Jesus
said, "Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up
his cross, and follow Me"
(Mark 8:34).
Self-denial is one of the most basic attributes of Christianity. Yet, it is
one of the most difficult to attain. One reason for that is that it requires
great strength of will.
Man has a great
problem mastering himself. Those who willfully engage in sin have not
learned to control themselves. Those who are overcome in a moment of
temptation have a problem (at least for the moment) with self-control. When
we get angry and let our tempers flare and our words fly, our character is
then flawed due to not practicing self-discipline. We exhibit a lack of will
power when we overeat, are lazy, or are addicted to alcohol, tobacco or some
other drug. Thus, mastering self requires constant work for all of us. The
difference in us is that we may need to work on it in different areas of our
lives.
Shakespeare
wrote, "Brave Conquerors! for so you are, that war against your own
affections and the huge army of the world's desires." John Sterling said,
"The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which
teaches everything else, and not that."
There are more
passages that imply the principle of self-denial than we may think at first.
To learn and grow in self-denial is to grow in heart, in soul, and in
character. This is one quality that we can use every moment of every day in
every place.
With this
article we begin a series of five articles on mastering self.
Defining Self-Denial
1. Different
words used in the New Testament. There are three different words or phrases
used in the Bible that point to the same concept of denying or controlling
self. (a) Jesus used the phrase "deny himself "
(Mark 8:34).
(b) The NKJV uses the words "self-control" in
2 Peter 1:6, Titus 1:8.
(c) The word "temperance" or "temperate" is used in the KJV in
2 Peter 1:6, 1 Corinthians 9:25, and Titus 2:2.
2. "Deny self"
means "to forget oneself, lose sight of oneself and one's own interest"
(Thayer, p. 54). Liter-ally it means to say "No!" to yourself. It is hard to
say no to others, but even harder to say no to ourselves.
3. "Temperance"
means "self-government"
(Thayer). Strong's says the original words translated "temperance" comes
from a word that means "to be strong in a thing (i.e., masterful)." It means
dominion, power or strength.
Thus,
temperance means to have power of dominion over self. William Barclay
suggests that it is the "ability to take a grip of oneself."
4. Aristotle
proposed that there are four states of man with reference to the battle
between reason and passion. (a) Perfect Temperance: This is where reason
rules over passion. The fight is won. (b) On the other end of the spectrum
is Unbridled Lust: This is where passion rules over reason. The fight is
lost. In between these two states is where the battle within ourselves takes
place. (c) Incontinence: This is where reason fights, but passion prevails.
The battle is on, but at the moment reason is losing. (d) Self-Control: This
is where passion fights against reason, but reason prevails. The battle is
still on, but at the moment reason is winning. (Taken from Barclay's
comments on
2 Pet. 1:6.)
The principle
of self-denial or self-control deals with the reality of life. The Bible
does not picture the Christian void of all passion, drained of all desires
or detached from all temptation. Rather, it envisions that all of his
appetites, and desires remain, but he keeps them under control and mastery.
With self-control man becomes the master and not the slave of his passions.
Passages That Require Self-Denial
1. Passages
that specifically mention self-denial or self-control. Jesus said that those
desiring to be his disciples must deny self
(Matt. 16:24; Mark 8:34; Luke 9:23).
Paul preached to Felix about righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come
(Acts 24:25).
Peter lists "temperance" as one of the "Christian graces" which we are to
add to our faith
(2 Pet. 1:6).
The fruit of the Spirit includes self-control
(Gal. 5:23).
Those who run the race and compete for the crown must be temperate in all
things
(1 Cor. 9:5).
The comparison in this text is that we are to be self-controlled and
self-disciplined just as athletes are. Elders are to have self-control
(Tit. 1:8)
and aged men should be temperate
(Tit. 2:8).
2. Passages
which deal with self-denial and self-control in principle. Paul urged the
Romans not to continue in sin
(cf. Rom. 6:1)
by telling them not to let sin reign in their bodies
(Rom.6:12ff).
That requires self-control. The same writer said that it was no longer
himself, but Christ who lives in him
(Gal. 2:20).
He had said "No!" to himself. Those who are God's people willingly submit to
Christ in everything
(Eph. 5:24).
That implies self-denial.
3. Any passage
that forbids the following requires self-control: lust
(2 Tim. 2:22; Matt. 5:28),
lying
(Eph. 4:25),
immorality
(1 Cor. 6:18),
covetousness
(Col. 3:5),
retaliation
(Rom. 12:17-21),
laziness
(Rom. 12:11; 2 Thess. 3:10),
self-willed
(Tit. 1:7)
and hatred
(Gal.5:20).
4. Any passage
that commands the following requires self-control: meekness
(Matt. 5:3),
gentleness
(2 Tim. 2:24),
patience
(2 Tim. 2:24),
soberness
(1 Pet. 1:13),
contentment
(Heb. 13:5),
and chastity
(Tit. 2:5).
This Is An Area In Which We Need To Grow
The Christian
life is a continual growing process. We should always be growing in grace
and in knowledge of the Lord
(2 Pet. 3:18).
Each day and each year we should be gaining more and more spiritual maturity
(Heb. 5:14).
Other Articles by Donnie V. Rader
An Interview With Mrs. Irven
Lee
Dealing With Others
May the Guilty Party Remarry?
The Conversion of Saul
I'm of the Old School
For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm
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