|
Napoleon once said,
”None but myself did me any harm.” To a much larger degree
than most of us are prepared to admit, this is true of us
as well. We are our own worst enemy. We do not to think this
and usually we are ready to blame someone or something for
all the things we did or did not do, but when we are alone
with our thoughts we have to admit that really ”none but myself
did me any harm.”
Surely Paul recognized
this truth when he declared, ”0 wretched man that I am!” To
recognize this truth is half the battle in overcoming self.
It is only when we try to whitewash our problems that we obscure
them so that they are difficult to correct. When we openly
admit that we are wretched, then we are in the position to
ask for help which is exactly what Paul did. He asked the
question, ”Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?”
The truth is that
we are all so wretched because man is completely incapable
of ever achieving salvation. With man this is impossible but
with God all things are possible and so Paul acknowledged
his own weaknesses as we also must, and he cast his burden
upon the Lord knowing that He will comfort and sustain in
time of need. This is exactly what he did, for Paul thanks
God saying, ”I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.” It
is only when we stop relying upon the arm of flesh and put
our faith and trust in the Lord that we begin to make headway
against the things of this life.
It is not an easy
thing to do. We live in a country and in an age when flesh
is glorified .God has allowed man’s knowledge to increase
and man has become puffed up by it. Puny man now not only
ignores God but he also challenges Him. By this very act man
is demonstrating the truth of Napoleon’s words. Because he
is his own worst enemy, man now by his cleverness would like
to exterminate the human race from the face of the earth.
We can’t do much about the age in which we are living except
to recognize its dangers and stay clear of its pitfalls. Just
because everyone else is losing his head is no reason for
us to relinquish ours.
If we do not learn
for ourselves how wretched we are, we may find that the words
of Jesus which were directed to the Church of Laodicea may
apply to us. ”Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased
with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that
thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor and blind and naked;
I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou
mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed,
and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint
thine eyes with eyesalve, that thou mayest see.”
The danger we face
is in not knowing. Those who think that they are rich are
not looking to God for help. After all, just look what they
think they have! They think they need nothing when in reality
they are really nothing and need everything.
There is only one
place where we can buy gold tried in the fire. Only God through
His Word has the eyesalve that can give us sight. When we
stand therefore before the judgment seat of Christ we will
have no one else to blame for what we did and what we left
undone. ”None but myself did me any harm.” None but God can
give us gold and white raiment.
|