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5. THE DEATH
OF SELF
"Not I, but Christ." Gal. ii: 20.
The story of Abraham, Ishmael and Isaac is a parable, illustrating this text.
The casting out of Ishmael is most clearly declared in this very epistle to be
an allegory setting forth the spiritual experience of the believer when he dies
to the law and sin through the cross of Jesus Christ, and comes into the
resurrection life of his Risen Lord. But there is something more than the
experience of Ishmael and our deliverance from the power of indwelling sin. In
the patriarchal story, this was followed by the offering up of Isaac on Mount
Moriah, and there can be no doubt that this sets forth the deeper spiritual
experience into which the fully consecrated heart must come, when even the
sanctified self is laid upon the altar like Isaac upon the mount, and we become
dead henceforth, not only to sin, but to that which is worse than sin, even
self.
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,
The proud and wilful I;
And ere my Lord can live in me, My
very self must die.
This is the lesson of Isaac's offering and Paul's experience. "I have been
crucified with Christ," that is the death of sin; "nevertheless I live," that is
the new life in the power of His resurrection; "yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me," that is the offering of Isaac, the deliverance from self, and the
substitution of Christ Himself for even the new self; a substitution so complete
that even the faith by which this life is maintained is no longer our
self-sustained confidence but the very "faith of the Son of God who loved me and
gave Himself for me, that is, instead of me, and as my Substitute.
I. THE FORMS OF SELF.
We read in the book of Joshua of the three sons of Anak, who formed the
Anakim, the race of giants who held the city of Hebron before Caleb's conquest,
and were the terror of the Israelites. Literally Anak means long-necked, and
represents pride, confidence, willfulness, and self-sufficiency. The first of
the Anakim may be called,
- Self-will, the disposition to rule, and especially to rule ourselves; the
spirit that brooks no other will and is its own law and god. Therefore the
first step in the consecrated life is unconditional surrender. This is
indispensable to break the power of self at the centre, and to establish
forever the absolute sovereignty of the will of God in the heart and life of
the Christian. We cannot abide in holiness and we cannot be wholly used for
God until self-will is so utterly crucified that we could not even think for
an instant of acting contrary to His will or without His orders. This is
obedience, and obedience is the law of the Christian life and must be
absolute, unquestioning, and without any possible exception. "Ye are my
friends if ye do whatsoever I command you."
It is true that God
requires of us in the life of faith the exercise of a very strong will
continually, and there is no doubt that faith itself is largely the exercise
of a sanctified and intensified will, but in order to this it is necessary
that our will be wholly renounced and God's will invariably accepted instead,
and then we can put into it all the strength and force of our being, and will
it even as God wills it, and because He wills it. In short, it is an exchanged
will; the despotic tyranny of Anak exchanged for the wise, beneficent yet
still more absolute sovereignty of God.
- Self-confidence is the next of Anak' s race. It is the spirit that draws
its strength from self alone and disdains the arm of God and the help of His
grace. In a milder form it is the spirit that trusts its own spiritual graces
or virtues, its morality perhaps, its courage, its faith, its purity, its
steadfastness, its joy, and its transitory emotions of hope, enthusiasm, or
zeal. It is just as necessary to die to our self-sufficiency as to our
self-will. If we do not we shall have many a fall and failure until we learn,
with the most triumphant and successful laborer that ever followed the
footsteps of his Lord, that "we are not sufficient of ourselves to think
anything as of ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God." The sanctified heart
is not a self-constituted engine of power, but is just a set of wheels and
pulleys that are absolutely dependent upon the great central engine whose
force is necessary continually to move them. It is just a capacity to hold
God; just a vessel to be filled with His goodness, held and used by His hand;
just a possibility of which He, in His abiding life, is constantly the motive
power and impelling force. The word "consecrate "in Hebrew means "to fill the
hand," and beautifully suggests the idea of an empty hand which God Himself
must continually fill.
- Self-glorying is the last and most impious of these Canaanitish tribes. He
takes the very throne of Jehovah and claims the glory due unto Him alone.
Sometimes it is a desire for human praise. Sometimes it is more subtle, the
pride so proud that it will not stoop to care for the approval of others, and
its supreme delight is in its own self-consciousness and superiority, ability
or goodness. Metaphysicians have sometimes made this happy distinction, that
vanity is an inferior vice to pride. Vanity only seeks the praise of others,
but pride disdains the opinions of others and rests back in the complacent
consciousness of its own excellency. Whatever its phase may be, the root and
principle is the same. It is impious self, sitting on the throne of God, and
claiming the honor and glory that belong to Him alone.
