John 1:29 The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.
What is the sin of the world? It is pride.
You
may not think so; you may not see it: but I would ask you to consider
again and see if all that is called sin cannot be traced to this, if it
is not this in some form of expression.
For what is the root of pride?
What is pride? It is selfhood come to life, risen up, active –
that is the root of pride.
And the branches and the fruit – how many
they are! – jealousy, covetousness, wrath, and all the rest.
How is
wrath pride? Well, wrath, if it is not holy, purified, blood-purged
wrath like the wrath of the Lamb, if it is wrath which is actuated by
ourselves and our interests, is the wrath of selfhood.
So often our
anger is our self-preservation, our reaction to some threat to our
interests or our likes.
Rebellion, stubbornness, prejudice, and much of
our fear, are all traceable to pride.
What are we afraid of? What are we
fearing?
If we examined our fears, why are we afraid?
If we were utterly severed from the personal interest –
that is, if we could hand entirely over to the Lord and get out of the
picture ourselves – would not a lot of our fear go?
And so we might go
on: but we do not want to indulge in a wholesale analysis of human
nature or of pride.
We have mentioned enough to show that pride is the
root and that there are countless fruits traceable to that root....
So may this be a word of interpretation as to why the
Lord is dealing with us as He has and does
On the one hand,
overcoming this evil thing, breaking, emptying, grinding to powder,
until there is nothing of us left in the matter of self-sufficiency; on
the other hand, giving Himself, increasing Himself.
Now this is not a
word, perhaps, of great inspiration, but I feel it to be a word of very
great importance.
This must be true of us individually. There must also
be a corporate humility. This is the way along which the Lord will
commit Himself.
He will never give us anything to feed our flesh, to
enlarge and strengthen our natural life.
He will hold us to the way that
keeps us safe where that is concerned.
How wonderfully the Bible
becomes alive when you look at it in this way!
~T. Austin Sparks~
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