Your “Friend”

saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’ Luke 14:30 NASB

Not able to finish – What if your best friend is really your worst enemy? What if embracing surrender to God means committing suicide of your self? What if there isn’t any real life after this death?

Answers to these kinds of questions are at the heart of the good news. The good news isn’t about your personal rescue from sin. It is about the establishment of God’s kingdom on earth. That is a joyful pronouncement to those who long for something other than living in Babylon. But it comes with cost. Freedom always does. If you and I are going to be free to live in a world of God’s making, then some of our best friends will have to die. Actually, the heart of the good news is that your best friend, the one you have relied upon for all these years, will have to die. Let’s see why.

Who has taken care of you all your life? You, of course. When everyone else failed, you didn’t. You provided that place of shelter when others battered your self worth. You made sure you could still function in a world that ignored your dreams. You gave yourself the necessary medication in order not to collapse into utter despair or pull the trigger of release. You stepped in with comfort when the world greeted you with accusations and punishment. Without you, you could not have survived. You are the best friend you have ever had.

And your worst enemy. All that time you were taking care of yourself, you were also extending the Early Warning System and the defensive borders. Survival became much more that food, shelter and oxygen. The “you” within is incredibly adaptable and voracious. So your borders began to include emotional protection, confrontation rejection and, above all, escape. You found that safe place, that spot where no one could hurt you at that moment—except you in the following moments. And that safe place became the default way of dealing with the world and other people. After all, they all failed to treat you as well as you did. Hearing the old song, “You’re not good enough,” only reinforced your resolve to leave them all behind, even if for a few moments. You converted confrontation into isolation.

But there was always the hint, the thin red line, the unsettling awareness that your isolation wasn’t real. It meant that you could not really be yourself in the presence of anyone else who counted, not even God. As your bifurcated reality increased, so did the strength of the protective mechanisms. You ate more. You swore more. You worked more. You used more. Until even the split apart world didn’t work any more. Your best friend, the one that offered you relief from all those horrible feelings, took over and became your worst enemy. You were a slave to your friend’s need to survive.

“Take up your cross daily” is pietistic tripe in a world where cross-bearing means death to the only friend who ever cared enough to shelter you. The problem is that taking up your cross is the only way out of the prison you built to protect yourself. You never intended it to become a prison. You intended to merely keep out the “bad guys,” those terrible emotional enemies that made havoc of your desire for worthiness and stability. But over time the walls got thicker and the relief you found deep inside the dungeon made it harder and harder to live a transparent life outside the prison. Now the jailer must die in order for you to get out. But how? If he dies, what will be left? A life without protective walls? Exposure to all those traumas? Loss of control? The very thought of a world where there is no place to hide is enough for you to dismantle the cross and go home.

Perhaps that’s the real intention of Yeshua’s question to the crippled man at the pool of Bethesda. “Do you want to get well?” Actually, the Greek text reads, “theleis hygies genesthai” It might be more accurately translated, “Do you affirm with definite conviction and efficacy that healthy you are?” The two verbs are crucial. The first, thelo, indicates an irreversible decision with full commitment to perform. The second, ginomai, is not a future tense (“want to be”) but rather an aorist, middle infinitive. That indicates it is a fully complete act, something accomplished already. Yeshua doesn’t ask that man if he is willing some day to be made whole. He asks the man if right now he sees himself already whole. The miracle isn’t getting to the water. The miracle is seeing a different self, of burning those bridges that kept him tied to a hopeless mythology and released him to God’s goodness now.   As long as we think we are sick, we will be sick.

This isn’t the power of positive thinking. The man wasn’t healed simply because he had a change of mind. But he couldn’t be healed until he had a change of view. As long as his hope resided in the troubled waters, no other means of healing could become reality. He had to see that he could be whole without the waters before the miracle could take effect.

As long as we see ourselves in the image of the “friend” who has kept us prisoner to the instant fix of the troubled waters, we will be chained to our place by the pool. We will long for that day when everything is instantly cured without having to do anything more than get to the pool on time. The problem with this methodology is that when we arrive at the pool, even if the waters are troubled, we arrive with our “friend” in tow. We are still the same person after the so-called healing. We share the same dysfunctional view of our identity. All we have done is grasped one more brass ring.

