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- STE:The awful sin of Pride by David Wilkerson
-
- Pride is at the very top of the list of things God hates. "These six
- things doth the Lord hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto him: a
- proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, an
- heart tht deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running
- to mischief, a false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth
- discord among brethren" (Proverbs 6:16-19).
-
- The Bible says further, "For all that is in the world, the lust of
- the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of
- the Father, but of the world" (1 John 2:16). Most Christians admit they
- battle against the lusts of the flesh and the eyes. They know what lust
- is, they hate it and flee from it by the power of the Spirit.
- Christians also recognize pride in others because they may appear to be
- stuck up, self-centered, ambitious and high- minded.
-
- But few Christians would consider themselves proud. Most Christians
- will admit they have not arrived, that they are not as Christlike as
- they want to be and that there are areas in their lives that need
- improvement. But few Christians recognize pride in themselves. Do you
- recognize it in yourself? Many Christians would admit, "Well, I may be
- self-assured - even confident. At the worst I may see myself as more
- talented or intelligent than others. But I'm not proud! I give God all
- the credit for what I've acomplished and for who I am. It's all in His
- strength. Proud? I don't think I can honestly admit to that. After all,
- I walk in holiness and I open my heart to be searched by his Word.
- Surely He would have shown it to me."
-
- Recently the Holy Spirit spoke to my heart about this hateful sin. I
- said, "Lord, You mean You want me to preach a message about pride at
- Times Square Church, don't You? There must be pride in the
- congregation." The Spirit's answer stunned me. "No, David, I want to
- speak to you about pride, about the subtle kinds of pride that you
- yourself are guilty of. First you must see it in your heart, then you
- may preach it to others. Like most other Christians, I thought I was at
- least trying to be humble. We take care not to boast like Pharisees
- about being better than all the rest. But deep within our hearts we
- think, "I'm not arrogant, boastful or overly ambitious. So how could I
- be proud?"
-
- The Word has been dealing with me, exposing forms of pride I did not
- know were so deeply imbedded in me - and a pride that is the worst kind
- of all. When the Spirit said, "Pride in you, David." I replied, "But
- Lord, I'm not trying to be somebody great! You know that. I"m not a
- bragart or a boaster. I am honestly trying to decrease so Christ can
- increase. If there is pride in me, I can't even see it. Please show it
- to me. Expose it to me!" And He showed me! As I look back I tremble at
- how many times I committed this hateful sin. I am guilty of it.
-
- ***What is Pride?***
-
- God sees pride in an entirely different way than we do. He showed me
- that I had too narrow a definition of pride. Yes, there is a wicked,
- boastful, arrogant pride, and it can be seen all about us in these
- days. But there is also a pride that is spiritual in nature. It is
- committed by those who have walked closely with God and it can be seen
- in the holiest among us. The more spiritual you are, the more
- revelation you have had, the closer to Him that you have been, the more
- hideous this sin is when it is committed. It is not a way of life,
- although it could become so. It is a sin that is often committed even
- on our knees, while seeking God.
-
- To understand this message, I want to give you new definitions of
- pride and humility. Pride is independence - humility is dependence.
- Pride is an unwillingness to wait for God to act in His own time and in
- His own way. Pride rushes in to take matters into its own hands. One of
- the greatest temptations true Christians face is getting ahead of God.
- It is acting without a clear mandate from God. It is taking things into
- our own hands when it appears that God is not working fast enough. It
- is impatience.
-
- ***Saul Couldn't Wait for God's Time***
-
- Saul committed this terrible sin at Gilgal, as recounted in 1 Samuel
- 10. When Samuel anointed Saul as king, "Samuel communed with Saul upon
- the top of the house" (1 Samuel 9:25.). This rooftop discussion
- centered with the Philistines. Samuel was preparing Saul, letting him
- know that he was divinely called to break this bondage. When the time
- was ripe, when the PHilistines and Israel appoached the brink of war.
- Samuel commanded Saul not to act, not to go to war, until all the
- people met at Gilgal to seek the Lord for specific directions. "And
- thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal ... Seven days shalt thou tarry,
- till I come to thee, and show thee what thou shalt do" (1 Samuel 10:8).
- This was to be all God's doing. He alone wants to be in total control.
-
- Samuel represented God's voice. NOt a word of his "fell to the
- ground." God, through Samuel, would supernaturally, sovereignly, give
- them direction. "I will show thee what thou must do." God would make
- all the plans - He would show them how to wage war. Saul was directed
- to do nothing more than to go to the altar at Gilgal and wait for the
- word to come. But war started when Jonathan smote a garrison at Geba.
