How to Overcome Sin

The following excerpt is from a message that was delivered at Grace Community
Church in Panorama City, California, By John MacArthur Jr.  It was
transcribed from the tape, GC 80-88, titled "Victory in the Spirit."  A copy
of the tape can be obtained by writing, Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000,
Panorama City, CA 91412.

I have made every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the
original tape was made.  Please note that at times sentence structure may
appear to vary from accepted English conventions.  This is due primarily to
the techniques involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in
placing the correct punctuation in the article.

It is my intent and prayer that the Holy Spirit will use this transcription
to strengthen and encourage the true Church of Jesus Christ.



                             How to Overcome Sin
                                     by
                               John MacArthur


The question is, "How do I kill sin in my life?  How do I do it?"  Let me
give you some little principles--very basic, very straightforward. 

If you live by the Spirit and are headed towards eternal life because of your
salvation, the Spirit in you gives the power to be killing the deeds of the
flesh.  The question is, "All right, how do I do that?  I agree that the
power is there, that's the bent of my life, that's the way I am going, I want
to see the Spirit do more and more and more of it.  How do I get to that
point?  How do I get that victory?  How do I get that pattern established? 
How can that become habitual?  What do I do?"


1.  Recognize the Presence of Sin in Your Flesh.

Do you know (I believe with all my heart) why most Christians are most
commonly defeated by sin?  It is because the sin has so totally deceived them,
that they never really get to the point where they honestly evaluate its
reality.  They are not dealing with the issue.  You spend so much of your
life justifying your sin as a quirk of your personality or a product of your
environment.  You spend so much time sugar-coating your habitual kinds of
sins as simply idiosyncrasies of individuality, or some prenatal predilection
that your mother had, or whatever.  You have become so good (we all have) at
coating over the reality of our sin that we don't see it, so we don't deal
with it because we "flat out," number one, don't even recognize it for what
it is.  Any kind of spiritual victory begins when you identify the enemy.  I
mean that it is the same old story, "If you don't know what you are shooting
at, how are you going to hit it?"  How am I going to eliminate from my life
what I don't even identify as needing to be eliminated? 

Sin is not only wicked, it is deceitful.  It is deceitful!  And it's there,
believe me it is there.  John Owens was right, he says [of sin],

                     It has no doors to open. 
                     It needs no engine by which to work. 
                     It lies in the mind and in the understanding. 
                     It is found in the will. 
                     It is in the inclinations of the affections. 
                     It has such intimacy in the soul.

It's there!  But inevitably it's covered up.  Do you remember when David
said, "Protect me from secret sins, hidden sins?"  And to kill it you have
to recognize it, you have got to search it out.  Psalm 139 is a good verse,
verse 23 (Psalm 139:23), remember this? "Search me, O God, and know my heart;
Try me and know my thoughts; and see if there be . . . " what? ". . . any
wicked way in me."  Help me see my sinfulness.  I want to recognize it for
what it is.  I want to get to the root of it.  That's what is so fallacious
about contemporary psychotherapy, it's that instead of having to deal with the
reality of your present spiritual condition, it wants to drag you in the past
and find somebody else who is responsible for your problem.  You must deal
with whatever is debilitating your life--that is you.  And don't be deceived
about how good you are.  Believe me, your sin is there, and it is wretched
and it spurts forth between the cracks of your supposed righteousness.  It
comes out in anger and bitter words, unkind thoughts, criticisms, self-
conceit, lack of understanding, impatience, weak prayers, immoral thoughts,
and even overt sins.  You have got to know your weaknesses. 

Haggai the prophet, chapter one, twice, verses 5 and 7 said, "Consider your
ways!  Consider your ways!"  Take a good deep look at yourself.  1 Kings 8:38
says, "Know the plague in your own heart."  Know the plague in your heart! 
And Paul in Ephesians 4:22, talks about deceitful lusts.  You have to begin
by examining your own life to see the reality of what is really there. 