Yeshua’s transformation begins with self-identification. And self-identification begins with an honest assessment of who we really are, as we are, right now. It begins with saying goodbye to the “friend” who has kept us tied to the lovely ground all these years. If we are going to transition to a newer identity, not one that miraculously erases our past, then we will have to wrestle with our “friend,” just as Jacob did at the brook. We may be defeated by the power we have already given to this comforter of the past. We may not get up from that struggle without a permanent limp. But we will be able to go on, knowing that our friend’s view of who we is no longer all of who we are. We may limp into the Promised Land, but limping across is better than remaining on the wrong side of the river. We may have to pick up our old ways and carry them, but the alternative is to wait for a miracle that may never happen instead of making a miracle happen where we are.

Topical Index: cost, finish, addiction, Luke 14:30

 

 

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Carl Roberts

Yes, your [Blood-Covenant] Friend

“Thirty-one Kings”

or

The Victory Over Self

by A. B. Simpson

“THESE are the kings of the country which Joshua and the children of Israel smote on this side Jordan on the west . . . All the kings were thirty and one” (Josh. 12:7-24).

“Arba was a great man among the Anakims” (Josh. 14: 15).

“Caleb drove out thence the three sons of Anak, Sheshai, Ahiman and Talmai” (Josh. 15:14).

“For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead; and that He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them and rose again” (2 Cor. 5: 14, 15).

These words describe the great conflict of the higher Christian life in the Land of Promise. This is not a conflict with the grosser forms of sin, for we leave them behind us when we cross the Jordan and come into the land of holiness, obedience and rest.

Surely it ought to go without saying, that no consecrated Christian would dare to indulge in willful disobedience or sin. But there are other foes more subtle, and these are symbolized, we believe, by these kings with whom Joshua made war so long.

There are various forms of self-life which, while not perhaps directly and willfully sinful, in the grosser sense are yet as contrary to the will of God, and as necessary to be subdued and slain, before the soul can be in perfect harmony with the Divine will. They are all tyrants, which, if allowed to remain, will ultimately bring us into subjection to sin and separate us from the Lord.

They belong to one family, and the progenitor of every one of them is Arba, the father of Anak; and his first born son, Anak, has perpetuated his generation through many children, and the numerous offspring constitute a line of no less than thirty-one; so that there is a foe for every day in the month, in the Christian’s calendar.

The name Arba means–“the strength of Baal.” This represents the strength of the natural heart. Baal was the ancient Sidonian god of nature, and Arba stands for the natural heart, in all the force of its self-will and self-sufficiency.

The name of his son, Anak, signifies in Hebrew, “long-necked,” and everybody knows that a long neck suggests pride and self-will; so that these two names express the character of the whole family.

The other three sons whose names are mentioned, Sheshai, Ahiman and Talmai carry out the family resemblance.

Sheshai means–“free,” suggesting the idea of the license in which selfishness delights.

Talmai means–“bold,” representing the independence of the self-life, which brooks no control.

Ahiman means–“brother of men,” and expresses aptly the humanitarianism which ignores God, and would make humanity a god unto itself, expressing the self-sufficiency of the race, rather than of the individual.

Shall we look at these kings of the old Self Dynasty, and see if we can recognize any of them in our own experience?

I. SELF-WILL.

This is old Arba, the head of the dynasty. It expresses its decrees in the personal pronoun and the active verb–I will, I shall. It recognizes no king but its own imperative choice.

Arba must die before Hebron can be won by Caleb. Self-will must be slain before love can reign.

Yield yourself unto God, is the watchword at the gate of holiness and peace.

It is not only the evil will, but the self-will that must die. Things that it would be right for us to have, God cannot give us when we want them wilfully, and therefore He has often to crucify us to our own will, for no other reason than to break us, and make us self-surrendered and wholly subjected to His control.

Often, therefore, in our lives, we have had to surrender something to Him which He really wished us to have; and later in our life, when we no longer wanted it because we wanted it, but because it was His will for us, He could trust us with it without harm, and it was freely given, when we could receive it no longer as a selfish idol, but as a Divine trust.

So God had to take Isaac from Abraham, and then give him back as no longer Abraham’s Isaac, but God’s.

The will thus surrendered becomes a stronger will, because it is henceforth not our will, but His within us; and when we choose, we choose with the strength of God, and choose forever.