- "And Jonathan smote the garrison of the Philistines that was in Geba,
- and the Philistine heard of it. And Saul blew the trumpet throughout
- all the land saying, Let the Hebrews hear. And all Israel heard say
- that Saul had smitten a garrison of the Philistines, and that Israel
- also was had in abomination with the Philistines. And the poeple were
- called together after Saul to Gilgal" (1 Samuel 13:3, 4).
-
- Saul waited impatiently. "And the people were called together after
- Saul at Gilgal..." Israel was in panic as a great Philistine army
- approached with thousands of chariots, 6, 000 horsemen and an army that
- appeared to them as numerous as the sand on the seashore. Saul's army
- was deserting on all sides and it had been at best a motley brunch with
- not a single sword among them. All they had were sickles, axes and farm
- tools. This is the very war crisis that Samuel had discussed with Saul
- months before on the rooftop. This was meant to be a time of gathering
- at Gilgal to wait on God for His clear word of direction. But Saul gave
- God a deadline. If the word did not come by a certain hour, Saul
- determined to do whatever he had to do to save the situation. "And he
- tarried seven days, according to the set time that Samuel had appoined:
- but Samuel came not to Gilgal; and the people were scattered from him.
- And Saul said, bring hither a burnt offering" (1 Samuel 13:9).
-
- This was not just to be a matter of waiting, but of waiting until -
- until the word came, until direction from heaven was given. "Wait...
- til I come to thee and show thee..." Why was Samuel just a few hours
- late? Because Saul was being tested to see if he believed that God
- could be trusted, to see if Saul would trust and obey even if things
- were not right on schedule, Samuel delayed because God spoke to him
- clearly and told him to delay. God wanted Saul to be a testimony of
- humble dependence on God in all things, especially in a dark crisis.
-
- BUT SAUL FAILED THE TEST. He looked at conditions and all appeared
- hopeless. An impatient spirit overwhelmed him. Logic told him that it
- was getting too late, that something just had to be done. I can just
- hear him, "I can't take this indecision any longer. God sent me to do
- His work and I'm willing to die for His cause. But here I sit doing
- nothing. There's no guidance, no word from God. I've got to make
- something happen or it will be all over. If we keep doing nothing,
- we'll be completely out of control." This is unmitigated pride - the
- need to be in control of the situation. Saul really believed things
- were spinning out of control.
-
- This is where I have so often failed. I have hated not being in
- control of situations. Not that I want to be the boss or to Lord it
- over others. It's just that I don't like the sense of helplessness and
- dependency. Living in New York, this is the first time I Have had to
- live in a high rise apartment at the mercy of the landlord, the
- superintendent, the union, the elevators, and the broken heaters. When
- things don't work, I have to wait and wait and wait. I tell my wife,
- "I've had enough of this. We're going to buy our own place so that we
- can be in control. This is ridiculous!" I want to be in control.
-
- In regards to Times Square Church, I sometimes feel as Saul did with
- impossibilities looming on all sides. We seem so helpless and the enemy
- seems so big and powerful. I get overly anxious about being in control.
- I don't like having to rent and be at the mercy of changeable
- landlords. God has promised us a permanent place. But I want it now!
- I'm impatient! There's so much to be done and so little time. I think
- to myself, "How long, Lord?" I don't like to be out of control. We need
- some action!"
-
- But God says, "Do you trust Me? Wait! Having done all you can, jsut
- stand still and see the salvation of the Lord!" The hardest part of
- faith is the last half hour, just before the answer is about to come
- forth, just before God is about to work a miracle. That's when we wilt,
- we faint, we try to make something happen. Thiat is sinful pride. "And
- it came to pass, that as soon as he had made an end of offering the
- burnt offering, behold, Samuel came; and Saul went out to meet him,
- that he might salute him" (1 Samuel 13:10). As soon as he took matters
- into his own hands, Samuel arrived. Divine direction was right at the
- door, just minutes away! But Saul couldn't wait!
-
- ***Implications of Not Waiting for God to Work***
-
- We charge God with deception. By impatiently acting on his own, Saul
- was saying, "God semt me out to do this, but now He's making me sit and
- wait. If God won't answer, He can't judge me for doing what I have to
- do>" Playing god is terrible pride. It is charging God with neglect. We
- are commanded, like Saul, to wait on the Lord, to stand still and see
- His salvation, to trust in Him at all times so He can direct our paths.
