Pride, Part 33

June 12, 2009

We live in an age where the chill of humanism has swept into the professing Church with its chill of death. In the great periods of the Church God was central in all ways and at all times. Human beings must not be the measure of God in any way or in any shape. No attribute of God can be measured by human beings. No doctrine of the Bible is to have man as its standard but instead it is to be measured by the real standard and that is the character and glory of God. There are many verses that teach us and we should not get stuck in the whirlwind of the horrible theology that can come from John 3:16 when it is read from a human perspective that makes man the standard for God.

“In egocentric religion, we may say, man is the measure of all things-even of God. For God Himself is understood in the light of man. In theocentric religion it is God who is the ‘disposer supreme,’ the final arbiter of all things. Here, man is understood in the light of God. Expressing the difference in specifically religious language, we may say; in egocentric religion, man chooses or ‘elects’ God; in theocentric religion, God chooses or ‘elects’ man.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

“All the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, But He does according to His will in the host of heaven And among the inhabitants of earth; And no one can ward off His hand Or say to Him, ‘What have You done?’ (Daniel 4:35). In this text we have the confession of Nebuchadnezzar after God dealt with Him. Here was the King of the most powerful nation on earth at the time. He realized that all of the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as absolutely nothing. This sounds like Isaiah: “Behold, the nations are like a drop from a bucket, And are regarded as a speck of dust on the scales; Behold, He lifts up the islands like fine dust. 16 Even Lebanon is not enough to burn, Nor its beasts enough for a burnt offering. 17 All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless” (40:15-17). “It is He who sits above the circle of the earth, And its inhabitants are like grasshoppers, Who stretches out the heavens like a curtain And spreads them out like a tent to dwell in. 23 He it is who reduces rulers to nothing, Who makes the judges of the earth meaningless. 24 Scarcely have they been planted, Scarcely have they been sown, Scarcely has their stock taken root in the earth, But He merely blows on them, and they wither, And the storm carries them away like stubble” (40:22-24).

When verses like this are read the fog and the rubbish from the man-centered views are swept away. We are given the greatness and glory of God which hits us hard and brings us back to reality. The love of God is not measured by how much He does or does not love men, but His love can only be measured by His own infinity and His love for Himself within the Trinity. It is utterly demeaning to the infinite God to imagine that His love can be measured by His love for one or many human beings. If we use John 3:16 as a passage to back us up on that, we can know we are looking at that passage incorrectly. Even if God would have sent every human being to eternal hell He would still be perfect in love for Himself and His own glory within the Trinity. How dangerous it is to read Scripture as if man is the standard of measure that God must measure up to. However, it is done so often.

Human reasoning tries to reduce God to where it can understand Him and then once He is understood He is cast off as weak and inept. This is so true in the reasoning of ancient and modern philosophers. How utterly absurd it is to look upon the world and say that there is suffering in the world and therefore God is either not omniscient or omnipotent. That is doing nothing but trying to make God fit with the judgments of human beings. How utterly wicked it is for fallen human beings to try to make God match up to themselves and their own standards of reason and morality. It is without doubt a depth of pride that cannot be measured by finite human beings when human beings who are fallen into sin will try to use themselves as the standard for the thrice holy God.

Yet within the professing Church the same thing is being done with doctrines and methodologies. We want to make things fit with human reason and with human sensibilities. We want to be liked and respected by the world. So we believe and do things which make us respected and liked. That is to be ashamed of the real God and is a desire to receive honor for self rather than God. Jesus put it this way: “How can you believe, when you receive glory from one another and you do not seek the glory that is from the one and only God? (John 5:44). That is all people are doing when they are trying to preach and do things in a way that will not offend human beings. They are seeking the honor of men rather than the honor and glory of God. God is the final arbiter and man is full of despicable pride when he tries to be the arbiter of God himself. It is a pride that is really an attempt to be God.

Conversion, Part 19

June 11, 2009

As we continue on with conversion, it is useful to note again the necessity of the work of God in the conversion of the soul. A soul that is dead cannot make itself alive; He who is life itself must give that soul life. A soul that hates God and has a strong aversion to holiness and true love cannot just make a choice to love holiness. This takes the work of a God who is love and holy, holy, holy to work this in a soul. The soul that has a deformed image cannot transform that image to be created like God from its own power, but instead the God of all power can alone take a soul and convert it to be like Himself. The soul that hates the glory of God cannot just decide to love the beams of glory that shine forth from God in Christ. The soul must undergo a complete transformation and be converted in order to become an instrument to receive the glory of God and out of love shine forth that glory. In looking at some of the pictures that Scripture gives it speaks of the soul as having an eye. Of course the soul does not have a literal, physical eye, but the Scripture gives us this in order to communicate some very important teachings.

Scripture speaks of the eye of the soul being the lamp of the soul. “The eye is the lamp of the body; so then if your eye is clear, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light that is in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!” (Matthew 6:22-23). What the eye looks at the body is full of because the body receives what the eye looks at. When the eye itself is bad, it receives is darkness. When darkness is thought to be light, there is a great darkness in the soul. If the eye pictures the understanding of the soul, then the unconverted soul can receive no understanding but darkness though it is very religious. The understanding of the soul is necessary to spiritual life and light. If it is only darkness in its fallen state, then all it understands and receives is nothing but darkness. The soul that has nothing but darkness in its understanding and receives nothing but darkness into the understanding is a soul that must be converted or it is nothing but darkness.

The eye lamp of the soul (the eye) is either humble or proud. Scripture teaches us that God hates haughty eyes. Proverbs 21:4 tells us this: “Haughty eyes and a proud heart, The lamp of the wicked, is sin.” The eye that is guided by pride is not changed by a decision, but instead can only be changed by the converting actions of the living God in changing a soul from darkness to light. Proverbs 6:16 tells us what things the LORD hates: “There are six things which the LORD hates, Yes, seven which are an abomination to Him.” Then verse 17 tells us what those things are: “Haughty eyes, a lying tongue, And hands that shed innocent blood.” Note that haughty eyes is on this list as one of those things. Proverbs 21:4 (given above) connects haughty eyes with a proud heart. There can be no haughty eyes without a proud heart and if one has a proud heart one will have haughty eyes. These things are the lamp of the wicked. These are the guides of the unconverted person and that is to be in great darkness.