Have we yielded our will and received His in return? Has the city of Arba become the city of Hebron, and the home of His love?

II. SELF-INDULGENCE.

This is the gratification of self in any of its forms.

Is it wrong to eat and drink, and indulge our appetites? No, the act may not be wrong in itself, but it becomes wrong when we do it for the sake of the indulgence. I am not to eat because it gratifies me to eat; I am not to drink because I enjoy the act; but I am to eat and drink for the glory of God; that is, with the distinct thought and purpose of pleasing Him and ministering to my bodily wants that I may be strong to serve and glorify Him.

It is the thought of self-gratification that defiles the act which in itself is right, but in its motive may be wholly selfish and sinful.

So the commonest acts of life are to be wholly consecrated to Him and done unto Him, and thus they become sacred and holy.

Have we learned the secret of thus living for His glory, and dying unto ourselves?

III. SELF-SEEKING

is one of the forms of self-life which must be surrendered. “Love seeketh not her own.” Her object is not to accomplish some personal end, but to benefit another and to glorify God.

The great business of the people of this world is to seek their own ends, aggrandizements, honors and pleasures. But a consecrated life has but one purpose: to “seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness,” and then to rest in His will, knowing that “all these things shall be added.”

IV. SELF-COMPLACENCY.

This is the spirit of Anak, the long-necked one. It is the spirit of pride; the pride that takes delight in our own qualities and rests with satisfaction in ourselves.

It is very different from vanity, which seeks the approval of others. Self-complacency is so satisfied with itself that it cares little for the opinion of others, and has a lofty independence about it that even scorns their criticism and rises superior to their praise. It is a god unto itself.

It is one of the most subtle forms of self-life, and has a sort of lofty grandeur which blinds its possessor to its danger and its deep sinfulness.

V. SELF-GLORYING

is the converse of this. It seeks the praise of others, rather than its own. It may be very small in its own eyes, and for this very reason tries to shine in the eyes of others.

A lady of rank is not dependent upon her dress or her equipage for her position, but is usually very simple. It is the lack of real greatness that makes the society butterfly eager to attract attention by her gaudy display.

Self-glorying vaunts itself and inflates its little bubble because it is so small. There is no creature so diminutive in its real proportions, when really reduced to its actual dimensions, as the dude and the daughter of fashion.

The truly consecrated life wants none of this. It is conscious of its nothingness, and knows that it is dependent on God alone for all it can ever possess, and therefore it covers its face with the veil of His loveliness, and robes itself in His own righteousness, and then hides in His bosom, saying, “Not I, but Christ that liveth in me.”

VI. SELF-CONFIDENCE.

This is a form of self-life which relies upon its own wisdom, strength and righteousness. It is Simon Peter, saying, “Though all men shall deny Thee, yet will not I.”

This is your man of strong common sense and self-reliance. He believes in his own opinion. He relies upon his own judgment. He laughs at the people who talk about Divine guidance and the Spirit’s leadings.

This must die before we can become established in the strength of Christ. Therefore, the strongest natures have often to fail in order to bring them to the end of self, and lead them, like Peter, to lean on God, and like Jacob, with wounded thigh, to go forth depending henceforth on the strength of God.

Closely allied to this is

VII. SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS

This is the self that is always thinking of itself and covered with its own shadow.

Every act and look and word is studied. Every feeling and inward state is morbidly photographed upon the inward senses.

Sometimes we become conscious of our own physical organism. We watch our breath, our pulses, our temperature, and our physical state. We carry about with us continually a morbid consciousness of our functions and conditions. All the simplicity is taken away. We are bound to ourselves like a man with his hand on his own collar, trying to pull himself along.

This is a dreadful bondage. God wants us to have the freedom of a simple child, that acts without thinking from spontaneous impulses and with a beautiful liberty. He does not want us to see the shining of our faces, to be conscious of our holy acts, or to make a note of every sacrifice and service; but He would have us, when He comes at the last, to say, “I was an hungered and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink”; to be so self-forgetful that we shall answer back, “When saw we Thee an hungered and fed Thee, or thirsty, and gave Thee drink?”

How shall we get out of this wretched self-consciousness?

Only by getting into a higher consciousness, even the presence of our Lord, and a purpose and object beyond ourselves, to live for God and others, and realize that He is living for us, and living in us, in those sweet spontaneous impulses that are the true springs of action.