- But when the deadline we set has passed and there is an anger against
- God and we can't wait, we run off and make things happen. We are saying
- by our actions, "God doesn't really care about me. God has let me down.
- Prayer and waiting doesn't work. Things just get worse. I can't just
- sit here being walked on." We really don't trust His Word.
-
- Samuel's command was, "Go to Gilgal and wait... I will come, you
- will get directions." Before God, all Saul was responsible to do was to
- wait for the word! God wanted to hear Saul say, "God keeps His word;
- never once has a word from Samuel's lips fallent to the ground. God
- said wait for directions and I will wait. Let the whole army desert.
- Let every Israelite be a coward. Let every man be called a liar. If God
- has to, He will send me an army of angels. This isn't my war, I don't
- have the slightest idea of how to go after this great enemy. It's al in
- His hands. All I have been commanded to do is wait for the word."
-
- BUT PRIDE REASONS, "GOD MUST NOT HAVE MEANT IT. MAYBE I HEARD IT
- WRONG. THE PROBLEM IS IN MY SEEING AND HEARING." Instead of standing on
- God's Word, we start figuring things out. In bed in the late hours we
- say, "Lord, here's how I see it can be done." It is wicked to do
- something very logical and reasonable when it is not God's clear word
- of direction. It may be the conclusion of wise men and logical minds,
- the only option open. But it is sin if it is not the word that comes
- from waiting only on God. We need totake the pressure off to perform,
- to do something. You dont' have to do anything but stand on God's Word.
- If you want to prove anything to God, prove you will patiently wait for
- Him to act. Do you really believe God means what He says? It is
- dangerous to get ahead of God! It is independence.
-
- "And Samuel said, What hast thou done? And Saul said, because I saw
- that the people were scattered from me, and that thou camest not within
- the days appointed, and that the Philistines gathered themselves
- together at Michmash; therefore said I, the Philistines will come down
- now upon me to Gilgal, and I have not made supplication unto the Lord;
- I forced myself therefore, and offered a burnt offering. And Samuel
- said to Saul, Thou hast done foolishly: thou hast not kept the
- commandment of the Lord thy God, which he commanded thee: for now would
- the Lord have established they kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy
- kingdom shall not continue: the Lord hath sought him a man after his
- own heart, and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over his
- people, because thou hast not kept that which the Lord commanded thee"
- (1 Samuel 13:11-14).
-
- Saul waited seven days, but that wait was unholy. He was impatient
- angry, fearful and pouting, We must wait with faith, believing that God
- cares for us and loves us, that He will be there on His time. This
- matter of waiting is so important that I must show you some Scriptures
- to prove it.
-
- "And is shall be said in that day, Lo, there is our God; WE HAVE
- WAITED FOR HIM, AND HE WILL SAVE US; this is the Lord; WE HAVE WAITED
- FOR HIM, WE WILL BE GLAD AND REJOICE IN HIS SALVATION ..." (Isaiah
- 25:9).
-
- "For since the beginning of the world men have not heard, nor
- perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye seen, O God, beside thee,
- WHAT HE HATH PREPARED FOR HIM THAT WAITETH FOR HIM..." (Isaiah 64:4).
-
- Compare the impatient pride of Saul to David's waiting on God for
- direction. How beautiful! And how clear!" And the philistine came up
- yet again, and spread themselves in the valley of Rephaim. And when
- David enquired of the lord, he said, Thou shalt not go up; but fetch a
- compass behind them, and come upon them over against the mulberry
- trees. And let it be, when thou hearest the sound of a going in the
- tops of the mulberry trees, that then thou shalt bestir thyself: for
- then shall the Lord go out before thee, to smite the host of the
- Philistines. And David did so, as the Lord had commanded him; and smote
- the Philistines from Geba until thou come to Gazer" (2 Samuel 5:22-25).
- The enemy was spread out before him, but David must have the word of
- God! Only then will he bestir himself.
-
- ***Servanthood***
-
- Pride is repelled by the idea of servanthood. Today everybody wants
- to be everything but a servant. The big children's game in America is
- called "Masters of the Universe!" But that is also becoming the
- theology of many Christians. We quote this Scripture, "Thou art no more
- a servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ
- (Galatians 4:7). What Paul is really saying is that a son who has been
- tutored correctly knows that he is legally the king's son with all
- rights, but he so loves his father he chooses the role of a servant.
- Paul, in the same book, said he was "a servant of Jesus Christ (Romans
- 1:1). James called himself "a servant of the Lord Jesus" (2 Peter 1:1).