Let us look at Matthew 6 again. “The eye is the lamp of the body; so then if your eye is clear, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light that is in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!” (Matthew 6:22-23). This is a verse that should chill us to the depths of our souls. The Pharisees were very religious and very moral in the externals, yet their eyes were bad and they were full of darkness. Here we had, at least in terms of profession and externals, the most religious people of their day. Yet these words were spoken by Jesus in the context of having a righteousness that surpassed that of the Pharisees (Mat 5:20, the Sermon on the Mount). It matters not how religious a person is or can be or even how religious they will become, but a person must be converted so that they have an understanding of light. If a soul is never turned from being darkness, it will never even see the light despite all of its religion, morality, and even ministry.

Ephesians 4:18 speaks of “being darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart.” These people (the unconverted) are excluded from the life of God because of this ignorance that is in them that comes from being darkened in their understanding. If eternal life is to know God as John 17:3 tells us, then a darkened understanding will exclude one from the life of God. A darkened understanding is one that has pride and haughty eyes as its light rather than Christ Himself. A heart that does not have the life of God is a heart that is full of darkness and is being given over to more and more to a hardened heart. This is a heart that does not need to be better, but to be totally converted.

Romans 1 shows us how this hardness of heart works: “For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures” (vv. 21-23). The heart has some aspect of information about God in it by reason of the fact that God has created it as one that bears His image in some ways. But the dark soul does not want the honor of God but instead wants the honor for itself. So this is a heart that is given over to futile speculation. While those speculations may come from brilliant men, they are nothing but the speculations of darkened hearts and that leads to more darkness. This futility in their speculations leads them even farther down the path: “And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper” (Romans 1:28). A sinful life is the demonstration of a heart that has not acknowledged God and has been given over to a depraved mind.

What we see, then, is that the understanding of a soul that is blinded by its own haughty eyes and pride is a soul that is descending in its darkness. It is the wisdom of God to hide Himself from the wisdom of men. “For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not come to know God.” The world sees the Gospel of the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ as utter foolishness. Even worse, in their case “the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving so that they might not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2 Cor 4:4). The devil is at work to blind the minds (eye of the soul) of the unbelieving because he does not want them to see the light of the Gospel. The eye that is darkness and fills the soul with more and more darkness will stay that way if the devil blocks the light. But God can overwhelm the devil and bring the light of His glory to a soul. “For God, who said, “Light shall shine out of darkness,” is the One who has shone in our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ” (2 Cor 4:6).

Ephesians 4:23 tells us something of how this works. “That you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.” The spirit of the mind must be made new in conversion. The old self must be put aside and the new self be created in righteousness and holiness of the truth. But this can only be done by God. It is God alone who can do this work of creation. As Ephesians 2:10 puts it: “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.” The new soul is the direct work of the living God in giving it a new eye and a new understanding. This new soul is now light in the Lord. “For you were formerly darkness, but now you are Light in the Lord” (Ephesians 5:8). The soul that used to be all darkness has been changed by the light of the knowledge of the glory of God who has made it a new creature that is now light.

The mind of the unnatural man’s mind is darkness and ignorance. Christ is the light and it takes the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ to be saved (II Cor 4:6). Christ is the light but it takes the work of the Spirit to illuminate the light or for us to be able to see the light. The mind must be converted in order for the eye to be full of light and then for the body to be full of light. The mind must be converted or the light that the eye sees will be nothing but darkness. Religious people will be religious but will not see the light of the glory of God apart from a converted mind. Nice people will be nice but will not see what true love is until they have converted minds. For a soul to be converted the aspects of the soul must also be converted. An intellectual understanding of the Bible and of many issues of Christianity can be attained to by the natural man and the natural mind, but to have a spiritual understanding of these things a mind must be converted.

We must begin to understand salvation in terms of conversion. Men, women, and children are dead in their trespasses and sins. They have hearts full of darkness and eyes that are bad and so see nothing but darkness. Paul, in recounting his conversion and then call to Agrippa, said this: “to open their eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who have been sanctified by faith in Me” (Acts 26:18). This is what Paul was called to. He was not called to talk people into praying or making decisions, but to be an instrument of the Gospel which opens eyes and turns from darkness to light. A soul is not saved until it has had its eyes opened and it has been turned from darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan (darkness) to God (Light). Until a proud heart is humbled, it will be in the darkness of the devil and pride. It must be broken from living in the lamp of its own haughty eyes and pride in order that it may deny self and follow Christ. For true conversion the understanding must be converted as well. The eye of the soul must be able to see and receive light for the soul to be light in the Lord. It is pride that holds the soul in the grip of the darkness of self and pride. That bondage must be broken by the light of the knowledge of His glory in order that it may know Him which is eternal life.

Pride, Part 32

June 10, 2009

The principle that man makes himself the measure of all things is one that is thoroughly biblical. For example, Isaiah 53:6 tells us that “All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own way.” Instead of following God, the pride of man in making his own way is seen. Each person turns to his or her own way and in doing so shows the nature of true sin. Turning to our own way may be seen in gross sin or in committed religion, but each is seeking our own way. The Bible shows the Pharisees choosing their own way in the things of religion when Jesus corrected their interpretations in the Sermon on the Mount. They chose their own way in their interpretations of Scripture that allowed them to be religious for the honor of others and also use religion to lie and take the property of others. That is a very man-centered way of doing things.

“In egocentric religion, we may say, man is the measure of all things-even of God. For God Himself is understood in the light of man. In theocentric religion it is God who is the ‘disposer supreme,’ the final arbiter of all things. Here, man is understood in the light of God. Expressing the difference in specifically religious language, we may say; in egocentric religion, man chooses or ‘elects’ God; in theocentric religion, God chooses or ‘elects’ man.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

Romans 1 also gives the way this happens:

“For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 19 because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. 20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse. 21 For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals.”

