I am so incredibly thankful for Romans
8:28. This process of sanctification
is long and often trying, but I am so grateful that the God I serve is One who
breaks into my brokenness and pieces me back together with the transforming
power of His grace and mercy.
What was my most recent “break-through”? It was my last post, titled “Lists: Your Plans or God’s?”. Actually, the “break-through” did not occur until several days after my posting. It was then that God quickly brought to my attention the rotten state of my proud heart. Through His Spirit and the words of other believing friends, He removed the scales from my eyes and allowed me to see that while the things I wrote in my last post may have indeed been true, they were not written in a spirit of grace and humility. Rather, my last post was an arrogant response to the seemingly proud and conceited “list mentality”. I am so convicted by Luke 6:45 which reads, “The good person out of the good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.” And what was the attitude of my heart? Pride, and it manifested itself in my self-righteous post. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black! I do not have everything figured out, and I am increasingly realizing how incredibly prone I am to the sin of thinking I do!
What was my most recent “break-through”? It was my last post, titled “Lists: Your Plans or God’s?”. Actually, the “break-through” did not occur until several days after my posting. It was then that God quickly brought to my attention the rotten state of my proud heart. Through His Spirit and the words of other believing friends, He removed the scales from my eyes and allowed me to see that while the things I wrote in my last post may have indeed been true, they were not written in a spirit of grace and humility. Rather, my last post was an arrogant response to the seemingly proud and conceited “list mentality”. I am so convicted by Luke 6:45 which reads, “The good person out of the good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.” And what was the attitude of my heart? Pride, and it manifested itself in my self-righteous post. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black! I do not have everything figured out, and I am increasingly realizing how incredibly prone I am to the sin of thinking I do!
I love how John Piper portrays this
battle between the Spirit and the flesh in one of his sermons. He states:
Picture your flesh—that old
ego with the mentality of merit and craving for power and reputation and
self-reliance—picture it as a dragon living in some cave of your soul. Then you
hear the gospel, and in it Jesus Christ comes to you and says, "I will
make you mine and take possession of the cave and slay the dragon. Will you
yield to my possession? It will mean a whole new way of thinking and feeling
and acting." You say: "But that dragon is me. I will die." He
says, "And you will rise to newness of life, for I will take its plan; I
will make my mind and my will and my heart your own." You say, "What
must I do?" He answers, "Trust me and do as I say. As long as you
trust me, we cannot lose." Overcome by the beauty and power of Christ you
bow and swear eternal loyalty and trust.
And as you rise, he puts a
great sword in your hand and says, "Follow me." He leads you to the
mouth of the cave and says, "Go in, slay the dragon." But you look at
him bewildered, "I cannot. Not without you." He smiles. "Well
said. You learn quickly. Never forget: my commands for you to do something are
never commands to do it alone." Then you enter the cave together. A
horrible battle follows and you feel Christ's hand on yours. At last the dragon
lies limp. You ask, "Is it dead?" His answer is this: "I have
come to give you new life. This you received when you yielded to my possession
and swore faith and loyalty to me. And now with my sword and my hand you have
felled the dragon of the flesh. It is a mortal wound. It will die. That is
certain. But it has not yet bled to death, and it may yet revive with violent
convulsions and do much harm. So you must treat it as dead and seal the cave as
a tomb. The Lord of darkness may cause earthquakes in your soul to shake the
stones loose, but you build them up again. And have this confidence: with my
sword and my hand on yours this dragon's doom is sure, he is finished, and your
new life is secure."
I think that is the meaning
of Galatians 5:24, "Those who belong to Christ have crucified the flesh
with its passions and desires." Christ has taken possession of our soul.
Our old self has been dealt a mortal wound and stripped of its power to have
dominion. The Christian life, the fruit of the Spirit, is a constant reckoning
of the flesh as dead (piling stones on its tomb) and a constant relying on the
present Spirit of Christ to produce love, joy, and peace within. The difference
between the Christian life and popular American morality is that Christians
will not take one step unless the hand of Christ holds the hand that wields the
sword of righteousness.
I am so thankful that I am not alone, for
I know how helpless I am to save myself.
If I want to destroy this dragon within me, I need Someone great. Only He who is within me possesses the power
to bring about my sanctification, and I am so thankful that my God is committed
to helping me destroy this dragon that rears its ugly head of pride and
self-righteousness.
I am not naïve enough to think that the
battle it over. In fact, I am so aware
of my sinful and needy state that I have no doubt I will continue to sin in
this area. By God’s grace, however, I
don’t want to give Satan a foothold. My
prayer is that I will awake every morning and prostrate myself before the foot
of the cross, for it is there that I am safest.
May God continually keep me on my knees before Him, and may I never
forget my own desperate and needy state!
And when I do fall and fail, may He grant me to humility and confidence
to boldly confess my sins.
In my pride I was blind to my own
self-righteousness and utterly convinced that my last post was justified. Indeed, the words may have been, but the
heart and spirit behind my words were not.
The following prayer from the Valley of Vision fits my situation
perfectly.
"Self-Knowledge"
“Searcher of Hearts,
It is a good day to me when
thou givest me a glimpse of myself;
Sin is my greatest evil,
but thou art my greatest good;
I have cause to loathe
myself, and not to seek self-honour,
for no one desires to commend
his own dunghill.
My country, family, church
fare worse because of my sins,
For sinners bring judgment
in thinking sins are small, or
That God is not angry with
them.
Let me not take other good
men as my example,
and think I am good because
I am like them,
For all good men are not so
good as thou desirest,
Are not always consistent,
Do not always follow
holiness,
Do not feel eternal good in
sore affliction.
Show me how to know when a
thing is evil
Which I think is right and
good,
How to know when what is
lawful
Comes from an evil
principle,
Such as desire for
reputation or wealth by usury.
Give me grace to recall my
needs,
My lack of knowing thy will
in Scripture,
Of wisdom to guide others,
Of daily repentance, want
to which keeps thee at bay,
Of the spirit of prayer,
having words without love,
Of zeal for thy glory,
seeking my own ends,
Of joy in thee and thy
will, of love to others.
And let me not lay my pipe
too short of the fountain,
Never touching the eternal
spring, never drawing down water from above.
-The Valley of Vision, p.
122f
This is such a powerful reminder that I
am not above reproach. Even more so,
however, I rejoice that God uses even my most miserable failings to bring about
my sanctification and ultimately His glory.
What a promise we have in Romans 8:28!
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