| Man:
The Worshiping Animal
This
essay is concerned with the often-asked question,
“Won’t a good, moral life get me to heaven?”
We
begin first with the nature of man himself.
One of the most remarkable things about humans
is that from the dawn of history, and no matter
where we find them on this planet, they are
worshipping animals. In fact, humans are the
only animals in the world who worship. Homo
Sapiens is incurably religious. Why is man so
inclined? What are the reasons, and how do they
bear on our question about having good morals
and getting to heaven?
Let’s
look briefly at some foundational elements that
appear to be universals when it comes to human
behavior. The first, as we stated above, is
simply that humans do worship. Ethnic groups
of all kinds, and in all places, whether remote
or close to other peoples, have their own history,
folklore, deities, rituals, particular moral
system and life-customs. All of these enable
each culture to cope with the great issues of
life and its passages--from childhood to maturity
to old age, and to the ultimate passage through
that dark gate, Death. Christians tie this human
inclination to worship directly to the fact
that God says man, and only man, is created
in His divine image. (imago dei)
Secondly,
what is also curious is how and what humans
worship. The most prominent feature of human
worship from earliest beginnings has been a
sacrifice of some sort, whether the sheep, goats
or bulls of the early Mediterranean world, or
the human beings hurled into the mouths of volcanoes
by the Polynesians, or the child sacrifices
of the Canaanites, or the ritual slaughter practiced
by the Aztecs, the Incas, and virtually all
of the New World Indians. In all cases, it appears
some kind of blood must flow. We can also add
to this (in many cultures) the prominence of
self-sacrifice through flagellation, severe
asceticism, or acts of personal penance.
The
centrality of sacrifice in all human religious
thinking points to an unmistakable reality;
that humans instinctively know, or at least
suspect, that there exists One to whom they
are accountable for their behavior. They also
assume, or know, that they have fallen short
of what that higher being (or beings) requires
of them. There is a universal sense that “God
is not pleased with me.” So a third feature
of worship is universal guilt. People worship
because they feel guilty. They feel this guilt
because they perceive they have fallen short
of the standard that God, others, and they themselves
require.
The
Great Global Heresy: Religion
“Good
little boys go to heaven and bad little boys
go to hell!” Probably most of us, at one time
or another, have undergone the ordeal of having
a parent or a teacher point a finger at us (or
a neighboring miscreant) and warn of the ultimate
outcome of unacceptable behavior. This “Santa
Claus” mentality suggests that God is “makin’
a list and checkin’ it twice, gonna find out
who’s naughty or nice.”
Everywhere
we turn, we hear people speak of this religion.
It is the most popular approach to God on the
planet. We all know about the good little angel
sitting on one shoulder and the bad little angel
on the other, and we are very familiar with
jokes about what happens to the person who dies
and is immediately face to face with Saint Peter
at the Golden Gates of Heaven. Peter stands
there ready to evaluate and pass judgment on
whether we’ve been good enough to be admitted
and accepted inside. Saint Peter expects us
to give moral account of ourselves before we
can go inside. The general, worldwide assumption
is that, when we die, our good deeds and our
bad deeds will be placed on the divine scales
and weighed to determine if we go “up” or “down.”
However, from Christianity’s viewpoint, this
is a great, global heresy.
This
is “religion,” but it is definitely not Christianity.
In fact, Christianity is radically opposed to
such an idea, teaching us that we are not to
do something, but rather that something has
already been done on our behalf. This global
heresy, which we call “religion,” actually comes
from Hinduism. It is the idea that God resides
at the top of a great mountain, and it makes
little difference which path a seeker chooses
in his ascent up that mountain, since all paths
lead to the God on top. And it is up to you
to climb if you want to reach the summit--and
God.
At
the western end of the Forum in ancient Rome,
there stood the Millenarium Aureum, the Golden
Milestone, a gilded bronze column set up by
Augustus Caesar to mark the junction and the
origin of the major Roman roads spreading out
like the spokes of a great wheel in every direction
to distant destinations throughout the Empire.
On this column were inscribed the major towns
and their distances from Rome. From this came
the popular saying, “All roads lead to Rome.”
This is what religionists believe about God.
They say things like, “Well, it really doesn’t
matter what you believe. What’s important is
that you try to do your best and be sincere
about it. After all, we’re all trying to get
to the same place; we all worship the same God.”