There are the basic things about God that are evident within human beings. In and through creation God’s eternal power and divine nature are understood and leaves all people without excuse. Yet human beings do not honor God and instead suppress the truth about Him and exchange the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man. The pattern is the same in all areas. The truth of God must be suppressed in order for the image of corruptible man to be asserted. In some forms of paganism they will use figures of beings for idols, but this idolatry can also be nothing more than concepts of the mind. Our theology can be idolatrous. Our good works can be idolatrous. Our going to church and doing what is called worship can be idolatrous. These are idolatrous when we are man-centered in what we do. When we are man-centered we have automatically suppressed the truth of God in order to make ourselves the center of things. This is simply a hideous pride to suppress the truth of God in order to make church all about man. Man-centeredness in anything but especially religion is scraping the very depths of pride and idolatry.

Wherever humanism and man-centeredness are found, idolatry is there in some form. Many of the good things that people carry out in various charities and organizations are really vile forms of idolatry. That is because they are from man-centered teachings. Even when we are trying to help our fellow human beings we can be fully given over to the idolatry of man-centeredness. In fact, there is nothing inconsistent with doing great things for human beings and man-centeredness. The Pharisees gave alms to the poor out of their man-centeredness. They would also hide their lies and greed by swearing on various religious things and then trying to find a way out of it. That is man-centered idolatry and nothing less. But what of those that preach on how others should give money to their ministries and that God will give those people even more? What about those that preach that God will heal if others only have the faith and express that faith by giving money? What about those with orthodox creeds who are full of pride over the words and over the fact that they have the truth while others don’t as if that makes them better? What of orthodox preachers who preach so that they will be honored by men? What of those that are proud of how much they tithe? What of those who are proud of their prayers? What of those who are proud of their righteousness or good works? It is all nothing but hideous pride and is to be at enmity with God.

Pride, Part 31

June 8, 2009

The pride of man is so great that he always thinks of himself first. If he hears that God is love, he thinks that God must love him instead of thinking of the triune God as being love within Himself. If he hears of God being just, he will think of justice according to his standard rather than thinking of it according to the character of God. Man thinks of hell as not being so bad because he thinks of the standard of sin, justice, and wrath in accordance with himself and his own fallen ideas. The pride of man’s heart has so worked that man is now the measure of all things, and yes, even of God. Man is so proud that he has even twisted Christianity to make it man-centered. When man thinks of the cross of Christ, he thinks of what that means for him first rather than what it means for God. When man thinks of the Holy Spirit, he thinks of the things the Spirit can give him. Christianity has thus been diluted if not almost destroyed in modern America by humanism and self-centeredness. That is nothing but pride.

“In egocentric religion, we may say, man is the measure of all things-even of God. For God Himself is understood in the light of man. In theocentric religion it is God who is the ‘disposer supreme,’ the final arbiter of all things. Here, man is understood in the light of God. Expressing the difference in specifically religious language, we may say; in egocentric religion, man chooses or ‘elects’ God; in theocentric religion, God chooses or ‘elects’ man.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

Some might think of Reformed theology as having escaped the ravages of the pride of man, but it has not. Reformed theology can become little more than an intellectual philosophy in the hands of proud man. People who are Arminian or even Pelagian at heart can put the veneer of Reformed theology over their man-centered hearts. The brain can hold to creeds of theology that a man-centered heart has stripped of its real meaning. So a person can walk around with a creed of Reformed theology while having gutted the heart of its God-centeredness. This is to gut Reformed theology of true Christianity. Reformed theology has historically taught on the total depravity of man, but totally depraved human beings can also believe in Reformed theology in a creedal sense while that same depravity can strip it of its inherent God-centeredness and make it man-centered. Thus the truth of total depravity impacts and even strips the meaning of creeds that declare it. The words of the creed can be adhered to while the pride of the depraved heart will strip it of the meaning that the words point to.

When man becomes the real center or measure of all things, the very nature of sin is in control to some degree. The pride of man’s heart will make himself the measure of human beings, the creeds, the Bible, and then God. There is no end to what the pride of the human heart will desire. After all, the promise Satan made to Eve was that she would be as God. The pride of the heart of humanity is such that all do desire to be as God. This is seen in religion and in Christianity as well as if not more than other places. The desire for man to be God is seen in man making himself, his reason, and his morality as the measure of God rather than Christ who is the perfect image of God. To understand God man must go by the standard of measure of God’s self-revelation in the Bible and especially in Christ. Rather than man being conformed to Christ as the image of God, fallen man in his pride tries to twist the truth of God until He is conformed to the image of man. As one ancient put it, “God has created man in His own image and man has returned the favor.”

The Pharisees were masters of this great sin through the use of the Old Testament and their writings. Modern man has perhaps outstripped the Pharisees in the extent and degree in which this is done. In modern forms of Christianity God is no longer the absolute sovereign of the universe that only shows men favor by grace alone, but instead He is now the divine genie by which men can gain riches and honor for themselves if they will just jump through certain hoops. Man does not like the will of God being supreme over him, so he decides that his own will is the final arbiter for himself. Man does not like the fact that the Bible teaches election which means that God must choose a man from His own will, so he turns things around so that man now elects God by a choice of man’s will. Those who are more orthodox know that God has something to do with salvation, so they let Him provide most of salvation and then try to talk others into seeing Christ as acceptable to them rather than declaring that God from sheer grace must make man acceptable to Himself through Christ. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is by grace alone, but man in his pride and self-centeredness always leaves himself something to do as the final arbiter of his own salvation. Thus we have those who are Reformed in creed essentially gutting Reformed theology by practicing forms of evangelism that are man-centered and dependent on the choice of man in reality. How idolatrous pride is.