These three
forms of self are illustrated by three very solemn examples in the word of
God. Saul the first king of Israel is a fearful monument of the peril of
self-will. His downward career began in a single act of disobedience, a
disobedience which seemed to have respect to a mere question of detail, but
which was really an act of self-will, a substitution of his choice for God's
express command. The prophet Samuel characterizes his sin in these very
expressive words, "To obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the
fat of rams. For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft (or devil worship), and
stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry. Because thou hast rejected the word
of the Lord, He hath also rejected thee from being king." It is evident from
these words that the very essence of Saul's sin lay in this element of
willfulness and stubbornness which had dared to substitute his own ideas and
preferences for the word of Jehovah. From this moment his obedience was
necessarily qualified and of course worthless, and God sent His prophet to
choose another king, who, although full of human imperfections, had this one
thing on which God could fully depend, namely, a purpose to obey God when he
fully understood His will. Therefore God calls David "a man after my own heart
who shall perform all my will." David made many mistakes and committed many
dark and terrible sins, but they were when under strong temptation and when
blinded by passion and haste, but never with the purpose of disobeying God,
or, at the time, with the consciousness that he was transgressing. The sad,
sad story of Saul's downward descent and final and tragic ruin should be
enough to make us tremble at the peril which lies before the willful soul, and
to lead us to cry, "Not my will but thine be done."
We have just as
marked an instance of the peril of self-confidence in Simon Peter. Strong in
his transitory enthusiasm, and ignorant of the real weakness of his own heart,
he honestly meant what he said, when he exclaimed, "Though all men should deny
thee yet will I never deny thee." But alas! the shameful denial, the
upbraiding look of Jesus, the bitter tears of penitence and the sad days of
the crucifixion that followed had to teach him the lesson of his nothingness,
and the necessity of walking henceforth with downward head in the strength of
the Lord alone.
We are not left without as vivid and impressive an
object lesson of the last form of self-will-the pride that glories in its own
achievements or excellencies. "Is not this great Babylon that I have built?"
cries Nebuchadnezzar, in the hour of his triumph, as he looks upon that
splendid city, which was indeed a paragon of human glory, and surveys in his
imagination the mightier empire of which it was the metropolis, an empire
which literally comprised the world. If mortal could ever have cause to glory
in earthly magnificence, Nebuchadnezzar had, for God Himself had compared him
and his kingdom to a majestic head of gold and had symbolized his power under
the figure of a winged lion, combining the majesty and sovereignty of the
eagle and the lion in one splendid image. But the very instant that
vain-glorious word reached the ears of God, the answer fell from heaven like a
knell of judgment, "The kingdom is departed from thee. And they shall drive
thee from men, and thy dwelling shall be with the beasts of the field, till
thou know that the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to
whomsoever He will." This is the glorying of the carnal heart, but even the
follower of God may mingle his own self-seeking and his own honor with his
work for God and thus impair his usefulness and lose his own
recompense.
There is not a more pitiful picture in the long panorama of
the Bible than that morbid and grumbling prophet, sitting outside the gates of
Nineveh under a withered gourd, his face blistered and swollen with the
scorching sun and his eyes red with useless weeping; asking God that he might
die, because his ministry had been dishonored; and presenting a spectacle of
ridiculous melancholy and chagrin while all around him millions were rejoicing
and praising God for the mercy which had just delivered them from an awful
catastrophe. Poor Jonah! God had given him the most honorable ministry ever
yet accorded to a human being. The first foreign missionary, he had been sent
to preach to the mightiest empire on the face of the globe and the imperial
city of the world, proud Nineveh! His preaching had been successful as no
mortal ever had succeeded. The whole city was lying prostrate on their faces
at the footstool of mercy in penitence and prayer through his words, and the
nation's heart, for a moment at least, was turned to God. And yet so full of
himself had all his work been, so utterly was he absorbed in his own credit,
reputation and honor, that when God listened to the penitent cries of the
Ninevites and revoked the sentence which Jonah himself had uttered, and
rendered his prophecy null and void, so that instead of his word coming to
pass he himself would probably be afterwards ridiculed as a fanatic and idle
alarmist, poor Jonah became disgusted and exasperated and like a petted child
went out and threw himself upon his face on the ground and asked God to kill
him, just because He had by His mercy spoiled his reputation as a true
prophet. He could not see, as God did, the unspeakable horror and anguish that
had been averted. He could not see the joy of the divine heart in exercising
mercy and in hearing the penitent cries of the people. He could not see the
great principle of grace which underlies the divine threatenings. He could not
see that great-souled pity, that felt for the one hundred and twenty thousand
infant children of the great capital, or the dumb brutes, which would have
moaned in their dying agony, if Nineveh had fallen.