But
in the Genesis account of Adam and Eve, we encounter
something very different: in fact, we discover
that there are two possible approaches to God,
but only one is acceptable. After Adam and Eve
had disobeyed God, they immediately hid in the
bushes, took out needle and thread, and began
sewing fig leaves together to cover themselves.
God came and found them in the bushes — flunking
the first home economics course ever offered!
God looked at the clusters of fig leaves they
had hastily sewn together, and He was not pleased.
In fact, He scolded their efforts and their
conduct. Adam and Eve not only had to admit
their guilt and disobedience, they also had
to acknowledge their inability to make things
right through their own efforts. They could
not cover, or atone, for what they had done.
The account goes on to say that God had to take
the initiative to adequately clothe them. He
killed some animals and made garments from their
skins for a covering.
All
philosophy, philanthropy, asceticism, religion,
ethics, and all other systems that seek to gain
the approval of God through human self-effort
are the “fig-leaf” approach. This method is
at the heart of what we call “religion,” man’s
best effort to reach up and find God. The problem
every worshipper encounters when climbing the
mountain is an impenetrable barrier which denies
all further advance. It is the barrier of God’s
holiness and perfection. Each individual’s personal
sin and imperfection prevents him or her from
coming any closer. In his autobiography, Mahatma
Gandhi, a devout Hindu, speaks eloquently of
his own struggle with this when he says, “Oh
wretched man that I am. It is a constant source
of torture to me that I am so far from the one
I know to be my very life and being, and I know
that it is my own sin and wretchedness that
hides Him from me.”
The
Problem of Sin
When
the word “sin” comes up in a conversation, most
people look as though someone just slipped them
a mildewed fig! We do lots of it, we just don’t
like to talk about it! Many people do not know
what sin or a sinner really is. What is sin?
Sin is a violation of the law, the standard
God requires of every human. A sinner is therefore
someone who has broken that standard. Do not
misunderstand me. I am not saying that there
is no good at all in people. There is a great
deal of good. Humans are not as bad as they
could be. The point is simply this: If our premise
is that to get to heaven one has to be good,
then how good is good enough? The Scriptures
are quite clear about this. God is not demanding
“goodness.” We saw above that Adam and Eve’s
best efforts to cover themselves (fig leaves)
were not enough. The good in man, all his moral
achievement, is not acceptable to God because
God is not demanding goodness. He demands perfection!
Many will say they try to live by the Ten Commandments
or by some other rule of life, such as the Golden
Rule. And yet, if we are honest, each of us
discovers we have violated our own standards
at some point. This is what Paul meant when
he said, “All have sinned and come short of
the glory of God.” (Romans 3:23)
The
Grand Canyon is 6 to 18 miles across, 276 miles
long, and one mile deep. The world’s record
in the long jump, set by Mike Powell at the
1991 World Championships in Tokyo is 29’ 4 1/2.”
The chances of a person jumping from one side
of the Grand Canyon to the other are greater
than that of someone attempting to establish
fellowship with God through his own efforts.
The standard man must meet is God’s perfection.
Who can match that? It is a goal so far away
that no one could ever reach it. To make matters
worse, James tells us, “Whoever keeps the whole
law and yet stumbles in one point, he has become
guilty of all.” (James 2:10) This means if someone
breaks just one of the commandments, he is as
guilty as if he had broken all ten! The purpose
of giving the Ten Commandments in the first
place was not because God knew human beings
would keep them perfectly. The Bible tells us
that these revealed standards were intended
to be to us what an X-ray machine is to a broken
arm. The machine reveals the condition of the
arm, but it will not set and knit the bones,
nor will it put the arm in a cast. By the same
token, the Ten Commandments can only reveal
to us the condition of our lives. They cannot
heal us or cover our sin.
The
Pharisees looked at the Law and then at their
own lives and said, “I’m pretty good, really
good.” Jesus had wanted them to come to the
opposite conclusion. He even called them hypocrites!
He said they were wrong to claim they were righteous
enough and that all was well between them and
their Maker. That is why he said, “Those who
are well do not need a physician.” (Matthew
9:12) When you are well, you don’t seek a doctor.
The time to consult a physician is when you
realize you are sick. Jesus was urging the Pharisees
to be honest about themselves when He said,
“I have not come to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance.” (v. 13)
When
my wife and I travel, and I discover I’m lost,
I really hate for her to make her classic statement,
“You’re lost. Why don’t you ask for directions?”