Conversion, Part 18

June 6, 2009

In the last newsletter we began to look at the purpose for conversion in terms of what God purposes or intends by converting sinners. Conversion is clearly the work of God alone and He only converts sinners by His grace and according to His eternal purposes. So many errors arise when we look at conversion from man-centered or man-focused way. Man desires to be free from hell and have a good life. So if a person says a prayer and seems to be blessed of God, that person will think that s/he is converted. It does not take much to get some people to say a prayer and then to lead something of an externally moral life. When they think of themselves as being blessed of God both now and in eternity, it is easy for them to think of themselves as saved or converted. But if we try to understand conversion as the work of God and its purpose being assigned to it by God, then everything changes.

In the last newsletter one aspect of glorifying God was mentioned that will be the focus of this newsletter. The Bible is clear that we are to live to the glory of God which means that we are to do all to the glory of God. But what is not so clear in our day is the meaning of that. If we think of doing something to His glory and all we mean by that is that we mention His name in what we do, then that is quite easy. If we mean by that we do things in order to make God look good (though we may state it differently), then as long as we do things that we think make God look good we are doing fine. If by that we mean that what we do honors God, then what we do that we think honors Him makes us think we am fulfilling the command quite well. But the problem is that none of those things really make sense in light of Scripture as a whole. It is true that at times we think of God being glorified when someone does something that honors Him, but that is not the pinnacle of partaking in His holiness. How we perceive or understand this has massive ramifications for the Gospel, worship and for daily life.

In the last newsletter I wrote this: “We must not imagine that human beings can glorify God by their own strength and wisdom. We think that we can do things to glorify Him, but we can’t. We may think we glorify God if we are moral and do religious things, but that is the creed of the Pharisees. We must begin to understand that God’s glory belongs to God alone. In the past the glory of God was spoken of as ad intra and then ad extra.” The following quotes are aimed at trying to understand these things more.

“When He is said to seek His own glory, it is, indeed, nothing else but to ray and beam forth, as it were, His own lustre…God does then most glorify and exalt Himself in the most triumphant way that may be, ad extra, or out of Himself, if I may so phrase it, when He most of all communicates Himself, and when He erects such monuments of His own majesty, wherein His own love and goodness may live and reign. And we then most of all glorify Him, when we partake most of Him; when our serious endeavours after a true assimilation to Him, and conformity to His image…The Divine love, according to those degrees by which it works upon the souls of men, in transforming them into its own likeness, by the same renders them more acceptable to itself, mingleth itself with, and uniteth itself to, them.” (John Smith, Select Discourses).

“We cannot see Divine things but in a Divine light; God only, who is the true light, and in whom there is no darkness at all, can so shine out of Himself upon our glassy understandings, as to beget in them a picture of Himself, His own will and pleasure, and turn the soul, as the phrase is, like wax or clay to the seal of His own light and love…Many are apt to misapprehend the notion of God’s glory, and flatter themselves with their pretended and imaginary aiming at the glory of God…A man does not direct all his actions to the glory of God by forming a conception in his mind, or stirring up a strong imagination upon any action, that that must be for the glory of God; it is not the thinking of God’s glory that is glorifying of Him…We rather glorify God by entertaining the impressions of His glory upon us, rather than by communicating any kind of glory to Him… It is His own internal glory that He most loves, and the communication thereof which He seeks… Though God cannot seek His own glory as if He might acquire any addition to Himself, yet He may seek it so as to communicate it out of Himself…As God’s seeking His own glory in respect of us, is must properly the flowing forth of His goodness upon us; so our seeking the glory of God is most properly our endeavouring after a participation of His goodness, and an earnest incessant pursuing after Divine perfection…God seeks no glory but His own; and we have none of our own to give Him…Salvation is nothing else but a true participation of the Divine nature.” (John Smith, Select Discourses).

Isaiah 42:8 might point to a problem: “I am the LORD, that is My name; I will not give My glory to another” However, God’s not giving His glory to another is different than His shining out in sinners and making them partakers of His glory. It is still His glory. Conversion is not a person making a change and then working to make God look good, but it is God making the soul a partaker of His Divine glory. We partake as God shines out of Himself into us continually and the sinner becomes like God as s/he is transformed by that glory (II Cor 3:18). God is not giving the sinner something that becomes his or hers, but He is sharing Himself in such a way that the sinner becomes like Him more and more. But the glory is always His. Thus we can see how it is that God opposes the proud and yet gives grace to the humble. The proud want to use the things of God for their own glory and welfare so God does not share Himself with them. The humble see and know that they are to be emptied of self and so receive all from Him and that it is His glory that is shining through them. The glory of God, then, shines in and through these people and He delights Himself and His own glory as it transforms them and shines through them.

“So this I say, and affirm together with the Lord, that you walk no longer just as the Gentiles also walk, in the futility of their mind, 18 being darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart; 19 and they, having become callous, have given themselves over to sensuality for the practice of every kind of impurity with greediness. 20 But you did not learn Christ in this way, 21 if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, 22 that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, 23 and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth” (Ephesians 4:17-24).

The text above also points us to many things about conversion. Unbelief is to live in the futility of a mind that is darkened and excluded from the life of God. Unbelief has to do with ignorance and hardness of heart which leads to sensuality. But learning Christ (not just doctrine, but to know Him in the depths of the soul) is to lay aside the of the old self and to put on the new self. The new self has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth. The new self is created in God or in the likeness of God. This is what John Smith (from above) is referring to when he speaks of a Divine light that begets a picture of Himself. In other words, conversion is not just some mechanical operation that God does upon the soul, but it is the activity of God that takes sinful creatures and makes them like Himself. In the Trinity God shines out the Lord Christ Jesus which is the shining forth of His glory (John 1:14-18; Heb 1:1-3). This is simply how the triune God functions. When God shines out in a sinner’s soul, He shines out in Christ and that glory is a creating glory which takes a sinner and transforms him or her. It is that glory that takes a person and transforms him or her to be like Him from one degree of glory to another (II Cor 3:18).

