A P T G P DVANCE RAISE FOR HE AME LAN “You may beat your demon the first time through The Game Plan or you may need it through a long season, but it’s a worthy companion. Joe’s advice is sound and his format is friendly.” — Tom Minnery Focus on the Family “Joe Dallas has written a practical handbook for men who want to get serious about their purity. The Game Plan is the tool that answers one of the most troubling problems in the church today, and it does so with compassion, clarity, and a sound biblical base.” — D. James Kennedy. Ph.D. Senior Minister Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church “For more than a decade Joe Dallas has been a role model for those battling to overcome sexual addiction as well as to those ministering to the sexually broken. The Game Plan is one more example of how God is using him to bring freedom to the captives. I know Joe. I trust Joe. What he says lines up with God’s word and when put to practice, bears much fruit.” — Alan Chambers President Exodus International “Joe Dallas gives readers a much needed plan for battling pornography and sexual addiction. The Game Plan will give you the tools necessary to stop looking at pornography and never return. A must read!” — Craig Gross Founder of XXXchurch.com Author of Questions You Can’t Ask Your Mama and The Gutter THE GAME PLAN JOE DALLAS Copyright © 2005 by Joe Dallas All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotation in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher. Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc. Thomas Nelson, Inc. titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected]. All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from The New King James Version®, copyright 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Scriptures marked KJV are taken from the King James Version of the Bible. Scriptures marked NIV are taken from The Holy Bible, New International Version®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved. ROUTE— Repentance, Order, Understanding, Training, Endurance—is a trademark of Joe Dallas. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Dallas, Joe, 1954– The game plan / Joe Dallas. p. cm. includes bibliographical references. ISBN-10: 0-8499-0633-4 ISBN-13: 978-0-8499-0633-6 1. Christian men—Religious life. 2. Sex—Religious aspects—Christianity. 3. Chasity. I. Title. BV4528.2.D35 2005 241'.66—dc22 2005010011 Printed in the United States of America 07 08 09 10 11 RRD 10 9 8 7 6 For my beloved son Jeremy— May you always be a Player, conqueror, and lover of God. CONTENTS Introduction Before We Begin Qualities of a Player REPENTANCE Day 1 Recruitment: Getting Back into the Game Day 2 Action Plan for Recruitment Day 3 Crisis: Truth Hurts Day 4 Action Plan for Crisis Day 5 Separation: Making the Final Cut Day 6 Action Plan for Separation ORDER Day 7 Structure: Your Daily Meds Day 8 Action Plan for Structure Day 9 Alignment: Teammates and Allies Day 10 Action Plan for Alignment Day 11 Confession and Restitution Day 12 Action Plan for Confession and Restitution UNDERSTANDING Day 13 The Arena and the Opposition Day 14 Action Plan for the Arena Day 15 The Wounded Player Day 16 Action Plan for Healing Day 17 Understanding Temptation Day 18 Action Plan for Understanding Temptation TRAINING Day 19 Temptation-Resistance Techniques Day 20 Action Plan for Resisting Temptation Day 21 Entitlement Day 22 Action Plan for Overcoming Entitlement Day 23 Boundaries Day 24 Action Plan for Developing Boundaries ENDURANCE Day 25 In Case of Relapse Day 26 Action Plan for Relapse Contingency Day 27 Your Broader Purpose Day 28 Action Plan for Your Broader Purpose Day 29 Conversion and Epiphany Day 30 Action Plan for Epiphany Appendix: Questions Players Frequently Ask Notes INTRODUCTION A famous Christian long ago told us that when he was a young man he prayed constantly for chastity; but years later he realized that while his lips had been saying, “Oh Lord, make me chaste,” his heart had been secretly adding, “But please don’t do it just yet.” —C. S. LEWIS, MERE CHRISTIANITY Since you picked up this book, my guess is you’re either in crisis over your sexual behavior, or you want to avoid ever having that sort of crisis. And why shouldn’t you? You’ve got other plans, after all—a family, a home, or a career. Or maybe you plan to earn a degree or complete some other project or achievement. At the very least, I figure you want someone to love, decent health, and enough money to pay the bills. And by now you’ve probably attained some of those goals, so I’ll also assume you’ve steered your life in a certain direction, and to some extent, you’ve succeeded. You have expectations, too, especially of yourself. You expect to be a certain type of man—not perfect, but the kind of man you can respect. You want to be a guy who lives up to his beliefs, has a decent reputation, and is the sort of friend, father, and husband who makes his loved ones feel safe and cared for. And if you do ever wind up having any deep, dark secrets, you figure they’ll be the sort that aren’t really that deep and dark. Plans and expectations—since you’ve got both, the last thing you want is to see them derailed by a moral failure. So maybe you picked up The Game Plan to make sure that never happens. Then again, maybe it already has happened. Maybe it started so long ago it’s hard to recall how or when, but at some point you discovered “it.” We usually refer to “it” as sexual