In my case, the issue is always my male pride!
With the Pharisees, it was religious pride,
as it is for all who would seek heaven on the
basis of their own merits. A wise old Baptist
preacher once said, “It isn’t difficult to get
people saved; it is difficult to get them lost!”
This is man’s dilemma: Like the Pharisees, people
cling to the old fig leaves of self-effort instead
of submitting to the covering God Himself has
provided for all (Christ’s sacrificial death,
the Cross). Each of us must choose one or the
other. (John 3:18, 36)
The
Problem of Righteousness
While
morality and human goodness are to be commended,
God makes it clear from the very outset that
no one, through his own efforts, possesses the
ability to make himself presentable before God.
It was Charles Haddon Spurgeon who said, “Man
is basically a silkworm. A spinner and a weaver
... trying to clothe himself ... but the silkworm’s
activity spins it a shroud. So it is with man.”
Adam and Eve are classic examples.
Our
problem is not only that we have fallen short
of God’s standard (Romans 3:23) by sinning.
We also lack something. We not only need the
removal of personal sin through blood sacrifice
to satisfy divine justice, we need something
further to make us fit for heaven and the divine
presence of God. In other words, Christ’s death
in our place will keep us out of hell, but we
still have the problem of getting into heaven.
Isaiah spoke of this when he said, “For all
of us have become like one who is unclean, and
all our righteous deeds are as filthy rags.”
(Isaiah 64:6) Not our sins, but our good deeds!
We need not only atonement for our sins, we
also need righteousness to enter heaven! It
has to be a certain kind of righteousness. The
most righteous people of Jesus’ day were considered
to be the Pharisees. They knew the Old Testament
by heart. They went to the synagogue three times
a day and prayed seven times a day. They were
respected in the community, but Jesus looked
right through their religious veneer and, in
their presence, admonished the crowds that “Unless
your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes
and Pharisees, you shall not enter the kingdom
of heaven.” (Matthew 5:20) The crowds responded
by staring at each other in bewilderment. “You
mean the Pharisees aren’t righteous enough to
go to heaven? If they can’t make it, who will?”
In
the Garden of Eden we observe this conflict
between two kinds of righteousness — human righteousness,
which is clearly symbolized by the fig leaf
garments Adam and Eve sewed together to make
themselves presentable before God, and divine
righteousness, which is symbolized by the adequate
covering of the slain animals provided by God
Himself. We find these two kinds of righteousness
marching and clashing with each other all the
way through both Testaments. Paul referred to
these same two forms of righteousness when he
said of his Jewish brethren, “I bear them witness,
that they have a zeal for God, but not in accordance
with knowledge. For not knowing about God’s
righteousness, and seeking to establish their
own, they did not submit themselves to the righteousness
of God.” (Romans 10:1)
In
the former Soviet Union, rubles are printed
and circulated. With those rubles you can buy
your dinner, pay your hotel bill, and purchase
things in the shops, but if you brought those
rubles back to America and tried to do the same
thing, the rubles would not be honored. It would
be futile to try to do business with rubles
in America. Let’s think of these two forms of
righteousness in mathematical terms. Let’s call
God’s righteousness “+R” and human righteousness
“-R.” The first righteousness is absolute, while
the second is relative. Over a lifetime, a human
being can accumulate a huge pile of -R, but
added up, it still totals -R. To do business
with God in heaven, we must deal with Him in
the only “currency” honored and accepted by
Him, and that is +R. It is futile to try to
negotiate with God on the basis of relative,
human goodness. We need +R. Where do we get
such “currency?” It is given to us as a gift
if we will accept it--the perfect righteousness
of Jesus Christ. The yardstick God uses to measure
everyone is His Son. This +R righteousness is
ours only in Christ: “Not by works of righteousness
which we have done, but according to His mercy
He saved us, by the washing of regeneration
and renewing by the Holy Spirit.” (Titus 3:5)
This gracious provision is a radical departure
from all other religious ideas humans have ever
conceived or set forth. It is so radical that
human beings would never have thought of it.
The
Uniqueness of Christian Grace
We
have sought to arrive at a biblical answer to
the question, “Will a good, moral life get me
to heaven?” We have examined the bankruptcy
of every attempt by people to reach that goal
through any and every means of self-effort.