God is perfectly holy and perfectly beautiful. His great love is within the Trinity and He cannot love another unless it is out of love for Himself. When He sets His love on a sinner, He gives that sinner what is best and that is Himself. But to do that He must change the sinner from the inside out which is conversion. He must change sinners so that they can receive the shining forth of His glory and be changed to where they love His glory and desire that glory to shine forth from them. He must change their minds, their hearts, their loves, and therefore their wills. God’s purpose in saving sinners is to manifest the glory of His grace (Eph 1:5-6; 2:4-10). He does not save them just so they can escape hell, but in order that they would manifest the glory of His grace for eternity. But we must also remember that believers are temples of the glory of God now. When the Bible tells us that we are saved to the glory of His grace, this is not to be understood as meaning that we are inactive. It means that we are now to be those that have the glory of God dwelling in us and that glory is to change us and then shine through us.

As John Smith said, “God seeks no glory but His own; and we have none of our own to give Him.” For a sinner to glorify God it is God that must seek His glory through that person. It is God that changes the sinner to see and love His glory. It means that the sinner is a dwelling place of that glory. It means that the sinner does not seek his or her own way, but the life that they now have (Christ, the glory of God) lives in them and makes them partakers of His glory. As they behold His glory they are changed more and more to become like Him and to partake of the Divine glory. It is then that His glory shines out through them because it really is His glory shining through them. It is always His glory and yet we glorify Him because we are converted to His image of glory. Conversion is God taking a soul and making it like Him in seeking His glory as He shines out in His glory. That is a radical change.

Pride, Part 30

June 6, 2009

Jeremiah 17:9 speaks to how “The heart is more deceitful than all else And is desperately sick; Who can understand it?” It is a verse that most who have been to even a relatively conservative church have heard. It is a verse that many have heard of, but it is not a truth that we really deal with much at all. We don’t want to deal with our own hearts to discover the abyss of deceitfulness that is in them. We don’t want to see the desperate sickness of our own hearts. While it is true that the sinfulness of man can be seen by looking at how wicked people become without as they degenerate into all sorts of sinful behavior apart from God, it is not as easy for us to see how wicked people can become within the confines of religion. The Pharisees became very wicked even while upholding many orthodox beliefs. Let us not assume that our age (and perhaps ourselves) has escaped their error. They used religion and even their belief about God to excuse sinful behavior and hide sin from their own hearts. They denigrated God because they were dealing with the things of God. Without realizing it they (man) became the measure of God rather than God being the measure of man. Our age has done the same thing as well.

“In egocentric religion, we may say, man is the measure of all things-even of God. For God Himself is understood in the light of man. In theocentric religion it is God who is the ‘disposer supreme,’ the final arbiter of all things. Here, man is understood in the light of God. Expressing the difference in specifically religious language, we may say; in egocentric religion, man chooses or ‘elects’ God; in theocentric religion, God chooses or ‘elects’ man.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

In the modern version or perversion of Christianity man has indeed become the measure of God. We will say hard things about the world as it does that, but we don’t realize that is exactly what we are doing as well. Our way of “doing church” is more about man than God. We want people to be comfortable coming to church and we will go to great lengths not to offend them so that they will like it and come back. What lengths do we go to in order that God may come to church and not leave? We just assume that God will be there since we have Bibles and offer things we call prayers. But should we just assume that? The church has become weak because it has made man the measure of a success. Let us not imagine that any particular denomination or theology has the corner on that practice. The standard of Reformed theology today is also that we are to be more concerned with being gracious and winsome than anything else. That can be nothing more than making man the standard and a tacit admission that we want to please men rather than tell them the truth about a God whose wrath they are under.

When people start churches, what is their focus? Isn’t it getting people in the door? They do evangelism to get people in the door. They do discipleship programs to get people to stay. They do worship a certain way to reach a certain group of people. They go to certain neighborhoods and try to fit in. The messages are watered down under the guise of making things practical or that people cannot understand theology or the deep things. What is this but making man the measure of all things? We are not evangelizing in order to make God acceptable to people, but it is to tell people the message of the living God and that they must repent of perish. We are to disciple because all are commanded to deny self and follow Christ. We are to worship because God is worthy and we can only truly worship if we love Him and our worship is done in spirit and in truth.

Man has become the measure of what sin is in the sense that sin is only bad if it hurts or harms another person. We have made man the measure of sin in the sense that we develop our own standard of what is right or wrong according to our own reason rather than the word of God. Man is the measure of sin when we ask how something can be wrong rather than whether it glorifies God or not. Man is the measure of sin when we think that if we are not violating any external commands we can do pretty much as we please.

Man has become the measure of Bible study when the Bible is studied with the main idea of helping man in life. Man is the measure of teaching when we focus our teaching on how man can overcome certain problems. Man is the measure when we tell him that he must esteem himself to do good rather than do all in the power of grace and to the glory of God. Man is the measure when he determines what is true about God based on what his fallen reason can come up with as a rational basis for God. In other words, God has left the professing Church and we have replaced Him with the idol built up in our own image. Such is the great danger of making the idol of self the standard. When we are there, we will always think God is here. The true God, however, has long since departed.

Pride, Part 29

June 3, 2009

It seems that Christianity today is under a dark cloud of self (pride). We are only moved for Christ for reasons of self. We go to church if it pleases self enough. We want what is called worship to please me rather than God. We want the preaching to be light and entertaining. We want the atmosphere and the furniture to be just right. When we sing we want it to make us feel good. When we pray it is all about the things of self. Down deep we still believe that if we are holy enough God will give us the things we want. Does deep we still believe that if we will be holy enough and pray enough God will give us growth of the church and perhaps revival. Even in the most spiritual things the orthodox in creed have such low thoughts of God when it comes to living. Our worship and our prayers are all very proud when for self rather than God. To pray in the name of Christ means far more than just tacking His name on at the end of a prayer,” but it is to pray without any self-reliance or hope in self. Prayer based on self (even partially) rather than Christ is nothing but pride. True prayer is based on Christ’s righteousness with Him as the goal and motive. It is to pray moved by Christ and seeking His glory out of love rather than anything of self.