An exaggerated form of self-consciousness is

VIII. SELF-IMPORTANCE.

This is very offensive and yet very common. Some people carry it in their very gait and bearing, as they walk along the street, and almost tempt one to step up to them and ask the question which it is said Sidney Smith used occasionally to ask people whom he saw on the street, “Excuse me, sir, but may I ask if you are anybody in particular?”

This is not the usual accompaniment of true greatness, but it is very common in very small men and women, who make up for their lack of real weight by an immense amount of self-assertion and swaggering assumption.

This is very offensive to a true Christian taste. Holy modesty will show itself in the very bearing. True humility consists not so much in thinking meanly of ourselves, as in not thinking of ourselves at all. And the ripe head of wheat always hangs down in proportion to its weight.

Closely allied to this is

IX. SELF-DEPRECIATION.

This is just as bad as the other. Some people are egregiously conscious of their own shortcomings and inability. It keeps them from useful service, and is always thrusting its littleness and nothingness upon every situation.

If it sees its name in print, it is afraid of being puffed up. If asked to be seated on the platform, it will blush and shrink, and hide away. If called upon to do some service, it will refuse on the ground of inability. This is all self.

A truly-surrendered heart hasn’t got any name to see in print, any person to be conscious of, any power to serve. Its name has been given to Christ, and if He wants it used let Him have it, and blaze it before the universe in fame or infamy. It hasn’t any ability to work, and if Christ wants to send it, He must equip it and supply it with all necessary resources.

Therefore, it goes unquestioning and fully assured because all of its strength must come from God.

X. SELF-VINDICATION.

This is the self that stands for its own rights and avenges its wrongs. It is quick to detect an injury or an offense, and to express its sense of it in some marked and unmistakable way.

It believes in receiving the respect and consideration due to it in all cases, and while it asks nothing beyond, yet it insists upon all its rights.

It is not egregious in its own conceit. It does not demand applause beyond its merits but it asks proper consideration, and is going to have it.

Now, this is a very respectable, but a very real form of selfishness. It is directly contrary to the spirit of Christianity and the Lord Jesus Christ.

The very idea of His incarnation was the renunciation of all His rights. Being in the form of God, He was entitled to be equal with God, but we are told He did not count this a prize, but “He emptied Himself and made Himself of no reputation.”

If God wants to bring you here, it is very easy for Him to empty you, and make you of no reputation, and there will be lots of people who will be ready to help Him do it. But it is very lovely to do this ourselves, as Jesus did, and not wait to have it done for us.

The very essence of Christ’s humiliation was that He gave up all His heavenly rights, and when He came down to earth He gave up all His earthly rights, and made it the business of His life to let go, until there was nothing left to give up, but even His very life was yielded.

You have not begun to deal with the question of self-surrender until it reaches your dearest rights, and you let them go into His hand as a glorious deposit; and every time you do so, He puts it down in your bank account, and when the interest has all accumulated, oh, how He will pay you back,–much of it in this world, but how much more in the day of eternal recompense!

I solemnly believe that most of the blessings that have been given to me in my life and ministry have come because of the evil things people have said of me, and because God made me willing to allow them to do it.

“Let Shimei curse; it may be the Lord will requite you good for his cursing this day.”

XI. SENSITIVENESS

is one of the most painful forms of selfishness.

One day, in India, I picked up a beautiful little vine that was spreading over the ground. I thought how lovely it would be to press it in my note-book. But by the time I had taken it up it disappeared, and there was nothing left in my hand but a long string on which the leaves had been. It was as stiff and hard as a leafless stem, and I said “Why, where has my plant gone?” I looked on the ground, and the other leaves were spreading over the grass as before, but I could see no trace of the one I supposed I had dropped.

I looked at the little dry stem in my hand again, and I found it was the same little branch I had picked from ground, but its leaves had all folded up as firm and dry as if it had been struck by an autumn blast. And when I touched the other leaves on the ground, they disappeared in the same way. Then I said, “Why, it is a sensitive plant!”

I thought of people I had seen who had been all bright and radiant for a time, but something touched them that was offensive, uncongenial, or humbling, and they suddenly disappeared and shrank into such hard, dry, leafless sticks that there was no point of contact with them. They seemed to have become all at once like Egyptian mummies, ready for a glass case. What is the matter?