We have discovered that the salvation offered
by Christianity is uniquely opposed to all human
efforts to secure it by working one’s way into
God’s good graces. In fact, if God expected
us to attain our salvation through good deeds,
then God made a terrible mistake. He allowed
His only-begotten Son to come to earth — robed
in human flesh — and die a horrible death on
a cross for our personal, eternal benefit. To
choose a “good works” path to God is to negate
the total significance of Christ’s death, making
it meaningless and unnecessary. What God has
to offer is free. It is a gift that is not deserved
by any of us, nor could we ever repay what the
gift is worth. God has dealt with humankind
in grace and love. The only thing that God has
asked us to do is to humbly admit that we have
broken His laws, acknowledge that He has indeed
made things right through His Son’s sacrificial
death on the cross, and accept His forgiveness
by faith. We are invited to lay aside our own
“fig-leaf” costumes and freely submit to the
covering God has provided for us — the bloodstained
garment of His Son, the very righteousness of
Christ.
This
is what Jesus sought to communicate in Matthew
22:1-14, the parable about the wedding feast
that a king was preparing to give his son, “So
the servants went out into the highways, and
gathered together all, as many as they found,
both good and bad: and the wedding was furnished
with guests. And when the king came in to see
the guests, he saw there a man who had not on
a wedding garment. And he said unto him, ‘Friend,
how came you here not having on a wedding garment?’
And he was speechless. Then said the king to
the servants, ‘Bind him hand and foot, and take
him away, and cast him into outer darkness;
there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth!’”
The text does not tell us whether this person
was one of the “good” ones or the “bad” ones.
Why? Because it is irrelevant to what Jesus
wants us to understand. The important issue
was proper attire for the occasion. God is telling
us that the only acceptable attire for heaven
is the righteousness of Christ. As a gracious
host, He stands holding out to humanity the
most expensive, costly garment in the universe,
and He eagerly desires to wrap us up in it,
safe, warm, happy and secure, “I will greatly
rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful
in my God: for He hath clothed me with the garments
of salvation, He hath covered me with the robe
of righteousness, as a bridegroom decketh himself
with ornaments, and as a bride adorns herself
with her jewels.” (Isaiah 61:10)
So
how does this apply to you and me? Simply this:
Everything that needed to be done for your salvation
and mine was accomplished the moment Christ
died on the cross. The penalty has been paid
and God’s righteous demands satisfied. God is
now free to extend eternal life as a free gift.
He declares, “The wages of sin is death, but
the free gift of God is eternal life through
Jesus Christ our Lord.” (Romans 6:23) Gifts,
of course, must be received. For that reason,
Jesus said, “He who believes has eternal life.”
(John 6:47) “Believe” means “to trust or depend
on.” God is asking each person to come to Him
as a sinner, recognize that His Son died on
the cross for us, and trust His Son alone as
our only hope of heaven. This was the message,
the good news which the first Christians took
to the world, “Neither is there salvation in
any other, for there is no other name under
heaven that has been given among men, by which
we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)
In
reality, every human being is just a prayer
away from receiving the grace and forgiveness
of God and the promise of heaven. It has to
be the right prayer, based on the right facts;
that Jesus Christ came into this world to save
sinners, not “Do-Gooders,” “I have not come
to call the righteous to repentance, but sinners.”
(Matthew 9:13) You can begin to trust Christ
for your salvation today instead of your own,
futile efforts of trying to be a fairly nice
person all your life. Obviously, your heart
attitude, your sincerity, is what really counts.
God knows your heart, but if the following suggested
prayer will help to bring a sense of closure
and certainty to your decision to believe in,
to trust Christ, then please feel free to use
it as a simple guide:
“Dear
God, I admit that I am a sinner, and nothing
I can do will ever get me to heaven. But I believe
Jesus Christ died for me and rose from the grave
to prove the validity of His claim to be my
Savior. He took my place and my punishment.
So right now, I place my trust in Christ alone
to make me presentable and acceptable to you.
Come into my life. I accept the gift of your
Son. Thank you that you are now within me, not
based upon my feelings, but upon your promise
that if I open the door of my life and invite
you to come live within me and be my Savior,
you would. (Rev. 3:20, John 1:12) Make me the
kind of person you want me to be. Begin to show
me that you really have entered my life and
heart, and now give me the guidance I need to
live a new life in fellowship with you. Amen.”
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