VOTD

Jan. 28

Joshua 1:9

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Tuesday, January 20, 2026 by K-LOVE Pastors

What Is Temptation?

Temptation

When we were controlled by our old nature, sinful desires were at work within us, and the law aroused these evil desires that produced a harvest of sinful deeds, resulting in death. – Romans 7:5 NLT

 

Have you ever been concerned you’re sinning just because you felt tempted? The New Living Translation Bible Dictionary defines “temptation” as “a cause or occasion of enticement.” And it defines “tempt” as “to entice to do wrong by promise of pleasure or gain; to test.”

Temptation is not the same thing as committing a sinful act. Temptation is the enticement or desire to commit the act. It’s the idea itself, presented in your mind, usually by our own sinful nature, and typically comes with some rationalization for why it would be “okay.” Temptation can also come from the enemy or sinful people we hang out with.

 

Temptation vs. Trial

Temptations are different from trials. With loving intention, trials can come from the Lord, as Paul experienced through persecution during his missionary journeys. They can come from the hardships of life like Joseph experienced when his brothers sold him into slavery. Trials can serve as an opportunity to grow in our faith and dependence on God. Romans 5 tells us trials can grow us in endurance, strengthen our character, and increase our hope in the Lord.

In Romans 7, Paul describes this arousing of our evil desires. This is temptation. If we act on the temptation, then we have sinned. When we sin, we offend God in His holiness, which we must all be accountable for. This is why avoiding temptation is of utmost importance.

 

Which Road Will You Choose?

Sin is very serious, because it first kills us spiritually, then physically. There is no safe middle ground with sin. We all have a sinful nature because of Adam and Eve’s fall in the Garden of Eden. In Matthew 7:13-14, Jesus talks about two roads, one wide and one narrow. The wide road leads to destruction. The narrow road leads to life. When tempted, we must choose which road our next footstep lands on. Do we go “wide” and honor ourselves, or go “narrow” and honor God?

Defeating temptation means we take the desire captive and bring it before the Lord (2 Corinthians 10:5), seeking His will and way over the pull to disobey. Again, temptation is the desire, not the action or entertained thought. In Jesus, we have the strength and wisdom needed to leave temptation behind (1 Corinthians 10:13) and pursue walking in holiness. This is God’s will for us in Christ; we need His help daily.

 

Dig Deeper

1. Fighting temptation often means identifying it ahead of time. Make a list of your top three areas of struggle, and then search for passages of Scripture that will strengthen you against them.

2. Find accountability with a brother (for men) or sister (for women) from church and ask them to help you stay on guard.