sin or acting out. However you label “it,” it’s the thing that’s now disrupting your life so badly you’re willing to pick up this book. The form “it” takes varies from man to man. For many, it’s a combination of pornography and sexual fantasies. Others find it in a prostitute’s embrace, strip clubs, adulterous or premarital sex, anonymous encounters, phone sex, cybersex, or chat rooms. Maybe you’ve practiced it in less common ways, through some habit or private ritual you’re deeply ashamed of and have never admitted to anyone. (Although heaven knows, there really is nothing new under the sun, and I can guarantee you’ve neither discovered nor created a new sin.) But whatever its form, it has become part of your life, despite your plans and expectations, because in its own strange way, it works. When you discovered it, you found something that delivered both meaning and ecstasy. Meaning isn’t normally a word we associate with immorality, but think about it: there really can be profound meaning in actions that are completely wrong. Just because they’re meaningful doesn’t make them right. But just because they’re wrong doesn’t remove the sense of meaning. In plain language, if sexual sin wasn’t deeply meaningful in some way, men wouldn’t indulge it. Masturbating to Internet pornography, for example, can bring a man comfort, thrill, power, and escape, all of which create a meaningful (though unhealthy) experience. When you add ecstasy to the mix—the anticipation of seeing the porn, the adrenaline rush that comes with viewing erotic images, the heightened sensations building up to orgasm, then the orgasm itself—then you’ve got yourself a powerful product. Morally wrong? Sure. Addictive, even destructive? Absolutely. But powerful, nonetheless. And when a customer tries a product that delivers both meaning and ecstasy, there’s a good chance he’ll go back for seconds. But it didn’t stop at “seconds,” did it? Maybe it became a fairly regular part of your routine. Oh, there may have been times— months, even years—when you stopped. But then it kept returning; or, I should say, you kept returning to it. It was reliable and ever-present, like an old friend who never said no. So it became not only a secret vice, but a secret device as well—a product you’ve relied on for comfort, connection, and escape. But knowing your behavior was wrong hasn’t stopped you from repeating it. And repeating it did not, at least in the beginning, ruin your plans and expectations. While nursing your sin, you may have also built up that family, career, and life you were aiming for. The sin didn’t keep it from happening. There’s a good chance, in fact, you’ve told yourself, “This is wrong, but it isn’t that wrong! If I’m careful and discreet, it won’t interfere with the rest of my life. I am, after all, a good man in general; and even good men can have a few bad habits.” Then something happened. You got caught, perhaps, or at least had a close call. Maybe your situation is worse—an arrest, a sexually transmitted disease, professional or financial damage—and now your life has been thrown into endless somersaults. Or maybe you’re just exhausted from the lying, double- mindedness, and shame that come from prolonged sexual sin. Whatever the case, a crisis of truth has gotten your attention, slapping you in the face with a realization: “This has to stop. I have to change.” Y L I B I OUR IFE S EING NTERRUPTED I say all of this because I know we don’t usually ask for help (which is what you’re doing by picking up this book) unless a fire has been lit under us. So I doubt that I’m assuming too much in saying you’re a man in crisis, either because of what you’ve done or what you fear doing. And since you can see by this book’s cover that it’s written from a biblical perspective, I feel safe in also assuming you’re a Christian. In that case, your crisis springs not just from circumstance but from deep within as well. Because you know better. You know God, you know something about His will for your life, and you know His will can’t include behavior the Bible so strongly and specifically condemns. In light of that, you know what you need to avoid doing. Or, if you’re already doing it, you know what you need to stop doing. You need to stop using pornography. You need to break off the adulterous, casual, or premarital sexual relationship. You need to distance yourself from the actions that have created your crisis, actions that may have been meaningful but have also done more damage than you ever thought they would. You need to stop, and you need to stop now. But even knowing that may not have stopped you so far. Maybe (in fact, probably) you don’t need to know what to stop doing. You need to know how to stop doing it. I’ve yet to meet a Christian in sexual sin who didn’t know what he should or shouldn’t do. Most of us, after all, have spent years hearing that sexual contact before or apart from marriage is wrong. So it’s not the knowledge of right from wrong you’re looking for, but a plan—a game plan that will map out a practical, effective way to recover (and keep) your sexual integrity. Now you have one. The Game Plan is written for the Christian man who is tempted by sexual sin or who has gotten involved in it but is now ready to walk away from it, and who wants a practical, biblically based plan to guide him. Since 1987, I’ve had the honor of working with these men through private
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