All he could see
was Jonah's reputation as a true prophet or what people might say when they
found that his word had not come to pass; and with that one little worm
gnawing at the root, his peace and happiness, like his own gourd, withered
away, and God had to set him up as a sort of dried specimen of selfishness, to
show the meanness and misery of the self-life that mingles its own glory with
the sacred work of the glorious God, and which, ever since the days of Jonah,
has rendered it impossible for God to use many a gifted man, and has blighted
the church of Christ and rendered vain the ministry of thousands because God
could not use them without giving to men the glory which He will never give to
another. God had tried to kill Jonah before He sent him to Nineveh, for He
knew the secret bane of his heart, and so He immersed him for three days and
nights in the sea and buried him in the bowels of a whale; but out of that
Jonah came, as a great many other people come out of the experience of
sanctification with a big self, supreme even in the sin-cleansed soul. Oh let
us lift up the heart-felt prayer,
O to be saved from
myself, dear Lord, O
to be lost in Thee! O
that it may be no more!
But Christ that lives in me!
II. THE EFFECTS OF SELF.
- It dishonors God and sets up a rival on His throne. The devil was not
altogether a liar when he said to our first parents, "Ye shall be as gods."
This is just what fallen man tries to be, a god unto himself. This is the
essence of the sin of selfishness, that it puts man in the place of God by
making him a law and an end unto himself. Whenever, any person acts, either
because it is his own selfish will, or for his own self-interest, purely as an
end, he is claiming to be his own god and directly disobeying the first
commandment, "Thou shalt have no other gods besides Me." Moreover, in assuming
the place of God, he is doing it in a spirit the very opposite of God's, for
God is love, and love is the very opposite of selfishness. He is thus
mimicking God and proving, at the same time, his utter unfitness to occupy His
throne by his unlikeness to Him.
- It leads to every other sin and brings back the whole power of the carnal
nature. For while self alone attempts to keep the heart it finds sin and Satan
too strong. A self- perfection is not possible for any man. There must be more
than "I" before there can be victory. In the seventh of Romans the apostle
tells us what "I, myself" can do and that is, ineffectually struggle. In the
eighth it is what "Christ in me" can do, and that is victory and everlasting
love. The man or woman who only goes so far as to receive Adamic purity, if
such a thing be included in the Gospel at all, will soon have the next chapter
of Adamic history, and that is the temptation and fall. But the man who
receives Christ to dwell within and keep the heart by His mighty power, shall
rise "to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ."
- The self-life leads back to the dominion of Satan. Satan's own fall began
probably in a form of self-love. Made to be dependent on God every moment,
probably he became independent; and contemplating his own perfection, and
thinking it was something that was his own, he became separated from God, and
then inevitably fell into rebellion against Him and eternal rivalry,
disobedience and all that can be the opposite of the divine and the holy. And
so still, any soul that becomes self-constituted or occupied with its own
virtues, and tries to be independent of Jesus, either as the source of its
strength or the supreme end of its being, will fall under the power of Satan
and share his awful descent. Where can we find a sadder illustration of the
end of self than in the story of Saul? He began with Saul and ended with
Satan. The first chapter is self-will, the last is the awful night at Endor
and the bloody day of death and ruin on Mount Gilboa.
- It is fatal to the spirit of love and harmony. It is the opposite of love
and the source of strife, bigotry, suspicion, sectarianism, envy, jealousy and
the whole race of social sins and grievances that afflict the Christian life
and the church of God. It is the mother of the strifes and sectarianisms of
the church from the very beginning. Where it prevails there can be no true
unity, no happy co-operation. You never can have a harmonious church or a
happy family where self is predominant in the hearts of the people. The very
secret of Christian co-operation and happy church life is "forbearing one
another in love," endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace, "in honor preferring one another."
- It mars our work for God. Self-will will try to force the chariots of
God's power and grace upon our own side-tracks, and that God will never
permit. Self-confidence will seek to build up the kingdom of Christ by human
means and unsanctified instrumentalities, and presume to go where God has not
sent and to do what God has not qualified us by His Holy Spirit to do. The
result is, it is but crude work, defiled by worldliness and sin, impermanent
and unfruitful, as much of the Christian work of to-day is, in all the
churches of Christ. And above all others, the spirit of self-glorying will try
to use the pulpit, the organ gallery, the subscription books, the religious
paper, the charitable scheme, the very mission for winning souls, as a channel
for developing some brilliant character, or to glorify some rich man or woman,
or minister to the spiritual self-sufficiency of some successful worker; and
God is disgusted with the spirit of idolatry, and His Holy Spirit turns away
grieved for the honor of Jesus. Until we are so yielded to our Master that He
and He alone can be glorified in our work, the Lord cannot trust us with much
service for Him or it will simply become the pinnacle of the temple from which
the devil will hurl us down.
