Found this site upon the recommendation of another person. It’s called the6c.
Here’s an introduction:
Enjoy!
by Phil Auxier
Found this site upon the recommendation of another person. It’s called the6c.
Here’s an introduction:
Enjoy!
by Phil Auxier
Last Friday I posted on TGINL, and how we tend to minimize the Gospel by being self-righteous. I get it. It’s hard to recognize and see how self-righteous we’ve become. We all tend to give ourselves very favorable ratings in what’s right. I was greatly helped then, this week, when I read over these questions again from Jerry Bridges’ Bookends of the Christian Life.
When you analyze your Christian walk: 1) Do you tend to live by a list of dos and don’ts? 2) Is it difficult for you to respect those whose standards aren’t as high as yours? 3) Do you assume that practicing spiritual disciplines should result in God’s blessing? 4) Do you feel you’re better than most other people? 5) Has it been a long time since you identified a sin and repented of it? 6) Do you resent it when others point out your “spiritual blind spots”? 7) Do you readily recognize the sins of others but not your own? 8) Do you have the sense that God owes you a good life? 9) Do you get angry when difficulties and suffering come into your life? 10) Do you seldom think of the cross?
Bridges concludes:
If you found yourself answering yes to at least half of these questions, it’s likely you’re living under the stronghold of self-righteousness toward God. You need to see this for what it really is — a hideous enemy disguised as a satisfying glory. It will let you down and leave you hanging. Its satisfaction is as short-lived as an ice cube in the blazing sun; its glory has all the appeal of a well-dressed corpse. And at the end of the day this fact remains: no amount of personal performance will ever gain the approval of a holy God. (pp.49-50)
The remedy is to repent of our self-righteousness by depending on the finished work of Jesus Christ. We need to truth of the Gospel to saturate us in such a way that our living is informed by the Gospel, not by our self-righteous, religious performance. Run to Jesus today, He’s your refuge and crushed your self-righteousness on the cross and through His resurrection.
by Phil Auxier
You may not recognize this acronym, but its sinister hold is found in probably every circle of believers you encounter. What does it stand for? Thank God I’m Not Like. Too often, as believers, we pride ourselves on what we aren’t rather than what we’re for.
Growing up, I often heard that phrase — “Don’t cuss, don’t chew, don’t go with girls that do,” as embodying what it meant to follow Christ. Or, take, for instance, Harry Potter. While much wisdom and discernment should be considered in digesting this form of entertainment (we should be wise and discerning with every influence that might come our way), by and large the Christian community blasts people who enjoy it. Often this simply comes across as “Thank God I’m Not Like Those People Who Enjoy Harry Potter.” And, in making such a statement, our identity is found in Anti-Harry Potter, not the Gospel.
The Bible, however, is bent on making the Gospel the message of first importance. The Gospel is to define us. The Gospel is to shape us. This may mean we avoid certain things and embrace certain things, but our identity isn’t found in what we avoid or embrace, our identity is found in the Gospel, in who we are in Christ. This was the problem with the Pharisee in Luke 18 and why the tax collector was justified and not him. His identity was in something other than the Gospel. The Pharisee looked to heaven and prayed, “God I thank you I’m not like this sinner. I do…I don’t… I do… As a result, the tax collector, who beat his chest and asked God to be merciful to a sinner like him, went to his house justified and not the Pharisee.
Today, examine your life. Is your identity really found in the Gospel? Or have you let other things define you spiritually? Forsake TGINL and embrace JESUS.