The Houdini God

No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, that you may be able to endure it.  1 Corinthians 10:13  NASB

Endure – Houdini was a great escape artist.  Time after time he extracted himself from apparently unbreakable bonds.  Unfortunately, we often read this verse, without its context, as if God is training us to be like Houdini.  We think that God is going to show us how to escape from our temptations.  But Paul implies something else.  Paul implies that God is going to show us how to endure temptations without succumbing to them.  God’s escape plan is not the exit door.  It is reinforcements to resist.

Now let’s add the context.  The verses immediately preceding and following this one both begin with Greek words translated “therefore.”  The two words are not the same in Greek.  This is important.  But the implication is that this verse is the conclusion of a previous thought and the basis of another thought.  It is not a standalone idea.  The previous thought is that anyone who thinks he can resist alone is in danger.  Life is treacherous.  History is a nightmare.  Naivety is inappropriate and foolish.  As a result of these truths about human existence (therefore), Paul offers his commentary on temptation.  Then, after his readers have understood this commentary, Paul expresses his action conclusion (flee idolatry).  This “therefore” essentially means “on this account – with emphasis.”  The whole argument goes something like this.  Watch out!  Don’t be arrogant about your own abilities.  Temptations are a real fact of human life.  But God is involved and will show you a way to endure them.  Because of this, run from idolatry.

Paul’s point demolishes human pride, even human spiritual pride.  We are not such giants of the faith that we can’t fall.  Once we realize the precariousness of our humanity, Paul offers comfort and hope.  God has not abandoned us to our own devices.  God brings reinforcements when we need them, and since living in this world is accompanied by the force of the yetzer ha’ra, we need reinforcements often.  Furthermore, God knows that we have our limits and He ensures we are not placed in situations that exceed them.  The purpose of all this heavenly interaction is to help us endure living in a broken world.   The Greek is hupophero.  The idea is to bear up under pressure.  It does not imply removal of the opposing force.  It implies the ability to resist that force, to bear the load.  Given that this remark is made to the Corinthians, the implication is instructive.  There is probably no better example of a dysfunctional assembly of believers than those in Corinth.  Yet even with all their temptations and failures, Paul insists that they aren’t experiencing anything that isn’t a typical human situation and that God is still in the midst protecting them from even greater disaster.  They can endure it without falling.

What’s Paul action plan as a result of this insight?  Flee idolatry!  Why would he say this?  Because the Corinthians were probably tempted to retreat to their ancestral gods in an effort to find relief from their struggles.  False gods offer freedom from temptation.  YHWH does not.  YHWH offers the ability to resist.  False gods offer either exits or excuses.  YHWH offers neither.

Maybe we need some contextual revision to the way we often use this important verse.  Maybe when we think that God is going to show us the exit or provide us with an excuse we turn Him into a god of idolatry.

Topical Index:  escape, hupophero, idolatry, 1 Corinthians 10:13

Subscribe
Notify of
24 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Daria

Skip, THANK YOU for putting the verse back into context. “Watch out! Don’t be arrogant about your own abilities.”

This can get confusing: “The idea is to bear up under pressure. It does not imply removal of the opposing force. It implies the ability to resist that force, to bear the load.” Contrast that to “FLEE idolatry” (and so very many other instructions in the Scriptures to STAY AWAY from evil things.

Obviously, COUNTLESS women and children (yes, and men too) have been ABUSED at the absolute (man’s twisting of God’s plan) COMMANDS of “submission,” many foolish, arrogant SINFUL people rush to temptation, playing with fire and then… ooopsie… life de-railed! (The Bible is full of situations like this… just because “it’s in the Bible” doesn’t mean it’s there for us to FOLLOW!)

Bottom line: God looks at the heart. With Yom Kippur right around the corner and my days prior being spent in much self-examination and gratitude to YHVH and Yeshua HaMashiach, this topic comes in PERFECT timing. How often to we rush to sin (and make excuses) but refuse to have the self-control AND FAITH necessary to endure various trials and temptations that ARE NOT OF OUR OWN MAKING!

P.S. How do I underline, set print in italics and do spellcheck here?

robert lafoy

Hi Daria, spellcheck does work on this site, (place the pointer over the word underlined and right click, it will bring up suggestions) in regards to the others, I’ve always had to write in my word processer and then copy and paste.

This year I’ve followed the traditional timing of yom kippur, and what was brought to my heart this year was the “distress” mentioned in Jonah’s prayer. The other issues that were brought to my attention were “hurling” and “on my account”. I also read Ps. 118 alongside and was amazed by the similarities. It would seem that “distresses” are most often sent by God (if not specifically designed) for our growth and benefit. Distress is a “tight place”, like God sticks you in a bag and ties the top. Seemingly, the idea isn’t about getting out but rather learning the lesson “in the bag”. All that “on account of me”. (The Messiah?)

YHWH bless you this year as you seek His heart on the Yom Kippur.

Pam

Job 14:17 My transgression is sealed up in a bag, and Thou heapest up mine iniquity.