“It is also a question to which the answer [fellowship with God] does not lie finally with me. Nothing that I may do or become can decisively ensure my standing with God. I cannot establish a claim to His favour or control His dealings with me. He is not to be moved by my merits or worthiness or by anything else of mine. On the contrary, I am moved by Him. I am moved to both seek fellowship with Him and to strive to do His will-not for the sake of any benefit I may derive therefrom, but simply and solely because such is His good pleasure and my unconditional obligation.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

In daily life and in prayer it is so hard (impossible by the efforts of self) to realize that the answer does not reside within self. It is possible to desire something of fellowship with God based on the desires of self rather than the life of Christ within the believer. But it is so contrary to our being born dead in pride and self-centeredness to understand that we have no claim on the favor of God or how He deals with us. The truth of the matter is that we are totally dependent on the hand of sovereign grace for each and every thing. We are not in hell only and simply because of His good pleasure and not because of any worthiness or merit we have. We have no claim on God and no way to establish a claim on Him through Christ but by grace and grace is always based on the character of God and not anything a human being can do. But a proud heart constantly looks to self for ways to obtain grace.

It is so hard for those bound within a self-centered view of humanity, nature, and of God to think of cause and effect relationships as being God-centered. We think that if we are holy then God will give us what we want rather than God will give us holiness in order to make us like Him and He is the greatest gift of all. True holiness is only found in love for God and the manifestation of His glory. If we think we are being holy when we are trying to get something from Him, then it is most likely that our very holiness is the height of our pride. The inward desires and motives of the heart can be nothing but the pride of self seeking to manipulate God. Ephesians 2 gives the pattern of God (true cause and effect) in all things: “But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, 5 even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), 6 and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, 7 so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.” God shows mercy because of His great love. His love is based on Himself and not anything found in human beings because there is nothing but sin found in human beings. God makes sinners alive by grace and God moves sinners to holiness and love by His grace. The purpose of God in these things is to manifest the surpassing riches of His grace toward sinners in Christ Jesus. So God is moved by Himself with the ultimate goal of Himself. When we desire God to be moved by self rather than Himself, that is nothing but the horrors of pride in us.

God is not moved by what is in us unless we can claim that God is moved by our sin, but He is moved by love for His own glory. After all, to be truly holy God must be moved by His own glory rather than our sin. We are moved to seek fellowship with Him because it is God moving within us. When God moves within us, our hearts are moved for His glory and pleasure rather than self. When self desires God, it desires God for self. Psalm 115:1 is the cry of the heart that is moved by God. “Not to us, O LORD, not to us, But to Your name give glory Because of Your lovingkindness, because of Your truth.” Self must become repugnant to us by the work of the Spirit moving us to love God. It is only when we have turned from pride and self to love God that we truly fellowship with Him.

Pride, Part 28

May 31, 2009

We have been looking at pride and how religion can be man-centered without people even recognizing it. God can be thought of as man-centered and men can think of all that religion entails as centered upon them. There is virtually nothing in Christianity as far as its teaching or its practices that proud men cannot focus on themselves and turn it into man-centered religion. In man-centered religion God becomes one that is bought and manipulated by men depending on what they can believe and do. Once one begins to see how the depraved hearts of human beings take things that are centered upon God and center them upon themselves, the teaching of the Bible on the depravity of man becomes even more obvious. The proud hearts of human beings are so blinded by the love of self that they can intellectually adopt orthodox creeds while their hearts are far from the living God.

“In theocentric religion, on the other hand, God is the sovereign and unquestionable Lord of man’s existence. He confronts man with compelling authority; and in His presence there is no place left for egoism in any form. He cannot be regarded here as the One from whom I expect either the fulfilment of my desires or the reward of my deserts. The question of my relationship to Him is not even in the remotest sense optional, dependent on my wishes or sense of need. It is a matter of urgent and imperious necessity.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

Man can even call God sovereign and yet think of this from a man-centered perspective. This is to say that the proud hearts of human beings will use words and phrases that sound God-centered but they will have twisted the meaning in their hearts to where man retains some control. We can think of God as sovereign but want Him to control others for our own purposes. We want Him to be sovereign over all things, but we stop His sovereignty at the door of our own hearts. There seems to be a type of Reformed thinking today that uses the historic language of the sovereignty of God and yet does not want God to be sovereign over the heart. It is able to retain the language and appearances of the sovereignty of God, but in shutting the door at the level of my own heart it remains a man-centered view of God. It is okay to a proud heart like that to think of God as sovereign over creation and over other people, but we retain a freedom for ourselves which is to say we still think we control God to some degree.

The proud heart of man retains lordship over himself (at least in the deep recesses of the thoughts of the heart) and thinks that he can obey God or not at his own will. He simply has not realized the depths of the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Apart from Him we can do nothing (John 15:4-5). The heart that has not dealt with its own pride and the glory of God will even accept those verses intellectually, but it will not accept those practically. Jesus Christ is absolute Lord over all hearts and the entire spiritual realm. We can do absolutely nothing in the spiritual realm apart from the inner work of Christ in our soul. That is humbling at the least, yet a man-centered approach to that denies this teaching in a practical way. The proud heart refuses to give up its pride. Pride and self will not die to pride and self unless Christ puts them to death. This is so hard for the proud and man-centered heart to give up. It will believe anything in order to keep from dying to self so that Christ will be absolute Lord of that heart. It will do anything in order to keep from dying to self so that Christ will be absolute Lord of that heart.

As the quote above says, “in His presence there is no place left for egoism in any form.” Here is a statement of magnificent proportions. If this statement could only be understood within Christendom it would be like a massive earthquake hitting an area with primitive buildings. The forms of Christianity that are so prevalent today are man-centered in theology and in methodology. If Christendom came to more than just an intellectual understanding of the extent of the sovereignty of God much of its man-centeredness would fall to the ground and be despised. It would be something like Job 42: “I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear; But now my eye sees You;
6 Therefore I retract, And I repent in dust and ashes” (vv. 5-6). Theology and creeds can simply be something like hearing of God by the ear. But when we come into His presence we retract (literally, loathe myself) and repent in dust and ashes. There is no room for pride and self in any form in the presence of the living and sovereign God.
Isaiah 6 also shows us how man responds when he sees God as He is in His sovereignty and holiness: “Then I said, “Woe is me, for I am ruined! Because I am a man of unclean lips, And I live among a people of unclean lips; For my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts” (v. 5). Isaiah had no place left for his pride or self. He had no place left for a religion that depended on him and his works and merits. Isaiah had no room for anything or anyone but the glory of this great God. He was utterly undone and had nothing but grace to look to. What happened to pride and self in Isaiah? In the presence of God there was no room left for those things. He was emptied of self.