Self!

“Great peace have they that love Thy law, and nothing shall offend them.” The Lord bring and keep us there!

There is a place where we can be, or rather where we can cease to be; and Christ become instead of me. And of that place it is true, “He that was begotten of God keepeth him, and that wicked one toucheth him not.”

XII. SELF-SEEING.

There are some people who always see things from their own side. How does this affect me?

You see your own side of it, but if you would wait and see your brother’s side, if you would be willing to believe that there is another side, you, yourself, would be saved from a thousand misunderstandings.

“Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others.” Put yourself in your brother’s place. Take into consideration his circumstances, his views. Think how you would act if you felt as he feels, saw with his eyes, were placed as he is placed. You will be surprised to see how differently you will look at things. And yet this is only one of the first things in the holy art of self-forgetfulness.

XIII. INTROSPECTION.

Our morbid and excessive self-examination is one of the forms of self-life that causes much pain and works much injury in our Christian life.

There is a right, but there is a wrong self-examination. God alone can truly search us. We are very apt, when we attempt it ourselves to get poisoned with the effluvia of the sepulchre into which we penetrate. Even Paul said, “Yea, I judge not mine own self, but He that judgeth me is the Lord.” Let us commit our own way unto Him, and honestly say, “Search me, O God, and know my heart; try me and know my thoughts, and see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

Thus let us walk in Him, trust Him to show us all we need to see, and then believe, “if in anything we be otherwise minded, God will reveal even this unto us.”

XIV. SELF-LOVE

is the root of all these forms of the self-life. It is a heart centered upon itself and so long as this is the case, every affection and every power of our being is turned inward and self-ward, and the whole character distorted by the false adjustment of our nature; just as much as our eye would be if it were ever turning inward upon itself, rather than outward upon the objective world which it was made to perceive.

God, who is the type of all true being, is essentially love, and lives not for Himself, but for others, and when we become self-centered we are the opposite of God, and really assume His Throne, and become gods unto ourselves.

It is the ruin and perversion of a soul to love and live for itself.

XV. SELF AFFECTIONS

are the natural fruit of self-life.

We love our own friends and families and the people who minister to our pleasure; and even those we love, we love not so much for the blessing that we can be to them, as for the pleasure that they minister to us.

Love that terminates on ourselves is selfish and degrading. The love that seeks another’s blessing is elevating and divine.

XVI. SELFISH MOTIVES

may enter into the highest acts and mar and pervert them to their inmost core.

It is not only what we say and do, but why. God sees the very thought and purpose, and He judges the act by its intent.

The natural heart cannot do a good thing without some selfish object which perverts and destroys its purity.

XVII. SELFISH DESIRES

are always springing up in the old natural heart, and even if they never reach fruition, or ever become choices, acts or facts, we want to be free from the very wish, and have God so give us our desires that they shall spring from Him, and be prompted by His love.

The spirit of covetousness is just a selfish desire, and God has pronounced it idolatry and most dreadful sin.

XVIII. SELFISH CHOICES

are still more serious, for the will is the spring of human actions, and determines all our words and deeds.

We want a rightly directed will, which chooses not its own gratification, but because of “Him who worketh in us to will and to do of His good pleasure.”
XIX. SELFISH PLEASURES.

There are two kinds of enjoyment: one, which we seek for its own sake, and this is selfish; the other is the pleasure that comes to us from doing good, and because we are in harmony with God and with our own being, which is the truest enjoyment.

Selfish pleasure, the desire that seeks its own, and terminates on itself, is earthborn, transitory and wrong.

XX. SELFISH POSSESSIONS.

The worldling seeks to gain the world, and calls his possessions his own. The true child of God has nothing for himself, but holds all as a sacred trust for God. “Neither said any of them that aught of the thing that they possessed was their own.”

The true Christian conception of property is stewardship; the holding of the gifts of God for His service, and subject to His direction, and for His glory.

This is the sovereign remedy for avarice and the grasping spirit of the world, and we are never consecrated until all is laid, absolutely and forever, at His feet, and held there, subject constantly to His will.

XXI. SELFISH FEARS AND CARES.

Nearly all our cares and anxieties spring from pure selfishness.