- Self makes us unhappy. It is a root of bitterness in every heart where it
reigns. The secret of joy is hidden in the bosom of love, and the arms of self
are too short ever to reach it. Not until we dwell in God and God in us, and
learn to find our happiness in being lost in Him and living for His glory and
for His people, shall we ever know the sweets of divine blessedness. All the
world cannot fill this hungry heart. All our spiritual treasures only corrupt
if we hoard them for ourselves. Only water that runs is living water. And only
when it is poured into other empty vessels does it become wine. The
self-willed man is always a miserable man. He gets his own way and does not
enjoy it, and wishes after he has had it, that he had never got it, for it
usually leads him over a precipice. The self-sufficient man can never know the
springs which lie outside his own little heart, and the self-glorying man,
like poor Herod, is eaten of the worms of corruption and remorse with which
God always feeds the impious soul that dares to claim the honors due to Him
alone.
- Self-love always leads to a fall. The boasted wisdom must be proved to be
foolishness. The proud arm must be laid, like Pharaoh's, in the dust. The
self-sufficient boast, like Peter's, must be answered by his own failure. The
disobedient path which refuses God's wise and holy will, must be proved to be
a false way. Every idol must be abolished, every high thing brought low, and
no flesh glory in His presence. Oh, beloved, if you are going on in your own
will, your own strength, for your own gratification and glory, beware! Thorns
lie in your pathway, serpents lurk beneath your feet, yawning abysses,
perilous precipices, angry tempests, midnight darkness, many a sorrow, many a
tear, many a fall, await you. "He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool."
"There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the ends thereof are the
ways of death."
Oh, let us ask our faithful God to save us from this
tyrant that dishonors God, that leads us into captivity to Satan, that withers
love, mars the work of God, poisons all our happiness; and plunges us into
failure and ruin; and so to show us that we are nothing, that we shall be glad
to have Christ live in us, our "all in all."
III. THE REMEDY FOR SELF.
- God often has to let self have its way until it cures us effectually by
showing us the misery and failure which it brings. This is the only good there
is in our own struggling, that it shows us the vanity of the struggle and
prepares us the more quickly to surrender to God. And so sometimes even our
disobedience is overruled to make us fear to repeat the experiment or to
venture again one step beyond our Father's will. Let us beware, however, how
we attempt the experiment ourselves, for there is always one step too far ever
to return.
- God has placed around us the blessed restraints of other hearts and lives
as checks upon our selfishness, and links, which almost compel us to reach
beyond ourselves and, work with and live for others. He has made no man
independent of his brethren. "We are fitly framed together" and so grow
into a holy temple in the Lord. We are adjusted, one to His bone, and, by
that which every joint supplieth, the body is ministered unto and groweth into
the fullness of His stature. The church of Christ is no autocracy where one
man can be a dictator or a judge, but a fellowship where One alone is Master.
Any work which develops into a one-man despotism becomes withered. It is true
that God has ranks of workers, but they are all harmonious and linked in
heavenly love. The man who cannot work with his brethren in mutual comfort and
harmony has something yet to learn in his own Christian life. True, God does
not require us to work with unsanctified men; but there are plenty of
sanctified ones, thank God, to-day, where any earnest heart can find a
congenial fellowship of service; and while He will teach any of us by
ourselves, and wants us to be independent of our brethren in the sense of
leaning on them instead of' God, yet He does require that we should be able to
co-operate with them for God, submitting ourselves one to another in the fear
of God, one sowing and another reaping, and both rejoicing together, "bearing
one another's burdens and so fulfilling the law of Christ," "true
yoke-fellows." And so by innumerable phrases and figures He has taught us the
blessed truth of Christian cooperation in the spirit of self-renunciation and
mutual confidence and love. Let us receive these blessed lessons and helps,
and let Him so slay in us the self-asserting "I" that we can be true
yoke-fellows, and like David's men, be able to "keep rank" in the great host
of God.
- The love of Jesus is the divinely appointed prescription for the death of
self. Paul expresses it beautifully, "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 that died for them and rose
again." Many of us have seen at some time a young, beautiful, petted,
luxurious and selfish girl, growing up surrounded with wealth, affection,
admiration, adulation, until she was wholly spoiled, and became the centre of
the circle in which she lived, her whole being perverted by her selfishness.
