Die, Monster Flesh, Die!

Pictured: Voldemort from the Harry Potter movies

Every Monday we’ll post something to do with maintaining sexual purity. Hope it helps.

Die, Monster Flesh, Die!

“For I know that in me, that is in my flesh, there dwells no good thing.” – Romans 7:18

‘Tis the season for monsters, and despite reservations about horror for entertainment, I’ll admit to having a perverse fondness for the cinema creatures that spooked me as a boy. Norman Bates, The Crawling Eye, Baby Jane Hudson and The Thing all cost me a few nights sleep back in the early 1960’s, but none so much as The Body Snatchers, those rude pod-critters that attach themselves to you while you’re napping, then take over. Nothing chilled me quite like the ending, when the lead character, fleeing a horde of body snatchers, looks directly into the camera and screams, “They’re coming! You’re next!”

The dread we feel about these monstrosities may be well rooted in the fear of looking at our own dark side, a side these stories invite you to visit. According to them, once the pod-creatures take you over, or the vampire bites you, or you drink the Jekyll-Hyde concoction, you became a one dimensional murdering drone, or worse. And who wants to admit to being capable of thinking, planning, doing terrible things? Therein lies the horror of horror films. They suggest that we can, at some level, have tendencies that are unacceptable, yet stubbornly present. We laugh at some of them – the tendency to overeat, for example, or towards occasional laziness – but it’s a scary thing to also consider that at times we can hate murderously or lust like animals, if we give in to secret urges. I once had a clinical supervisor who insisted we’re fascinated by what repels us, and repulsed by what fascinates us. (Case in point: rubbernecking while driving past a serious car accident.) If my supervisor was right, and I think he was, then our love/hate relationship with stories about people becoming evil makes sense. We are, perhaps, both repulsed and fascinated by the lowest elements of our own nature.

St. Paul used a good word for that lower element: The Flesh. Strong’s Concordance defines the Greek word for “flesh” (sarks) as meaning “The earthly nature of man apart from divine influence” (http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?Strongs=G4561&t=KJV) and Paul described that unregenerate nature in the most unflattering terms:

“Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these: Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, revelings, and the like.” (Galatians 5:20-21)

There’s a cast of scary villains for ya, and to make matters worse, they come back for sequel after sequel. So Paul added that although we as born again Christians have a new nature (II Corinthians 5:17) and the Holy Spirit indwelling (Romans 8:9), we still have the old fleshy nature to reckon with, causing an ongoing, relentless battle:

“For the Spirit wars against the flesh and the flesh against the Spirit, so that you cannot do the things that you would.” (Galatians 5:17)

Paul didn’t hold out any hope for the flesh. He didn’t say it could be reformed, reasoned with, or rehabilitated. Our only option when approaching the flesh was, he said, execution:

Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection evil concupiscence and covetousness which is idolatry. (Colossians 3:5)

We don’t send the Body Snatchers to counseling, nor do we try to reason with The Blob, or negotiate with The Crawling Eye. As someone in a horror film inevitably says, “The monster must be destroyed,” because no other approach works. The flesh is mortified when it’s denied, reckoned dead, resisted, crucified. Apart from God’s power, that’s an impossible execution for mere man. But in Christ the monster is slayable. Present, but, thank God, no longer powerful to dominate.

In a few weeks, we’re likely to encounter little gremlins demanding candy, and no doubt we’ll remember the Pagan origins of Halloween, mutter a tsk-tsk under our breath, and hand out the treats. But as we do, I hope we’ll also be reminded of the flesh, a creature more frightening than any that a Halloween mask represents, and of the victory He’s given us over it. Heck, in that frame of mind, I might even dance a few Thriller steps for the kids that come to my door.

If that doesn’t traumatize them, nothing will.

Comments

Theresa DelaRosa | Oct 10, 2012

You've been an incredible strength of wisdom in this most shaky time in my life...the Holy Spirit has spoken crystal clear through your blogs Mr. Dallas and I just wanted to say thank you! I wish someday soon to turn and do for others as you so graciously have done for me...praying for blessings to pour over you, your ministry and your family! GOD BLESS!

Julie | Oct 12, 2012

Wow, I hadn't thought of those movies in years! lol. I saw all of them too and thought they were the scariest thing ever. I am sure kids now wouldn't think they were scary at all but rather lame..:/ Oh well. They don't know the classics like we do.

Excellent points you made though and something I sure wish people would remember...instead of trying to change themselves or others, (the flesh) they need Christ, first. Thanks for all you do! :)

Caryn LeMur | Oct 13, 2012

I realize that in the generation before me, dancing was considered an intrinsic evil that God could never bless. And in my generation, some young Christians focused on the external behaviors (rather than the internal heart), and declared Halloween an intrinsic evil God could never bless. And then, when I read your punch line of dancing Thriller for the kids, I laughed so hard. Loved it! Thank you for bringing a smile to me this Sunday evening.

Much love in Christ always and unconditionally; Caryn

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