2.  A Heart Fixed on God.

Second step.  In order to gain this victory, its triumph, and to see the
power of the Spirit of God begin to give you the power over the unredeemed
flesh that you desire, that God desires, you must have a heart fixed on God. 
A heart fixed on God.  The Psalmist said in Psalm 57:7, "My heart is fixed, O
God, my heart is fixed."  What do I mean by that?  Undivided devotion to God! 
That's that wholeness in spiritual life where I am given wholly to God. 
What do I mean by that?  What I am really saying in this context is, you
can't have sin in one area.  You can't just sort of clean up a lot of it but
leave it in one area.  You can't starve it out and kill it in one spot and
feed it so it lives in another spot.  If it lives anywhere it will crawl all
over everywhere.  It is the most noxious, fastest growing weed in existence. 
It will not confine itself to one flower bed, it'll be everywhere.  The
Psalmist said in Psalm 119, verse 6, "Then shall I not be ashamed."  When? 
When will you not be ashamed?  "When I have respect unto all thy
commandments."  My life isn't going to be right, my life isn't going to be
without shame until I give proper respect to every command of God.  And that
is to deal with every issue of sin in my life.  The only unshamed life is the
life of one who is totally fixed on God; everything has been dealt with. 

3.  Meditate on the Word.

Meditate on the Word.  The filling of the Spirit is equated in Colossians 3,
to letting the Word of Christ dwell in you richly.  When the Word controls
you, when it controls your thinking, when it is there as the Psalmist said,
"To meditate on day and night," when it is there hidden that "I might not
sin against God," then you have a control factor in your life.  The way to
kill sin in your life is to feed it Scripture.  It's a poison.  It'll poison
sin.  Just feed a sinful life Scripture--it will poison it!  Whatever really
controls your mind, controls your behavior; so you learn to close out the
garbage and you feed the sin, the remaining sin, in your life a steady diet
of God's glorious truth and it poisons sin.  And so you must give yourself to
the Word.  You must saturate yourself in the Word.  You must hear the Word
preached and taught.  You must learn it yourself and you must meditate on it
day and night. 


4.  Commune with God in Prayer.

These are so very basic.  Fourthly, and very important, commune with God in
prayer.  Commune with God in prayer.  This sort of circles back around to the
first point that I gave you.  True prayer gives the heart a sense of its own
vile character and renews the hatred of sin.  True prayer does that.  John
Owens said, "He who pleads with God for the remission of sin also pleads with
his own heart to detest it."  Somewhere along the line, in your own prayer
life you need to get honest.  You need to get honest.  And you need to begin
to say to God, "I want you to reveal my sin, I want you to stir it up in me. 
I want you to show it to me.  I want you to blow away the dust that is
covering it.  I want you to peel off the things that have been hiding it away
in my life, so that it becomes manifest and visible to me.  I want to see the
reality of my sin.  I want you to show it to me just the way it is."  That's
part of your communion with God. 

When you pray to God--that is an honest confession.  You can say you confess
your sins, but until you pray, "God show me all the sins of my life, reveal
all of them, uncover every little corner of my life.  Bring it up and may it
become as detestable to me as it is to you, and may you give me the strength
to see it go away."  Those are the kind of prayers that are the true prayers
of repentance.  I have always believed that when you really confess your sins
there is a little P.S. that you add to the end of it, when you say, "Lord
please forgive me for that sin," and you always add, if your confession is
true, "and Lord may I never do that again."  That's my heart's cry.  And then
prayer exposes secret sins.  Prayer weakens prevailing sins.  Prayer
finds strength in fellowship with the Holy God to kill sin in our lives. 

What must I do if I am to know victory over sin?  First, I have to recognize
the sin in my life.  Don't kid yourself, don't gloss over yourself, don't
underestimate your wretched condition as Paul didn't in Romans, chapter 7. 
And then fix your gaze wholly on God and become totally devoted to Him, so
that everything in life, center and circumference, is Him.  As the Psalmist
said in Psalm 16, "I have set the Lord always before me," and that is the only
way to live.  And then it is also equally essential that you cultivate a
knowledge and understanding, and a deep comprehension and application of
Biblical truth, and that you spend time in honest prayer before God, bringing
the truth to life in His presence.  And in those kinds of simple spiritual
exercises comes the death of sin.  Then there is a fifth and last in this
little pattern of victory.

