before he murders his
bother. In verse 7, God comments to Cain
“If you do well, will you not be
accepted? And if you do not do well, sin lies at the door. And its desire is
for you.” By all accounts, God’s
statement to Cain sums up what our relationship with Him is all about - running
the race of life and doing good.
For the successful, they will be
accepted and receive the crown of life. (James 1:12). But for those who do not do well
(spiritually speaking) – sin is an aggressive predator, pacing back and forth
outside their door and is waiting to attack at every opportunity. “Its desire is for you” God tells
Cain. Friends what a frightening image this passage paints for us. Make no
mistake about it, the rulers of darkness (Eph. 6:12) are waiting for any and
every opportunity for us to become slack and slothful in our spiritual service.
Satan and his agents are using every device (2 Corinthians 2:11) to try and
cross the door to our heart and overtake us spiritually. Let us be watchful that sin does not
overtake us through these methods commonly used by Satan:
1.
Making our service to God
seem burdensome
Numbers
11:4-15 speaks of the children of Israel moving through the Wilderness
following their Egyptian captivity. The people become restless and begin to
continually whine and complain to Moses about their food and conditions. The
groaning continues to the point that Moses utters these words to God in verse
11 – “why have you laid the burden
of all these people on me?” Moses,
the man chosen to lead God’s people from Egypt, the man given the power to
overcome the mighty Egyptians, the man who performed miracles before Pharaoh is
now stating that God’s work for him is a burden! Doesn’t that happen all too
often today as well, we lose our spiritual appetite and before you know it,
attending services, studying our Bible, participating in the worship service,
teaching classes - all become as a burden to us as sin crosses the door to our
heart and overtakes us.
2.
Causing us to lose our
spiritual focus and vision
Nehemiah
4:6-10 tells of God’s people returning from Babylonian captivity with their
primary focus being to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. Upon first arrival, the
workers were enthusiastic and much work was done (verse 6). But as the hours,
and days, and weeks passed, the work slowed and even came to a complete stop.
Why? Verse 10 tells us that there was “so
much rubbish” the strength of the laborers became weak. The work site became disorganized, chaos set
in, building materials were lying around, and the rubbish became the focus of
the workers rather than the project itself. They lost their zeal and enthusiasm
and became discouraged. Today, as new converts we burn with zeal. We focus on
God’s Word and His service and are full of energy. But as the hours, days, and
weeks pass, if we are not careful, the rubbish of the world (sin, evil,
despair, tragedy, and temptations) distracts us –and we become weakened and
lose focus. And sin crosses the door and overtakes us.
God
tells Cain in Genesis 4:7 regarding the sin that desired his soul; “but you should rule over it”. What
sound advice for us today as we battle against sin and its desire to cross the
door of our hearts. Don’t allow yourself to be fooled into believing God’s work
is a burden. Don’t become distracted and lose the focus of obtaining heaven for
eternity. Sin’s desire is for you! It lies at the door and waits continually.
Rule over it! If only Cain would have
listened to that advice!