Conversion, Part 17

May 28, 2009

One thing that can help us understand conversion is to look at its purpose. If a person is building a house, it has a different purpose than if one is building a warehouse or a public playground. The purpose for a structure determines the nature of the structure. It is also true in automobiles. If a company wants to build a vehicle to haul heavy objects and pull trailers, they will not build a small vehicle with no room in the back. It is also true that if they want to build a vehicle that gets great gas mileage, the end result will not be a large truck with a large motor. So in looking at the purpose God had in creation and then in conversion will help us to see His purpose and the nature of true conversion. We must also fight to keep ourselves thinking in a God-centered way. The purposes of conversion must be God-centered rather than man-centered. If we think that the main purpose God has is to rescue sinners from hell, then we are thinking in terms of man’s need rather than the purposes of God.

Ephesians 3 gives a piece of the puzzle: “To me, the very least of all saints, this grace was given, to preach to the Gentiles the unfathomable riches of Christ, 9 and to bring to light what is the administration of the mystery which for ages has been hidden in God who created all things; 10 so that the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known through the church to the rulers and the authorities in the heavenly places. 11 This was in accordance with the eternal purpose which He carried out in Christ Jesus our Lord, 12 in whom we have boldness and confident access through faith in Him.” Paul saw his position and privilege as a preacher was not just to tell people things to make them comfortable, but it was to declare the eternal purposes of God hidden for ages. This eternal plan of God was from the eternal wisdom of God who created all things. Colossians 1:16 tells us that the Savior who saves sinners is also the One that all things were created through and for: “For by Him all things were created, both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities– all things have been created through Him and for Him.” Whatever there is in all creation it was created through and by Christ. God’s eternal purpose begins to shine as we see that from eternity all things were created through and by Christ. Salvation should be seen as having eternal purposes from within the Godhead as well.

Revelation 4:11 tells us that God created all things for His own glory and pleasure: “Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created” (KJV). This should not surprise us at all. Before there was a beginning of creation for eternity past God existed in eternal pleasure and joy within the Trinity. He could have no other purpose for creation that would be fitting other than His own glory and pleasure. He could have no greater or higher purpose than Himself in creation and so it would be against His holiness and justice if He had another reason to have created. He also could not have any higher reason to save sinners who are His creation than to save them for the purposes of His glory. There is no higher purpose than the glory of God and so the purpose of converting sinners must be the glory of His name.

As we look at what human beings are commanded to do, we are commanded to love God with all of our being. That is simply to be like God who is perfect and infinite love within the Trinity. He perfectly loves Himself as triune. We are also commanded to do what love would demand from us: “Whether, then, you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31). Ephesians 1:6 tells us the purpose of salvation when it says that we are saved “to the praise of the glory of His grace, which He freely bestowed on us in the Beloved.” Ephesians 2:5-7 shows this with even more clarity: “even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), 6 and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, 7 so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.” It is simply impossible to escape the conclusion that sinners are saved by and for the purposes of God to manifest His glory. We must see this from a God-centered viewpoint or we will miss the reasons and purposes for conversion and therefore the nature of true conversion.

Let us look at two more verses of Scripture that teach this. “Just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we would be holy and blameless before Him” (Eph 1:4). “Also we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to His purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will” (Eph 1:11). God has purposes for human beings in saving them. He has had purposes from eternity for them and those purposes are for His glory. In order to convert a soul to fit it as an instrument for His purposes that soul must be made fit to be an instrument though which His glory would shine through. A soul is not just saved from hell, but it is saved to be an instrument through which the glory of God would shine through. It must be converted to do that.

Romans 3:23 gives us a definition of sin: “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Romans 1:21 also sets out this same truth: “For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened.” The word translated as “honor” is the same root word we translate as “glory” Romans 3:23 and other places. Another definition for sin is given in I John: “Everyone who practices sin also practices lawlessness; and sin is lawlessness” (3:4). God exalts the Law, but man violates the Law. Jesus came to fulfill the Law out of love for the Father, but man breaks the Law out of enmity toward the Father. Sinners are full of pride and self-centeredness as they live for their own honor making their own laws. Despite the religiosity of the Pharisees, that describes them exactly. For a person to be turned from seeking his or her own honor and violating the Law of God out of enmity toward Him, that person must be converted to one that lives for the glory of God and loves Him and His Law. That requires a total change of the inner person.

The unconverted mind is in darkness and must be converted to receive the light of the glory of God shining out in Christ and the Gospel. The affections of the unconverted go after the things of the world and of the flesh and must be converted to love spiritual things and the glory of God. The unconverted will always chooses the things of the flesh and must be converted in order to pursue God and the things of God in the pursuit of His glory as the chief love. True conversion will not be understood until we understand these things to some degree. Jesus Christ Himself is the very temple of the glory of God (John 1:14) and is the outshining of the glory of God (Heb 1:3). The sinner must be converted so the life of Christ is his or her life. The life of Christ is the shining forth of the glory of God and when Christ lives in a soul that soul will live to the glory of God. The Gospel consists of what Christ has done so that God would shine in hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of His glory in the face of Christ (II Cor 4:6). The souls of sinners must be converted in order to see and love this glory and then be instruments by which the glory of God that shines in Christ would now shine in and through sinners so His glory would be manifested.