But we have seen that girl years afterwards, and we would not have known her
had we not traced the intermediate steps. She was now a self-denying, loving
wife and mother, her whole being devoted to the happiness of that husband
whose fortunes she had followed amid poverty, obscurity and separation from
all her former friends; sharing his penury, toiling for his comfort, and
nursing as a faithful and loving mother, the little children who had come into
her arms, with the love that never wearied, that felt no task too hard, and no
work too menial. What has made all the difference? What has cast out that
idol, self, from its throne? Nothing but love. That man has won her heart. He
has come in and taken the place that it had occupied; it is cast out and he
reigns. That is the simple story of the death of self in the Christian life.
It is the love of Jesus that has excluded it, and never, until we become
fascinated with His affection, and won in complete captivity to His love,
shall we cease to live unto ourselves. Then, like that girl, we will follow
Him anywhere. We will toil and suffer with Him. We will be content without
many things that before we thought we must have, because His smile is our
sunshine, His presence is our joy, His love, shed abroad in our hearts, is our
heaven, and we cannot speak or think of sacrifice or suffering, our heart is
so satisfied with Him.
Beloved, if you would die to self you must fall
in love with Jesus and let Him become to you the personal reality of Solomon's
sweet Song in which the whole heart summers into a land of Beulah and a
"Hephzibah" of joy.
- But it is not the love of Christ merely that we want; it is the living
Christ Himself. Many people have touches of the love of Christ, but He is a
Christ away up in heaven. The apostle speaks of something far mightier. It is
Christ Himself who lives inside and who is big enough to crowd out and keep
out the little "I." There is no other that can truly lift and keep the heart
above the power of self but Jesus, the Mighty Lord, the stronger than the
strong man armed, who taketh away his armour wherein he trusted and spoileth
all his goods and then takes forever the heart that has given him its goods.
Blessed Christ! He is able not only for sin, sorrow and sickness, put He is
able for you and me-able so to be our very life, that moment by moment we
shall be conscious that He in us fills us with Himself and conquers the self
that ruled before. The more you try to fight a self-thought the more it clings
to you. The moment you turn away from it and look to Him, He fills all the
consciousness and disperses everything with His own presence. Let us abide in
Him, and we shall find there is nothing else to do.
- It is almost the same thing, but another way of saying it, that the
baptism and indwelling of the Holy Ghost within us will deliver and keep us
from the power of self. When the cloud of glory entered the tabernacle there
was no room for Moses to remain; and when filled with the heavenly presence of
the blessed Spirit we are lost in God and self hides away, and like Job we can
say, "Now mine eye seeth Thee. Wherefore I abhor myself and repent in dust and
ashes."
Beloved, these temples were reared for Him. Let Him fill them so completely
that like the oriental temple of glass in the ancient legend, the temple shall
not be seen, but only the glorious sunlight, which not only shines into it, but
through it, and the transparent walls are all unseen.
It is not a new, but it is an appropriate thought, that all the things that
God has used have first been sacrificed. It is a sacrificed Saviour, One who
emptied Himself, and made Himself of no reputation, that God has so highly
exalted, and given Him a name that is above every name, "that at the name of
Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things in earth and things
under the earth." It was a sacrificed Isaac that God made the promised seed and
the progenitor of Israel's tribes. And it was on that very Mount Moriah where
Isaac was sacrificed, that God afterwards reared His glorious temple. And so it
is only when our Isaac is on the altar and our whole being lost in God that He
can lay the deep foundations and rear the everlasting walls of the living temple
of which He is the Supreme and eternal glory.
I look back to-day with unutterable gratitude to the lonely and sorrowful
night, when, mistaken in many things, and imperfect in all, my heart's first
full consecration was made, and not knowing but that it would be death in the
most literal sense before the morning light, yet with unreserved surrender I
first could say,
"Jesus, I my cross have taken,
All to leave and follow thee;
Destitute, despised, forsaken,
Thou from hence my All shalt be."
Never, perhaps, has my heart known quite such a thrill of joy as when the
following Sabbath morning I gave out those lines and sung them with all my
heart. And if God has been pleased to make my life in any measure a little
temple for His indwelling and for His glory, and if He ever shall be pleased to
use me in any fuller measure, it has been because of that hour, and it will be
still in the measure in which that hour is made the key-note of a consecrated,
crucified and Christ-devoted life.
Oh, beloved, come and let Him teach you the superlative degree of joy, the
joy that has learned to say not only, "My Beloved is mine," but better even, "I
am my Beloved's;" and we shall find as one of our dear missionaries in China
used to say, "He is willing to come into the heart of every one of us and love
us to death." |