Be sure to read in context. 😉

Michael

Hi Pam,

I was talking to my adopted son about Job last week

Telling him that if he wants to understand Jesus IMO

Then he needs to read and understand Job

They are “2 peas in a pod” IMO

In Job 14:17 Job says to God

Now you count every step I take
but then you would cease to spy on my sins
you would seal up my crime in a bag
an whiten my fault over

God’s advertisement is kind of like the Uncle Sam picture with the pointed finger

“We want you
For this Job”

Pam

🙂

Jill

Daria, above the box that you make a reply in you will see a XHTML this is how to make bold, italics etc… you start with the code in the little carrots (the brackets around the letter) and then you end the section by putting a / before the letter in the carrots. for bold you would have the carrots around b then you would put want you want bold in then end it with the carrots around /b…make sense? I think u is underline if this shows up underlined that it is. Hope this helps

Michael and Arnella Stanley

Daria, I saw you question and asked Jill who seems to have figured it out. Here is her reply on 8/29/13 TW at September 15, 2013 at 6:54 pm

“When you go to fill in the box with your response there is a XHTML: the b in the carrots means bold i in a carrot means italics a href is how to post a hyperlink I think u is underline. To start and end that part you want changed you need to say for example bold (but with no spaces between the carrots and the b, and then to end the section and again no spaces. Hope this makes sense.”

It made absolutely no sense to me, except the part about the carrots made me hungry! Shalom, Michael

Tom Hayward

Skip, this is reassuring. However, the Lord’s Prayer has me asking “lead me not into temptation, but deliver me from evil.” Which is it? Tom

Ester

Shalom Tom,
Consider these verses?

“And don’t let us yield to temptation, but rescue us from the evil one.” NLT

James 1:13 Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted/enticed by Elohim for Elohim cannot be tempted/enticed with evil, and He tempts/entices no one.:
James 1:14 But each one is Enticed/tempted, when he is drawn away of his own desires/lusts, and enticed/trapped.

Michael

In my view, it is either the Houdini God or the God Father Game

1. Do the right thing by serving others
2. Never take sides against Him or his family
3. Else you’ll receive an offer you cannot refuse

And maybe you’ll receive an offer you cannot refuse anyway 🙂

Pam

🙂

Ifeoma

Tom, I think it is both if we will listen, hear and do as we are told. This is my understanding I could be wrong. But will love to read from others their perspectives.
Thanks Skip. What a reminder of the truth of God’s Word.
Blessings to y’all

Ifeoma

Daria

OFF TOPIC TESTING:
Jill is trying to teach me how to bold, and write in italics. In this first line, I clicked on before and after the word “bold.” For italics, I clicked on before and after the word “italics.” Can’t see how to underline.
I would have expected that I would need to hightlight and then click the appropriate XHTML on that particular section I chose.
How did this turn out?

Daria

OOOoooops. How about this? And how do I underline stuff?

Daria

then you end the section by putting a / before the letter in the carrots./ Like this?/
If this worked, that means I LEARNED A NEW THING… and with debilitating myalgic encephalomyelitis hitting the nervous system with ferver, THAT IS A HUGE BIG DEAL.
(Now, how do I delete all of this “testing” stuff if Skip wants it gone so as not to clog TW?)

Daria

Uh, how about this?/ I’m trying to figure out how to END the bold,/ italics, etc.

Daria

Ok, now I’m obsessed with figuring this out./ Did this work?/ I highlighted.

Michael C

Daria,
I think you’ve somehow contracted a mild case of xhtml-itis! 🙂

Maybe even a BOLD case!

Michael C

I believe in order to underline you just use a “u” between the great than/less than symbols.

If the word is underlined above, then it works.

Michael C

Nope, apparently, only the tags listed after the XHTML: above the text box are authorized to work.

Michael C

Underline test:

This text is underlined but it’s not a link.

Michael C

Sorry, Daria. I tried. Can’t do underline.

Ester

Seems contradictory in first reading of the verse-
“..but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, that you may be able to endure it. ”
“Escape” “to endure”.
Rather, with the trial of temptation, YHWH will open a way out of the predicament, IF/when we call out to Him. 🙂

“But God is involved and will show you a way to endure them. Because of this, run from idolatry.”

It surely is saying FLEE from idolatry, then He will hear our cries to extend His hand to help us, to strengthen us to overcome the temptation! Not otherwise!
YHWH is NOT ever going to take us away/RAPTURED to escape.
There could be a lesson in the temptation too, perhaps it reveals our weakness in that area?
Perhaps it is a test to prove if we will call upon Him? IF indeed HE is our Master and Elohim.

Mary

James 4:10 responds to this: Humble yourselves in the sight of God and He will lift you UP. Temptation brings us to the point of either buckling under the pressure OR “lowering” ourselves by submitting to God. Now it seems that we may not be aware of exactly WHAT to submit to. We know the WHO, but WHAT can be a detail many of us may not have been taught. Thanks for the lessons. 🙂