SELF ESTEEM (Part 1)
by Dr. W. J. Prost
A MAN IN
CHRIST1
Now let us consider man in
Christ. We have already seen that sin
was brought into this world by man's disobedience and that it has affected
every part of our being. Because sin
entered this world, each of us has a sinful, fallen nature. We have seen that sin takes even our
God-given abilities and uses them in a wrong way. In the last section we have said that the answer to everything
for the believer is found at the cross.
In order to understand this statement fully we must consider the truth
found in Romans, chapters 6, 7 and 8.
In the book of Romans up to verse 12 of
chapter 5 we have the matter of sins taken up.
The absolute guilt of the whole world is established, and then the
finished work of Christ is presented as the only remedy. Then, from Romans 5:12 to the end of chapter
8, the question of sin in its root and principle is brought before us. We must be clear on the sin problem if we
are to see the scriptural answer to the question of self-esteem.
It is important to see that when God
saves us, He does not forgive our sinful, fallen nature, nor does He take it
away. The Lord Jesus said to Nicodemus,
"Ye must be born again" (John 3:7). When we come as guilty sinners, God forgives our sins and gives
us a new life in Christ. Now the
believer has two natures: one which is hopelessly sinful and cannot please God,
and a new nature which is truly life in Christ and cannot sin. Having these two natures in us causes the conflict
in our lives.
The old, sinful nature never improves
as long as we live. It is always with
us, and is just as bad after I have been saved for twenty years as it was
before I was saved. God wants me to
display the new life and its nature in my Christian walk, but how often the old
nature tries to assert itself! That is
why Christians sin, and occupation with myself and pride are part of those
sins.
In Romans 5, we get the truth that the
blood of Christ has put my sins away.
In Romans 6, we get the further truth that, in the death of Christ, God
saw the death of our "old man."
Knowing this, that our old man is
crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that
henceforth we should not serve sin. (Romans 6:6)
Now the command is to "reckon
ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus
Christ our Lord" (Romans 6:11).
Before the death of Christ, man was never told to reckon himself (that
is, the old man) to be dead. Rather, he
was placed under law, until Christ came.
"The law has been our tutor up to Christ" (Galatians
3:24 JND).2 Now Christ has
died, and is risen again. The believer as identified with Christ can say that
he too has died to sin, and thus sin has no more dominion over him. Now God sees us, not as fallen sinners, but
as those who have new life in Christ.
We are to allow the new life and nature to characterize our Christian
walk, and we are to recognize that we have died to sin.
This conflict between the old and new
natures is brought before us in a practical way in Romans 7. Here the man is
truly born again and has a new life, but has not yet experienced deliverance
from sin. Like so many of us, the man
in Romans 7 found that while he had a new life and wanted to do what was right,
he had no power to do so. How many of
us have sincerely wanted to live the Christian life, yet constantly found that
we sinned in spite of ourselves? How
many of us have found, in the words of Romans 7:15 (JND),
For that which I do, I do not own: for not what I will, this I do; but what I hate, this I practice.
What is the reason that we are unable
to get the victory? We find the answer
in verse 18. We must come to the
scriptural conclusion that "in me, (that is, in my flesh,) dwelleth
no good thing." So often we
are willing to admit that we have sinned, but are not willing to admit that
there is nothing in us that has any merit towards God. We are unwilling to recognize that there is
absolutely nothing in us in the flesh that God can accept – all has been ruined
by sin. More than this, we must also
come to the sad conclusion the Apostle comes to in verse 24, when he says,
"0 wretched man that I am!"
Not only is the old nature within us incurably bad, but our condition is
wretched beyond belief. This is a
painful thing to realize, but essential if we are to know deliverance from
sin. It is only when this is realized
in our souls that we cease to have any confidence in our old, sinful nature,
and turn to Christ. That is why the
last part of verse 24 and verse 25 says,
Who shall deliver me from the body of
this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ our
Lord.
Deliverance
comes, not through being occupied with ourselves and trying to improve
ourselves, but rather with looking outside of ourselves, at Christ. Then we find immediate deliverance, because
we are occupied with what Christ is, instead of what we are.
Often we shrink
back in horror when we see how awful our sinful nature really is. We do not want to admit it, so we de- fend
our old, sinful nature, or make excuses for it, rather than admitting that it
is as bad as it appears to be. The
pathway of deliverance is to admit fully what God has already told us in His
Word, that "the heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked"
(Jeremiah 17:9). Let our sinful nature
be as bad as God says it is – God has condemned it at the cross, and in the
death of Christ I have died to sin.
God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin,
condemned sin in the flesh. (Romans 8:3)
Romans
8 brings before us the blessed position of the believer who has been delivered
from sin. Not only are my sins washed
away, but I have been delivered from the law (or principle) of sin and death. No longer am I before God as a ruined
sinner, but I stand "in Christ Jesus" (Romans 8:1), and "walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit" (Romans 8:4). Instead of
trying to improve the sinful nature, I simply turn away from it, recognizing
that before God, I am "in Christ," and have a new life in Him.
In years gone by
more people burned wood and coal to heat their homes, and men known as chimney
sweeps were very common. As you may know, with the burning of wood and coal a
substance called creosote builds up in chimneys and, if it is not cleaned out
periodically, it eventually results in a chimney fire. These chimney sweeps
used to go around and clean out chimneys for their living. Sometimes the
chimneys were large enough for boys and men to get right inside them to do the
cleaning, and you can imagine how filthy they became. They were covered from
head to toe with soot. You would see the men going from house to house, black
all over, with their brooms and other tools over their shoulders.
Now let me ask you the question, "Which would get
you more dirty, hugging a chimney sweep, or fighting with him?" If you think for a moment, you will agree
that it would not make much difference – you would get hopelessly dirty either
way.
If we think of the chimney sweep as our old, sinful
nature, the application is obvious. The
devil does not care whether we embrace sin, or continually fight with it, because we
become defiled either way. We must give
the chimney sweep a wide berth – keep well away from him. That is what the Word of God tells us to do
when our sinful nature tries to act – I am simply to turn away from it, and
allow the Spirit of God to bring Christ before me. Every true believer is
indwelt with the Spirit of God, and the Spirit of God is the power of the new
life. We will speak more of this later.
The Apostle Paul spoke of himself as
"a man in Christ" (2 Corinthians 12:2). No longer was he the man he had been before
he was saved, although his sinful nature remained with him, and was just as bad
as before. But before God he recognized that he was "in Christ,"
and that God looked on him as "a man in Christ." No longer did he try to improve his sinful
nature, for that had been condemned at the cross, and he had died to sin. As "a man in Christ" he
viewed himself as God viewed him, and practically took the position that he was
dead to sin. Then he sought to live in
the good of that position.
We have seen that true Christian
position is that of being dead, buried and risen with Christ. As far as sin is concerned, God has
condemned it at the cross. In the death of Christ, God saw the
crucifixion of my old man, and the cross was the end of all that I was as a
sinful creature of Adam's race. Now I
am entitled to take that position practically, and reckon myself to be "dead
indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Romans 6:11). With this blessed truth in mind, we can go on to see the true,
scriptural answer to self-esteem. ˘
To be continued in the next edition of
the GFJ.
Editor’s Notes:
1
This is the
first installment of a multi-part series on “self-esteem” and the Christian
living by grace.
2
JND is an
abbreviation for the “The New Translation” by John Nelson Darby.
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