Self-Centered Godliness
Self-Centered Godliness. Modern Christians tend to make satisfaction their religion. We show much more concern for self-fulfillment than for pleasing our God. Typical of Christianity today, at any rate in the Engilish-speaking world, is its masive rash of how-to books for believers, directing us to more successful relationships, more joy in sex, becoming more of a person, realizing our possibilities, getting more excitement each day, reducing our weight, improving our diet, managing our money, licking our families into happier shape, and what not. For people whose prime passion is to glorify God, these are doubtless legitimate concerns; but the how-to books regularly explore them in a self-absorbed way that treats our enjoyment of life rather than the glory of God as the center of interest. Granted, they spread a thin layer of Bible teaching over the mixture of popular psychology and common sense they offer, but their overall approach clearly reflects the narcissim - “selfism” or “me-ism” as it is sometimes called - that is the way of the world in the modern West.
So wrote J. I. Packer in his book, Keep in Step with the Spirit in the chapter, “Mapping the Spirit’s Path: The Way of Holiness.” “Self-Centered Godliness” sadly defines much of what passes today for Christianity. It is an indictment on this generation that words like godliness, sanctification, and holiness, which were central to conversations of believers, the subject of sermons, and the hot issue of writing just 75 years ago is now practically absent from the modern Christians vocabulary. We are now so absorbed with self and the fulfillment of our needs, claiming our miracle, discovering our gifts, exercising our faith, exploring our ministry, etc., that God has become little more than a genie in a bottle (bible) - a means to our end.
Packer continues:
Now self-absorption, however religious in its cast of mind, is the opposite of holines, holiness means godliness, and godliness is rooted in God-centeredness, and those who think of God as existing for their benefit rather than of themselves as existing for his praise do not qualify as holy men and women. Their mind-set has to be described in very different terms. It is an ungodly sort of godliness that has self at its center.
Self-Centered Godliness. Modern Christians tend to make satisfaction their religion. We show much more concern for self-fulfillment than for pleasing our God. Typical of Christianity today, at any rate in the Engilish-speaking world, is its masive rash of how-to books for believers, directing us to more successful relationships, more joy in sex, becoming more of a person, realizing our possibilities, getting more excitement each day, reducing our weight, improving our diet, managing our money, licking our families into happier shape, and what not. For people whose prime passion is to glorify God, these are doubtless legitimate concerns; but the how-to books regularly explore them in a self-absorbed way that treats our enjoyment of life rather than the glory of God as the center of interest. Granted, they spread a thin layer of Bible teaching over the mixture of popular psychology and common sense they offer, but their overall approach clearly reflects the narcissim - “selfism” or “me-ism” as it is sometimes called - that is the way of the world in the modern West.
God.