| DAILY 
Devotion Dealing with the SnakesBy Laura J. Bagby
  If there is a snake to be found, chances are the snake will 
            find me or I will manage to find it.  Meeting Mr. Snakey-pooThe first time I discovered this phenomenon I was working as an employee 
            at Yosemite National Park, on a hike with a friend and fellow missionary 
            to find the "Hidden Falls" in the heat of a typical dry and dusty 
          summer day.  While hiking on a trail lined by granite boulders, a welcome 
            habitat for warmth-seeking snakes, I wasn't thinking about the legless 
            reptiles, though I should have been. No, I was determined to find 
            that waterfall, despite my friend's waning enthusiasm and better judgement.  I blindly pressed on until I was literally stopped in my tracks by 
            a snake that had slithered out from under a boulder not two feet in 
            front of me. I let out a blood-curdling scream at the sight of my 
            enemy, a wail so powerful it boomeranged around the mountain valley 
            in a series of thundering echoes.  The snake must have felt the vibrations 
            (snakes can't actually hear the vibrations, because they don't have 
            ears), recognized the threat, and retreated back under the boulder 
            whence it came -- but not before delivering a powerful and unforgettable 
            message: the rattling of its tail. I had nearly stepped on a poisonous 
            rattlesnake, one that minutes before had not been a part of my world. When Snakes Take Up ResidenceSin is like that poisonous snake. It exists for a long time unnoticed 
            as it slithers through our thoughts, and with time, holes up in the 
            comfort of our souls, until the Holy Spirit reveals our sinfulness 
            to us as we are praying, reading the Bible, and/or listening to the 
            wise words of other Bible-believing Christians.  When we pray as David 
            prayed, "Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my 
            anxious thoughts; see if there is any offensive way in me, and lead 
            me in the way everlasting" (Psalm 139:23-24), we can expect the Holy 
            Spirit to show us those ugly snakes that have taken up residence in 
            our lives. The first time the Holy Spirit enables us to recognize a lie or a 
            slanderous word or drunkenness or unfaithfulness to a spouse or lust 
            or idolatry or a host of other evils as what it they actually are 
            -- SIN --we may shriek in terror. We had no idea the little things 
            that we brush off as human nature, as someone else's fault, as gender-driven 
            behavior, as personality quirks, or as our rights could be considered 
            sin. And we never imagined that those little sins could become so 
            incredibly dangerous, enough to eventually kill us. Fortunately, we don't have to shake in fear or hide in shame in the 
            light of these revelations. We need only call sin sin, repent, and 
            gain forgiveness. It says in 1 John 1:9, "If we confess our sins, 
            he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us 
            from all unrighteousness." Also, in James 4:7, the Bible tells us, 
            "Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee 
            from you." Bye-bye Mr. Snakey-poo. But what happens when we choose not to deal with our sins right away? 
            Do they go away? Unfortunately, no. Sin that has not been dealt with 
            will only increase in harmfulness. We may, as Ephesians 4:27 warns 
          us, give Satan a foothold.  In seeking to understand what it means 
            to make Satan a foothold, I have taken the liberty of quoting from 
            the American Heritage College Dictionary. Entry two defines foothold 
            as "a firm or secure position that provides a base for further advancement." 
           We certainly don't want to give the devil a stable base to continue 
            this sin business, because if we let him continue, we know that little 
            bitty snake of a sin will end up killing us in the end. James 1:15 
            says, "Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and 
            sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death." Sin grows and evolves 
            and multiplies if left entrenched. So how exactly do we root out those sins that "so easily entangle" 
            as Paul wrote in Hebrews 12:1 once they've taken up what seems like 
            permanent residence? We certainly can't rely on our own wisdom. Proverbs 
            3:5-6 says, "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on 
            your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will 
            make your paths straight."  When we can't seem to break free from the cycle of sin, we have to 
            give the old snake some good vibrations, the kind brought on by faith 
            in the Lord Jesus Christ, our Victor, and watch that snake retreat. Get ready to rumble. Get ready to stamp that snake with a "return 
            to sender" notice: "Please send straight back to Satan's lair at 666 
            Hell."  Good VibrationsThis isn't a mystical thing. Good vibrations are simply the powerful 
            results that naturally occur when we put our total trust in the power 
            of the name of Jesus Christ, when we speak the Word of the Lord boldly 
            in the face of our foe as Jesus did when faced with Satan in the wilderness, 
            when we sing praises to His name, when we pray fervently and unceasingly 
            to God for His deliverance, and when we shout in victory and boldness 
            the wonders and workings of our Lord Jesus Christ. When we do these 
            things, snakes feel the good vibrations of God's chosen people, get 
            scared, and leave. Scripture details several such righteous rumblings.  The faithful shouts of Joshua's military troop sent the walls of 
            Jericho crashing to the earth, bringing Israel victory over her enemies 
            in Joshua 6.  Acts 16 tells the incredible account of Paul and Silas, who were 
            imprisoned for their faith. One night as they were praying and singing 
            hymns to God, the Bible says, "Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake 
            that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all of the 
            prison doors flew open, and everybody's chains came loose" (v. 26). 
            Prayer and praise had literally opened a way to freedom.  We know that at the moment of our Lord Jesus Christ's death, the 
            temple curtain that had separated the Holy Place from the Most Holy 
            Place Holy, which was placed there because of our unrighteousness, 
            was ripped in two from top to bottom, enabling us to come before the 
            throne of God by the blood of Jesus. It's there in Mark 15:37-38. A little stomping and shouting, a little rocking and rolling, and 
            many enemies have been conquered in the name of the Lord. And, yes, 
            that includes sin in your life.  Be on the lookout for those snakes. 
            Ask the Holy Spirit to show you those sins that are crawling in your 
            soul. And then root the vipers out. Repent of your sins, resist the 
            devil, and persist in prayer, praise, and proclamation of the power 
            and authority of Jesus Christ. And then praise the Lord for the victorious 
            deliverance He has brought. Hallelujah! Related Links: Can God change your life?God has made it possible for you to know Him and experience an amazing change in your own life. 
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