5.  Cultivate Obedience.

Now we go out of that private place, where you looked for your sin and where
you fixed you gaze on God.  And where you meditated on the Word, and where
you communed with God in prayer, and we move into the public place and now
the pattern of your life is set on a course of obedience.  Paul said, "I
haven't attained,"  I love this, "but," he said, "I press towards the mark." 
I haven't reached the goal but I am on the path.  What path was he on?  The
path of obedience.  Peter said, "Our lives should be characterized," 1 Peter
1:22, "by obedience to the truth."  And we walk a path of obedience.  If you
want to engage yourself with a real battle with sin, just set your course,
day-by-day, moment-by-moment, one step at a time, on a path of obedience.  At
first it seems hard, at first the progress seems slow, but you stay with it
and eventually you become habitually obedient.  Habitually obedient.  It
becomes a habit!  You stay on the path that God has laid out in His Word. 
That path will lead you to grow in grace, to perfect holiness, to renew the
inward man day-by-day, and you'll train yourself towards godliness.

Now, it would be fair, I think, to ask a final question, and that is, "How am
I doing on this?"  How can I do a little inventory and say to myself, "Soul,
Soul, how are you doing?  How's this working out?  Are you doing these
things?"  Just ask yourself some simple questions. 

A.  How's my zeal for God? 

Is my heart cold towards God?  Has sin made me indifferent to times of
communion with Him?  Do I have little or no interest in His presence?  In the
glory of His name?  Do I love His Word?  Do I love His law?  Can I understand
what the Psalmist meant in Psalm 119:136, when he said, "Rivers of water run
down my eyes, because they keep not thy law."  Do I have such a love for
God's law that I am devastated when His law is disregarded?  Do I earnestly
contend for the faith?  Do I live to uphold truth?  To live it?  To proclaim
it?  What level is my zeal at? 

B.  Do I love the Word? 

Do I find myself drawn to the Word?  Almost pinned to it by some divine
wrestler who has me on the canvas and I can't get up until its truths have
become my own convictions.  Do I find myself indulging in the deep things of
the Word?  Ask myself this, "Self, do you love the time of prayer?   Do you
love the place of confession?  Do you eagerly rush into the place where you
can confess your sin and ask God to do the self-examining process by the
light of the Holy Spirit, so that every dirty thing can be brought to light. 
Do you seek that?  Do you delight in worship?  Is it your great longing to be
here with God's redeemed people?  Is it precious to you to spend the Lord's
Day in the church?  Is it your soul's highest delight to sing His praise and
know Him better, that you might offer Him honor?"  Or do you say with the Jews
of Malachi's day, "What a weariness worship is!" 

Ask yourself this, "Are you sensitive to sin in the church?  Are you
sensitive to sin in the world?  Does it tear your heart up when you see sin
around you any where?  In your own life?" 

You see those are just the basic principles I gave you, just flipped around
and turned into self-examining questions.  Spiritual victory is there if you
recognize that you are not under any obligation to sin.  If you recognize
that the Spirit of God has already bent you towards life, and so He's already
killing sin in your life, and the power to kill all of it is there.  Then all
you need to do is tap into the means, and I gave you simple principles by
which you can begin to do that in your life, and a little test by which you
can examine where you are. 

I don't know about you but I want to have a life of virtue.  I want to have a
life of joy.  I want to have a life of peace, and I want to have a life of
usefulness to God, and this is the path to that life.  And may God give you
the strength to walk it; and may through you walking it faithfully, God bring
glory to His own name.  That's the purpose of everything. 

Let's bow together.  Father, confirm to our hearts these truths, that we
might be all that you want us to be.

Transcribed by Tony Capoccia of

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