If we were wholly yielded to God, and recognized our life in its every movement as absolutely His, we would have no anxiety, but would regard ourselves as His property and under His safe and constant protection. The Lord has said, “Ye cannot serve God and Mammon,” and has added, with strange logical suggestiveness, “Therefore, I say unto you, take no anxious care for the morrow.”

That little word, “therefore,” discovers the link between Mammon worship and anxious care.

XXII. SELFISH SORROWS.

Many of our griefs and heartbreaks spring from the purest selfishness, wounded pride, ambition, self-love, or the loss of something which we should not have called our own.

The death of self blots out a universe of wretchedness and brings a heaven of joy.

XXIII. SELFISH SACRIFICES AND SELF-DENIALS

are as real as they are paradoxical.

A man “may give all his goods to feed the poor, and his body to be burned, and have not love.” He may do it all for the gratification of his vanity or the display of his orthodoxy, and the propagation of his own beliefs and opinions.

Simon Stylites, after sitting a quarter of a century of the top of a pillar and living on roots and pauper pittances, was, perhaps, the most egregious embodiment of self-righteousness and self-consciousness in the whole world. He had denied himself to gratify himself, to exalt himself, and to save himself. It was simply the old stream of his life turned into a new channel.

And so there may be

XXIV. SELFISH VIRTUE AND MORALITY.

The Pharisees were virtuous, but their virtue was a selfish cloak, intended for display, and therefore worthless, or worse. It was simply an advertisement, and its motive destroyed its value.

The lady who walks the street with her skirts held carefully away from the touch of her fallen sister may be an icicle of selfish propriety; while her poor sister, with all her faults, may have a generous heart, and may even be sinning from some motive of mistaken love, and sacrificing herself for another. And while this does not palliate her sin, it may make her a nobler character than even the virtuous one who scorns her.

And so there is a

XXV. SELF-RIGHTEOUSNESS

which would even seek to justify itself before God by its own religious works, and thus forfeit His righteousness and salvation. For it is not of our sins alone, but even of our righteousness, that He has said, they are “as filthy rags,” and they must be laid down and we, as helpless, worthless sinners accept the righteousness of Christ for our justification before God.

We may have

XXVI. SELFISH SANCTITY AND SANCTIFICATION

and be so absorbed in our religious experience that our eye will be taken off Jesus and centered upon ourselves, and thus we shall become offensive exhibitions of religious self-consciousness, and our very good be marred by its indirection and introversion.

True sanctification forgets itself and lives in constant dependence upon the Lord Jesus as its Righteousness and All-sufficiency.

So we may have

XXVII. SELFISH CHARITIES AND SELFISH GIFTS.

The largest generosity and the most munificent offerings of money may be only an advertisement of ourselves, and prompted by some motive which terminates on our own interest or honor.

Some people give liberally, and then hamper their gifts with so many conditions, and get themselves so wrought into the administration of their beneficence, that all its disinterestedness is lost, and it looks like the gratification of their own higher pleasure.

XXVII. OUR CHRISTIAN WORK MAY BE SELFISH.

We may preach because of the intellectual pleasure it gives us.

We may work for the church because we like the church, the minister, or the people.

We may engage in a benevolent or Christian profession because it enables us to make a comfortable livelihood, and gives us congenial employment.

Or we may do our religious work on selfish principles, and from religious selfishness.

The Church of God today is blighted by the selfishness of her evangelistic work. She is spending seven hundred times as much for her own people as she does upon the heathen world, and the spirit of religious selfishness runs through all her plans.

XXIX. SELFISH PRAYERS.

There is nothing that sounds so selfish as the prayers of many Christians.

They travel in a circle about the size of their own body and soul, their family, and perhaps their own particular church, and the suffering household of faith and the perishing world are scarcely ever touched by their sympathies or their intercessions.

The highest prayer is the prayer of unselfish love, and as we learn to pray for others, and to carry the dying world upon our hearts, we shall find ourselves enriched in return, a thousand fold, and prove, indeed, that “it is more blessed to give than to receive.”

XXX. SELFISH HOPES.

The future of many persons is as selfish as their present. They live in the dreams of coming joys and triumphs, and their vision is all earth-bound, and often, alas! as baseless as the fading cloud-land that floats upon the summer sky.

