
Looking for the god or goddess within
Modern spirituality urges us to look within
ourselves and embrace the inner man and the god within. I did an Internet search for “find god within” which identified over
124-million results! It seems that finding the god within oneself is quite a hot
topic. There is a shaky assumption that inner peace awaits as we discover the god
or goddess within. On one particular
Internet site a fellow who identified himself as a Grand Master (of what I don't know) told his followers (how many I'm not sure): “Yes, there is a God, but not the God you perceive. As Jesus
said, “Don’t look here or there for heaven. It is within you.”” Methinks the "Grand Master" was taking a few liberties with Luke 17.21.
In that passage, the Pharisees asked Jesus
when the Kingdom
of God would come. Jesus replied that the “Kingdom of God
(not heaven) is amongst you.” Our Lord
was referring to the Kingdom
of God being internal and
spiritual rather than external and physical. Taken in light of other things He
said about the Kingdom of God (Mark 1.14-15, Luke 16.15-17), his last comment
likely means that the kingdom has arrived in the person and ministry of Christ.
Looking within for God is a dead end rooted
in pride and self-exaltation. It ultimately brings people lower not
higher. The Scriptures repeatedly tell
us this. (Proverbs 18.18, 28.25, Ezekiel 28.1-9, Habakkuk 2.4, Matthew 23.12, Luke
14.11, 1John 2.16). Pride is a form of hatred for God. It was pride and self-exaltation
that made the devil the devil (Is.14.12-15).

The “Source” and “Good” Saint Augustine referred to is the God of the
universe not some puny, make-belief god within us. Saint Augustine was referring to the great I
AM WHO I AM of Exodus, the Alpha and Omega of Revelation 1.8. (Also see Jesus’
words in see John 8.57). The simple fact
is that God is who He is quite apart from what Mark,Tom, Dick, Grand Master Harry thinks.
The eyeless “I” of self exaltation
Pride poisons our potential to foster or
even care about our relationships with other people, other than how they can
puff us up. We become an eyeless “I”. Self-exaltation
kills the potential for a relationship with the great I AM WHO I AM, through
Jesus Christ. That has eternal implications.
I want to help you not to overlook this point. We live in a time and culture that celebrates Self above everything.
Our example
Fellow Christian, place a guard around your heart against
self-exaltation lest you fall away from the warmth and light of Christ. He said, “Whoever exalts himself will be
humbled but whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” (Matthew 23.12.) And
Jesus practiced what He preached.

Live and walk humbly before God (Micah 6.8).
If there’s any exalting to be done toward you, let it come from Him. In such a state, you will find your worth as a
child of God.
“But to those who did accept him he gave
power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name.” John 1.12
Mark
[Steve Green sings I Repent]
So our goal as humble followers of Christ is not to be great in the eyes of the world. I agree completely. But I wonder how this relates to your quote at the top of the post about wanting to become a great western (christian?) civilization again.
ReplyDeleteIt is only through Christ western civilization became great. It only through Christ that we will return.
ReplyDeleteMark
Profound in its simplicity that a at the end of the day, as St. John suggested, we are called to be less so that Christ can be more in our lives and everyone's life.
ReplyDelete