- And Christ, the Lord, the very Son of God "made himself of no
- reputation, and took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in
- the likeness of men... He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto
- death, even the death of the cross? (Philippians 2:7-8). Let this mind
- be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus. A servant has no will of his
- own; his master's word is his will.
-
- The Cross represents the death of all my own plans, all my own
- ideas, my own desires, my own hopes and dreams. It is most of all the
- absolute death of my own will. This is true humility. Humility is
- associated only with the Cross. "He humbled Himself-to death at the
- cross..." He had told His disciples, "My meat, My fulfillment in life,
- is to do the will of Him who sent me..." (John 4:34). He said, "I can
- of mine own self do nothing: As I hear, I judge..." (John 5:30). In
- other words, I refuse to take matters into my own hands. I wait to hear
- every direction from my Father! He who is the Light, absolute
- intelligence, knowing all things, humbles Himself, makes Himself
- totally dependent upon the Father in all things. "I can't do it on My
- own, " Jesus said.
-
- John wrote, "As He is, so are we in this world..." (1 John 4:17).
- There is not a true Christian but who can say, "I really want to do His
- perfect will." But here is where we miss it: we set our hearts on
- something that we want, something that looks good, that sounds logical,
- but is not God's will. We will fast and pray and intercede for it! Cry
- a river of tears! Claim it! Bind demons hindering possession of it!
- Quote Bible! Get others to agree with us! One of the biggest traps to
- Christians is a good idea which is not God's mind, a good strategy
- which is not His, a well-conceived plan that is not His. The question
- is - can your desire survive the Cross? Can you walk away from it and
- die to it? Can you honestly say, "Lord, maybe it's not the devil
- stopping me, but You! If it's not Your will it could destroy me. I give
- it up to the Cross! To death! Do it Your way, Lord."
-
- It is when you go down into the grave of death to all self, all
- ambition, all self-will, that you hear His voice. Jesus said, "The hour
- is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of
- God.... All that are in the graves shall hear His voice" (John 5:25,
- 28). This is why thousands of Christians today are getting into trouble
- hearing still small voices. There is confusion, things are not coming
- out right, because there has been no dying to self-will. Yes, I believe
- God does speak to His children. You can hear His true, holy,
- unmistakable voice, but only after crucifixion of self-will and
- self-desire. Jesus heard clearly from the Father. So did Paul, Peter,
- John and Stephen; but only because they were dead to this world. They
- were consumed with doing His will only.
-
- ***What is Humility?***
-
- Humility is total dependency on God. It is trusting God to do the
- right thing at the right time in the right way. It is trusting Him to
- use you in the right way at the right time. Humility is patiently
- waiting on the Lord in a spirit of expectant faith. Pride has no
- patience. "Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him: fret not
- thyself because of him who prospereth in his way, because the man who
- bringeth wicked devices to pass ... fret not thyself in any wise to do
- evil" (Psalm 37:7, 8). This tells us, "Don't get uptight by the
- apparent success of those who look like they are passing you up. They
- take shortcuts. They are blessed and prospered while here you sit,
- trusting God, praying." God says, "Just wait. They are on slippery
- ground. You won't be sorry if you do it My way. Patience is doing a
- work in you. You are becoming strong by waiting in faith. Let patience
- do its perfect work in you!"
-
- The person with godly experience is not the busy-beaver Christian.
- Rather, it is the one patiently waiting on God in faith. He is gaining
- experience, as we are told in Romans 5:4. "Take, my brethren, the
- prophets, who have spoken in the name of the Lord, for an example of
- suffering affliction, and of patience. Behold we count them happy which
- endure. Ye have heard of the patience of Job, and have seen the end of
- the Lord; that the Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy" (James
- 5:10, 11). God equates "walking worthy before him" with joyful patience
- and long suffering. "That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all
- pleasing ... strengthened with all might, according to his glorious
- power, unto all patience and longsuffering with joyfulness" (Colossians
- 1:10, 11).
-
- ***Jesus' Promise for the Last Days"***
-
- Jesus has left us a glorious promise to see us through the dark days
- ahead! He said, "Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also
- will keep the from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all
- the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth" (Revelation 3:10).
- Jesus is saying, "You stayed true when tested by the world. You
- joyfully waited for Me to work things out. Now, while there is
- confusion all around, while the worldwide test is on, I will keep you
- from it. You've proven you will trust Me, come what may!"
-
- The Lord is right now preparing a humble people who have proven God
- faithful. Not only do they say, "God has everything under control."
- They actually let Him have control of their lives. "He shall not be
- afraid of evil tidings: his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord"
- (Psalm 113:7).
-
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-