The true Hope of the Gospel swallows up all these selfish visions and earthly hopes. Looking for that blessed Hope and the glorious appearing of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, we hold all other prospects subordinate and subject to that Supreme prospect. Even the old hope of heaven that was sometimes a selfish weariness, and a longing to be at rest, has been exchanged for that high and glorious looking for His coming that lifts us out of ourselves into the greater blessing it is to bring to millions, and nerves us to the highest and noblest efforts to work for the hastening of the coming glory and the preparation of the world to meet Him. God alone can give this new and heaven-born hope, which is as divine as it is lofty and inspiring.

XXXI. OUR LIFE.

Our very life must be held not as a selfish possession, but as a sacred trust.

“Neither count I my life dear unto myself,” is the true spirit of consecration; “but that I may finish my course with joy and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus Christ.”

That is the meaning of life, and the only object for which it should be cherished.

So we find the same apostle saying, “For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain”; and he adds, “Therefore, I know that I shall continue with you all for the furtherance of your faith.”

The unselfish life is a safe life, and it is immortal till its great purpose shall be fulfilled.
CONCLUSION.

How shall we overcome these giant Anakim? How shall we win the victory over self? How shall we win the victory over self? How shall we possess Hebron, the city of love?

1. We must definitely and thoroughly enter into the meaning of the mighty word, “Ye are not your own.” We must surrender ourselves so utterly that we can never own ourselves again.

We must hand over self and all its rights in an eternal covenant, and give God the absolute right to own us, control us, and possess us forever.

And we must abide in this attitude, and never recall that irrevocable surrender.

2. We must let God make this real in detail, as each day brings its tests and conflicts, and each of these thirty-one kings comes face to face before us. That which we did in the general must be fulfilled in the particular, and step by step, we must be established in the full experience of self-renunciation and entire consecration.

As each of these issues meets us, God is asking us the question, “Are you your own, or are you mine?” And as we stand true to our covenant, He will make it real.

We must choose that each new Agag shall die, and God will make the death effectual the moment we sign the death warrant.

3. We must receive the great antidote to self–the love of Christ.

We have seen the power of love in a human life transforming a selfish girl, living for the pleasures of society and the gratification of her own self-love, into a patient, self-sacrificing wife and mother, willing to endure any privation and go any length for the man she loved with all her heart.

In a far higher sense the love of Christ, and that alone, can slay the strength of self-love, and enable us to say, “The love of Christ constraineth me; for I thus judge that if One died for all then all died; and He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him who died for them and rose again.

4. Finally, we need not only the love of Christ but the Christ Himself.

It is not a principle, nor an emotion, nor a motive, that is to transform our life and conquer these determined foes, but it is a living person.

Christ will put His own heart into us, and so live in us, and we so live in His life, love in His love, and think, speak and act in Him, in all we do, that it shall be “not I, but Christ that liveth in me.”

So let us receive Him, the Antidote of self, the Lord of love, the Conqueror of the heart.

There is a foe whose hidden power
The Christian well may fear,
More subtle far than inbred sin
And to the heart more dear.
It is the power of selfishness,
It is the wilful I,
And e’er my Lord can live in me
My very self must die.

There is, like Anak’s sons of old,
A race of giant still,
Self-glorying, self-confidence
Self-seeking and self-will.
Still must these haughty Anakim,
By Caleb’s sword be slain,
E’er Hebron’s heights of heavenly love
Our conquering feet can gain.
Oh, save me from self-will, dear Lord,
Which claims Thy sacred Throne;
Oh, let my will be lost in Thine;
And let Thy will be done.
Oh, keep me from self-confidence,
And self-sufficiency;
Let me exchange my strength for Thine,
And lean alone on Thee.
Oh, save me from self-seeking, Lord.
Let me not be my own,
A living sacrifice I come–
Lord, keep me Thine alone;
From proud vain-glory save me, Lord.
From pride of praise and fame;
To Christ be all the honor given,
The glory to His Name.
O Jesus, slay the self in me,
By Thy consuming breath;
Show me Thy heart, Thy wounds, Thy shame,
And love my soul to death.
When the Shekinah flame came down,
E’en Moses could not say;
So let Thy glory fill me now,
And self forever slay.

