Some time ago I saw this
link http://www.challies.com/christian-living/when-youre-at-your-best-plan-for-your-worst?utm_content=buffer71490&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
and I believe it is timely for all of us. This advice should help all of us in
every area of life, not just when dealing with the internet.
When You're at Your Best,
Plan for Your Worst
My children are growing up fast and, between you and me, they’re
growing up a little bit faster than I had expected. My son is thirteen now,
just a half school year away from being in high school. I sometimes find myself
remembering when I was thirteen, and the kinds of things I awakened to and
became interested in. Though I see now that I was only a kid, I was sure that I
was all grown up. It’s disquieting at best. Meanwhile my oldest daughter is 11,
going on 16. I love her to death, but she too is getting far too old for her
own good. There are three kids in our home, but only one of them is still
a child.
As my kids grow up, I find that I need to have important but
uncomfortable discussions with them. They are unfortunate discussions, but the
kind you’ve got to have in a world like ours. I
suppose the only thing worse than having those discussions is not
having them.
Some time ago we implemented a plan in our home to protect the
kids from some of what lurks out there on the Internet. We removed Internet
access from some devices, limited it on others, and applied filters that keep
tabs on what we are doing online. It has been very smooth from a technological
perspective, but a little less so on the interpersonal level.
Recently my son said, “Dad, you’re treating me like I’m addicted
to pornography. But I haven’t ever seen it and don’t want to see it!” And he’s
right, to some degree. If I’m not treating him like an addict, I am at least
treating him like a pre-addict, someone who has the inclination, or who may
well have it before long. In this way I think I understand him a little better
than he understands himself. Of course our Internet plan is not designed only to protect
the children from exposure to pornography, but that is still one of its
major purposes.
But his exasperation and hurt feelings gave us opportunity to talk
about one of the principles I have found helpful in my own life: When you are at your best, plan
for when you are at your worst. I see this as an application of 1
Corinthians 10:12-13: “Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed
lest he fall. No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is
faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the
temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to
endure it.”
Right there, in the middle of this discussion about sexual
immorality, the power of temptation and the promise in temptation,
Paul gives a call to humility: “Let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed
lest he fall.” This is consistent with what he told the church in Rome: “For by
the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think of himself more
highly than he ought to think, but to think with sober judgment, each according
to the measure of faith that God has assigned” (Romans 12:3).
There is a kind of weakness, a kind of vulnerability, that may
come when we are convinced of our strength. It is when we arenot being
tempted, it is when we are standing strong in the Lord’s grace, that we ought
to consider the times we will be weak and tempted and eager to sin. We need to
assume such times will come and we need to use the moments of strength to put
measures in place that will protect us when we are weak. The wise nation builds
its defenses in peace time, not once the enemy has invaded its borders; the
wise homeowner buys insurance before the big catastrophe, not once the flood
has already risen. The wise Christian fights sin
even when sin seems distant and dormant.
I have yet to meet the man who hasn’t been tempted at one time or
another. And for this reason I have filtering software and accountability
software and, even better, men who ask me good questions about my life. In the
end, I explained, I am only holding my son to the standard I use for myself—the
standard of a sinful man, wanting desperately to avoid a major fall, and all
too aware that in those times I begin to lose my delight in God, I grow in my
delight in sin. This, I hope, is the sober judgment the Lord calls us to.