We must not imagine that human beings can glorify God by their own strength and wisdom. We think that we can do things to glorify Him, but we can’t. We may think we glorify God if we are moral and do religious things, but that is the creed of the Pharisees. We must begin to understand that God’s glory belongs to God alone. In the past the glory of God was spoken of as ad intra and then ad extra. Those are ways of speaking of the glory of God as being within Himself and then the glory shining out of Him. We must understand that apart from Jesus Christ (the outshining of the glory of God) we cannot glorify God. We must understand that we can do nothing spiritual apart from the Holy Spirit. A sinner has no power within himself to reach out and take glory from the inner character of God and then shine it for others to see. What must happen is that the sinner must be humbled and empty so that God will manifest His glory through the sinner. It is God alone who can take His inner glory and manifest it. It is God alone who can take a fallen sinner and make a new creature out of that sinner who will then live to the manifestation of the glory of His name. It is God alone who can manifest His glory through a human being.

Conversion can only be seen in light of God’s purpose(s). The one purpose of God is expressed to us as purposes. Humans were created (all creation) to be instruments of His glory, but man fell into sin and is now opposed to the glory of God in all parts. This is total depravity. There is nothing in man that is not opposed to God’s glory. Man is now dead in sin which is to be spiritually dead. That is when the Spirit is not working spiritual things in man. To save sinners, grant them His presence, and to make them instruments of His glory God has to convert them from what they were to instruments that can receive and love His glory. If a human being cannot love His glory, then that human being will never see or live for His glory. The New Covenant teaches that God lives in sinners: “I WILL PUT MY LAWS INTO THEIR MINDS, AND I WILL WRITE THEM ON THEIR HEARTS. AND I WILL BE THEIR GOD, AND THEY SHALL BE MY PEOPLE” (Heb 8:10). The Law can only be kept out of love for God and His glory from the heart. That only happens when God is dwelling there and manifesting His glory in and through the sinner. “For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, 15 from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name, 16 that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with power through His Spirit in the inner man, 17 so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; and that you, being rooted and grounded in love.” In this we see that the work of the Holy Spirit in the inner man is necessary so that Christ would dwell in a heart by faith so that a person is grounded in love. Conversion is when sinners are changed by the Spirit and made into dwelling places of the living God. Conversion is the Spirit applying what Christ purchased so that Christ would dwell in and manifest or shine the Father’s glory through them. Conversion is God changing sinners by the work of Christ through the Spirit to be instruments of His glory.

Pride, Part 27

May 28, 2009

As we think through the ramifications that pride and self-centeredness have for the modern versions of Christianity, it is becoming even clearer that the modern professing Church has lost the very core of Christianity. The core of Christianity is indeed Christ and the cross, but if we water Christ and the cross down into a form of humanism we no longer have Christ and the cross. The Christ and the cross that are being taught today in many places are man-centered and are little more than a form of humanism. Christ came to deliver sinners from themselves and give them over to new hearts that love God. He does not leave them in their state of pride and self-centeredness and simply give them more rules and things to do that fill self with more pride.

“Eudemonism means that my desires and needs, whether temporal or spiritual, are the fundamental inspiration of my quest for acceptance with God. I seek God in pursuit of my own interests. Impelled, for instance, the fear of hell and hope of heaven, or by a yearning for present peace of heart and mind, I seek God no less for my own satisfaction than if I sought material advantages at His hands. In egocentric religion, fellowship with God depends ultimately on man’s achievement and is sought ultimately for man’s own ends. God is characteristically conceived in terms of the answer to human problems and needs.” (Let God Be God! An Interpretation of the Theology of Martin Luther)

The state of the heart of human beings is exceedingly deceitful. It takes the Word of God to set the truth before its eyes and it takes the Holy Spirit to open the eyes and allow them to see spiritual things. A person can be very involved in religious things and essentially be absorbed in the things of self. A person can be a minister and be absorbed with the things of self. A person can be a very orthodox minister and be absorbed with the things of self. A person can be a very nice, kind, and even caring person (outwardly) and still be primarily concerned about the things of self. In Philippians 2 we have Paul wanting to send the people a minister, but he had no one to send them. In verses 20-21 he tells them this: “For I have no one else of kindred spirit who will genuinely be concerned for your welfare. 21 For they all seek after their own interests, not those of Christ Jesus.” Evidently Paul wanted to send them a minister or someone who would train them in the faith but the only ones he knew about were concerned with the interests of self rather than the interests of Christ. Would he have anyone to send today?

This is another way of saying that what inspired these men in the ministry were their own desires and perceived needs. Perhaps they wanted more respect and renown, a bigger and better package, or perhaps more authority in the church. But all that they were doing in seeking God was to use Him to seek their own interests. It may also be the case that these men were interested in building treasures in heaven. Now the Bible does teach us about building treasures in heaven, but one can have an unbiblical idea of those things too. It is no better to seek treasures in heaven for the wrong reasons and of the wrong kind than it is to seek to build earthly treasures. It is nothing but pride to seek self in heaven or on earth. It is entirely godless and it is to be full of pride to seek God only for the things of self or the advancement of self. It is idolatry to seek God for the desires and things of self. In the Old Testament we can see how the Israelites tried to use idols and false gods to protect them from their enemies and to get their crops to grow. That is plainly idolatry as they were using false gods to get what they wanted.

Can we say that it is less idolatrous to use the true God to get what we want? One might argue that we only have half the problem of the Israelites. They used false gods and sought the things of self. Now we have the true God as we seek the things of self. Some will even go so far as to say that God is glorified in giving us what we want and desire. That is entirely hideous in its deception. We are clearly told that we must deny self in order to follow Christ rather than to seek Christ in order to have self fulfilled and its desires met. The desires and so-called needs of self are wicked and sinful and yet we think God is glorified if He fulfills those wicked desires? If God does give us over to hardened hearts and allow those sinful desires for self to be fulfilled He is acting in judicial punishment. Yet we pack the church buildings by telling people that God will meet all their needs and will fulfill their desires. Orthodox people will tell others to believe the right things and believe God to give them what they need. But where is the power and life of the living God in the soul? Where is the utter denial of self and the interests of self so that God will fill the soul with Himself which is what is truly good? Ministers who are concerned with the interests of self will teach others in a way that makes it sound like God will fulfill their interests as well. A minister that is only concerned with self-interests is a very proud person and is a hireling rather than a true shepherd.