O Jesus come and dwell in me,
Walk in my steps each day,
Live in my life, love in my love,
And speak in all I say;
Think in my thoughts, let all my acts
Thy very actions be,
So shall it be no longer I,
But Christ that lives in me.

~ He must increase, I must decrease ~

~ I [must] die daily ~

Absolute Surrender.

laurita hayes

Thank you, both Skip and Carl. Both bringing such necessary information. Self is the hardest frontier.

I was shocked to learn that all that self focus was a result of a profound lack of love in my life. You can call narcissism self love, and the world is not going to be able to tell the difference, either, but the foundation of self focus will always be generated out of a bottomless pit of the Need To Be Loved.

I don’t know why it usually takes unrelenting suffering to convince us that Self cannot protect us, but until we are convinced of that, we have no way TO turn loose. We have to see our own failure in action to believe it, but until we do, we are going to protect that hole in the heart with everything we have.

I had to let go of Self before I could accept the love of God, but that only happened when I had been beaten to a complete standstill. I believed awful things about the Source of love, and never even knew it. Those beliefs made me more afraid of that Source than of anything or anyone else. I had to face the fear and failure of all else before I was willing to consider turning to that Source. Self was just a coverup.

I repented for believing the lies that told me I was unlovable. In that place, the load of Self stuff fell off my back. I had to confront the cross with the bottom of my desperate rebellion against my fear of heaven before I could see the love on that cross for me. This is what the experience of not being loved produces in all of us. We all run and sin because we believe lies about love. The installment of Self in the black hole where the love of God should be is what we all do, but to be able to conquer Self, we have to become willing to face down the lies about love that we believe as a result of not being loved, and we have to become willing to forgive, too. Why that is so hard, I still haven’t figured out!

Dana

Skip, are you reading my mind? Are we going through similar issues? Years ago, the Lord told me He was taking me through a time of “emptying me of self” – Philippians 2. Dealing with childhood traumas that started as a toddler, talk about being a prisoner? We all know how a two year old behaves – “No!” I think this has been the greater battle than all the attacks and tragedies that have happened to me. Getting this inner one to let go of the reigns. Slowly but surely the Lord addresses something new. He is good and kind and gentle. Me on the other hand wants it all fixed by tomorrow. God help us from being held hostage by our “best friend!”

Rich Pease

THE GREAT TRUST TRANSFER

Paul said, “I die every day.”

Who could possibly utter this unless they were also experiencing
“a new birth” every day? Shedding the sins of self proficiency is a lifetime process
made possible only by the divine introduction (better said, revelation) of another Friend.

“And in Him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which
God lives by His Spirit.”

DONE DEAL.

EM

the isolationist can become victim to their environment–in relation to the directives mentioned in your topic; faith, trust and obedience to God is tough in our society of diversity i.e. for some . This topic speaks out to me; I have found out after self evaluation that I am an isolationist. Searching for the truth in religion and spirituality is bring consolation and investigative soul searching

Tami

Wow! This described exactly what my struggle has been like the past 13 years failing to die to self and give total surrender to God, I just didn’t know how to put it in words. I have self- protected, isolated, comforted myself all my life. I can’t count the time I have just dismantled the cross and went home with the fear of losing control and going without my protective walls. I’m going to take the last paragraph to heart. I am so ready for my new identity.

Seeker

Carl Thank you for sharing I understood their must be something involved with taking up your cross to follow Yeshua.

As reborn in water, spirit and truth is a gift from YHVH.

The overcoming of me is the Cross I must endure to become a servant as Paul said in Rom 6, Col 2, Gal 6. Just reminding the audience that our sacrifice is not the calling the calling is that what we will become…

Ester

Yes, our friend (self) has become our greatest enemy! We think we are covered -with fig leaves, but we are not. We need to take a good look at ourselves.
Do we allow the yetza hatov, or the yetza hara to rule us, in our perspectives towards others, towards ourselves, towards יהוה.
Are we clear where we are heading, or are we slaves to our “friend’s need to survive”, building up walls to ‘protect’ what we stubbornly stand for/ believe in, until we come to Yabok- to get dusty while wrestling with יהוה?
“We are still the same person after the so-called healing. We share the same dysfunctional view of our identity.” NO! We desire to have a new identity, a transformation of authority to rule over ourselves!
SO, goodbye, my trusted friend! https://youtu.be/tE1QRZoXluo