The lesson that “true
greatness consists in true
goodness” has always been
difficult to learn.
[1] Even the proud
monarch Nebuchadnezzar had
to learn the hard way. It is
so natural, when striving to
do right, to feel that we
have achieved a degree of
godliness through doing good
things.
“The reason many in this
age of the world make no
greater advancement in the
divine life is because they
interpret the will of God to
be just what they will to
do. While following their
own desires, they flatter
themselves that they are
conforming to God’s will.
These have no conflict with
self. There are others who
for a time are successful in
the struggle against their
selfish desire for pleasure
and ease. They are sincere
and earnest, but grow weary
of protracted effort, of
daily death, of ceaseless
turmoil. Indolence seems
inviting, death to self
repulsive; and they close
their drowsy eyes, and fall
under the power of
temptation instead of
resisting it.”
[2]
There are two classes
pictured in the foregoing
paragraph. The first we
could classify as permissive
believers. They have no, or
at the most little, conflict
with self. To these it seems
easier to delete
sanctification from God's
gift of righteousness by
faith than to follow the
Master's invitation, " . . .
if any man will come after
me, let him deny himself,
and take up his cross, and
follow me." Matthew 16:24.
The other class are stony
ground believers who grow
weary because their root is
not wholly secure in Christ.
They have not learned the
joy of renouncing self and
of letting Christ carry the
load. They have never
discovered that His yoke is
easy and His burden is
light.
Sanctification, as a
process, reaches deeper and
deeper into our lives and
requires total surrender at
each step. This, of course,
is not easy for the proud
heart to find joy in doing.
[3]
"John and Judas are
representatives of those who
profess to be Christ's
followers . . . . Each
possessed serious defects of
character; and each had
access to the divine grace
that transforms character .
. . One, daily dying to self
and overcoming sin, was
sanctified through the
truth; the other, resisting
the transforming power of
grace and indulging selfish
desires, was brought into
bondage to Satan."
[4]
Since life is a
continuous round of making
decisions, it follows
logically that this is the
area where this daily dying
to self must start. Like
Jesus, our true Pattern, our
automatic response in every
decision must be "not my
will but Thine be done."
This must be more than a
verbalization of the
thought. It requires a
willingness—as God
directs—to change, drop, or
carry out any given plan or
desire, no matter how
cherished it might be. It
requires an acquaintance
with, and a sensitivity to,
God's will as revealed in
Inspiration; we must also be
tuned to the still small
voice of conscience and
carefully evaluate His
providential leading.
[5]
By following this process
the grace of God will
"attract the mind upward and
habituate it to meditate
upon pure and holy things."
[6] God-like-ness
is not doing what Christ
did, but living the way He
lived. We need to
understand clearly Paul's
counsel for holy living as
described in Colossians
3:3,4. "For ye are dead, and
your life is hid with Christ
in God. When Christ, who is
our life, shall appear, then
shall ye also appear with
him in glory." What glory is
Paul concerned about? "To
whom God would make known
what is the riches of the
glory of this mystery among
the Gentiles; which is
Christ in you, the hope of
glory." Colossians 1:27.
What a privilege that we
can be used of God to reveal
His own character to an
unbelieving world. "Jesus
revealed no qualities, and
exercised no powers, that
men may not have through
faith in Him. His perfect
humanity is that which all
His followers may possess,
if they will be in
subjection to God as He
was."
[7]
This is true godliness,
not trying to be good
or doing good things
but daily dying to self—truly
trusting God. "My son,
give me thine heart, and let
thine eyes observe my ways."
Proverbs 23:26. We would be
amazed at what God would do
in our lives if we would
stop trying and start
dying—being in
subjection to God as Jesus
was.
There is, however, a real
hindering factor we must
face as we attempt to take
this step—compromise. This
is one of Satan's most
effective weapons to keep
the Christian from making
the spiritual progress God
desires him to make. Jesus'
life showed no compromise at
any time. He was wholly
dedicated to do His Father's
will. His words, "I delight
to do thy will, O my God . .
. " Psalms 40:8 reflect the
only attitude that is
God-like, or acceptable, in
God's sight. Reluctant
obedience is not obedience
at all.
"When the requirements of
God are accounted a burden
because they cut across
human inclination, we may
know that the life is not a
Christian life. True
obedience is the outworking
of a principle within. It
springs from the love of
righteousness, the love of
the law of God. The essence
of all righteousness is
loyalty to our Redeemer."
[8]
The disciples of old, the
reformers, and God's people
in all ages have met Satan's
temptation to compromise
their loyalty to God. It is
often in what we consider
our strength that
Satan finds our weakness.
Let us look again at another
side at Peter's experience.
"It was on the point
where he thought himself
strong that Peter was weak;
and not until he discerned
his weakness could he
realize his need of
dependence upon Christ. Had
he learned the lesson that
Jesus sought to teach him in
that experience on the sea,
he would not have failed
when the great test came to
him."
[9]
Now we can better
understand Christ's words to
Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:9,
" . . . My grace is
sufficient for thee; for My
strength is made perfect in
weakness . . . " Then, as
Paul gives answer in the
next verse, ". . . for when
I am weak, then am I
strong." We can see the only
way to godliness is by daily
dying to self. No, there is
no stopping place here. This
round of the ladder only
opens our eyes to the great
vistas ahead as Christ's
indwelling becomes the
practical key to
God-like-ness.
Notes
[1]
Prophets and Kings,
p. 521.
[2]
The Acts of the Apostles,
p. 565.
[3]
Christ Our Righteousness,
pp. 33, 34.
[4]
The Acts of the Apostles,
pp. 558, 559.
[5]
Messages to Young People,
p. 156.
[6]
Testimonies, vol. 2,
pp. 478, 479.
[7]
The Desire of Ages,
p. 664.
[8]
Christ’s Object Lessons,
p. 97.
[9]
The Desire of Ages,
p. 382