
James 4:7 “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.”
If non-Christian behavior goes against Bible teaching; if they have priorities wildly out of line with the ones Jesus taught; if their understanding of right and wrong is vastly different than that of Biblical and orthodox Christianity; there is really no surprise. They are non-Christians. They have decided to go a different way. Of course their standards are going to be different.
It’s different for the Christian. Jesus isn’t just a casual friend and a good guy. Believing him isn’t the same as believing my golfing buddy when he tells me about his kid’s success on the football field. We believe in him. We attach ourselves to him as a person. We trust him with our soul’s salvation for all eternity. That’s not like finding a good insurance agent or a reliable mechanic. We follow Christ. We give up our own ideas, our own desires, in favor of his. Or, as James urges, “Submit yourselves, then, to God.”
I don’t have to tell you how hard this is. If it seems easy to you, I have to wonder whether you have ever really taken this call seriously. It means that what God tells you in his word always overrules your own ideas–no exceptions. You don’t get to privately disagree, “Well, the Bible says this, but I think…” It means the Lord gets everything you have–no exceptions. If he wants your child, he can take him. If he wants your health, he can take it. If he wants your life, he can have it. He doesn’t have to explain himself. “Submit yourselves, then, to God.” Because we have not lost the old self, the sinful nature with its desires, we will struggle with this until the day we die.
This also means that we have clearly chosen sides in a cosmic battle between heaven and hell, God and the devil. But here we get some promises. “Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” I have personally met a few men who played professional football. I have shaken hands with Cowboys hall-of-fame quarterback Roger Staubach. I have met former Cowboys backup QB Babe Laufenberg. On TV they looked like the little guys out on the field. In person, I’m sure if I ever had to face them in a fair fight, I would be crushed. They towered over me and weighed twice as much.
I have seen the work the devil does on the pages of Scripture and in the souls of the people I have served as pastor. In a single day he destroys Job’s life with foreign attackers and natural catastrophes. He gets great heroes of faith like Abraham, David, and Peter to fall into horrifying sins and temptations. He has snatched colleagues in the ministry, elders and life-long Christians in my churches, away from the Christian faith altogether. He doesn’t fight fair, but if I had to face him alone, I would be crushed.
Yet James can say, “Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” How can this be? There is a scene near the end of the C.S. Lewis movie Prince Caspian, in which Queen Lucy, a little 9 year-old girl, comes marching across a bridge toward an entire army of enemy occupiers of her country. She draws out a little kitchen-knife sized sword, and stops the army in its tracks. Why? Behind her, and then beside her, is the miracle-working lion Aslan, the Jesus-character in the story.
It works the same way with the devil. Resist him and he will run away, like the little coward he is, because behind you and beside you is your Lord Jesus, and the devil knows he is outmatched.



