Chapter 10
Self-Examination
“Examine yourselves, whether
ye be in the faith.”
Probably no subject connected with the religious life has
been the cause of more discomfort and suffering to tender consciences than has
this subject of self-examination; and none has led more frequently to the
language of “much less,” which we found in our last chapter to be so great an
obstacle to all spiritual growth. And yet it has been so constantly impressed
upon us that it is our duty to examine ourselves, that the eyes of most of us
are continually turned inward, and our gaze is fixed on our own interior states
and feelings to such an extent that self, and not Christ, has come at last to
fill the whole horizon.
By self I mean here all that centers around this
great big “me” of ours. Its vocabulary rings out the changes on “I,” “me,” “my.”
It is a vocabulary with which we are all very familiar. The questions we ask
ourselves in our times of self-examination are proof of this. Am I earnest
enough? Have I repented enough? Have I the right sort of feelings? Do I realize
religious truth as I ought? Are my prayers fervent enough? Is my interest in
religious things as great as it ought to be? Do I love God with enough fervor?
Is the Bible as much of a delight to me as it is to others? All these, and a
hundred more questions about ourselves and our experiences fill up all our
thoughts, and sometimes our little self-examination books as well; and day and
night we ring the changes on the person pronoun “I,” “me,” “my,” to the utter
exclusion of any thought concerning Christ, or any word concerning “He,” “His,”
“Him.”
The misery of this, many of us know only too well. But the
idea that the Bible is full of commands to self-examination is so prevalent that
it seems one of the most truly pious things we can do; and, miserable as it
makes us, we still feel it is our duty to go on with it in spite of an
ever-increasing sense of hopelessness and despair.
In view of this idea many will be surprised to find that
there are only two texts in the whole Bible that speak of self-examination, and
that neither of these can at all be made to countenance the morbid self-analysis
that results from what we call self-examination.
One of these passages I have quoted at the head of this
chapter: “Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith.” This is simply an
exhortation to the Corinthians, who were in a sadly backsliding condition, to
settle definitely whether they were still believers or not. “Examine yourselves,
whether ye be in the faith.” It does not say examine whether you are
sufficiently earnest, or whether you have the right feelings, or whether your
motives are pure, but simply and only, whether you are “in the faith.” In short,
do you believe in Christ or do you not? A simple question that required only a
simple, straightforward answer, Yes or No. This is what it meant for the
Corinthians then, and it is what it means for us now.
The other passage reads: “Wherefore, whosoever shall eat
this bread and drink this cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the
body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of
that bread and drink of that cup.” Paul was here writing of the abuses of
greediness and drunkenness which had crept in at the celebration of the Lord’s
Supper; and, in this exhortation to examine themselves, he was simply urging
them to see to it that they did none of these things, but partook of this
religious feast in a decent and orderly manner.
In neither of these passages is there any hint of that
morbid searching out of one’s emotions and experiences that is called
self-examination in the present day. And it is amazing that out of two such
simple passages should have been evolved a teaching fraught with so much misery
to earnest, conscientious souls.
The truth is there is no Scripture authority whatever for
this disease of modern times; and those who are afflicted with it are the
victims of mistaken ideas of God’s ways with His children.
Some of my readers, however, are probably asking
themselves whether I have not overlooked a large class of passages that tell us
to “watch”; and whether these passages do not mean watching ourselves, or, in
other words, self-examination. I will quote one of these passages as a sample,
that we may see what their meaning really is. “But of that day and that hour
knoweth no man, no not the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the
Father. Take ye heed, watch and pray; for ye know not when the time is. For the
Son of man is as a man taking a far journey, who left his home, and gave
authority to his servants, and to every man his work, and commanded the porter
to watch. Watch ye therefore, for ye know not when the master of the house
cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cock-crowing, or in the morning: lest
coming suddenly he find you sleeping. And what I say unto you, I say unto all,
Watch.”
I think if we carefully examine this passage and others
like it, we shall see that instead of teaching self-examination, they teach
something that is exactly the opposite. They tell us to “watch,” it is true, but
they do not tell us to watch ourselves. They are plainly commands to forget
ourselves in watching for Another. The return of the Lord is the thing we are to
watch for. His coming footsteps, and not our own past footsteps, are to be the
object of our gazing. We are to watch as a porter watches for the return of the
master of the house, and are to be ready as a good watchman should be to receive
and welcome Him at any moment that He may appear.
“Blessed are those servants whom the Lord when he cometh
shall find watching.” Watching what? Themselves? No, watching for Him, of
course. If we can imagine a porter, instead of watching for the return of his
master, spending his time morbidly analyzing his own past conduct, trying to
discover whether he had been faithful enough, and becoming so absorbed in
self-examination as to let the master’s call go unheeded and the master’s return
unnoted, we shall have a picture of what goes on in the experience of the soul
that is given up to the mistaken habit of watching and looking at self instead
of watching and looking for Christ.
These passages, therefore, instead of teaching
self-examination, teach exactly the opposite. God says, “Look unto me, and ye
shall be saved”; but the self-analyzing soul says, “I must look unto myself, if
I am to have any hope of being saved. It must be by getting myself right that
salvation is to come.” And yet the phrase, “Looking unto Jesus,” is generally
acknowledged to be one of the watchwords of the Christian religion; and all
Christians everywhere will unhesitatingly declare that, or course, this is the
one thing we all ought to do. But, after saying this, they will go on in their
old way of self-introspection, trying to find some salvation in their own inward
feelings, or in their own works of righteousness, and being continually plunged
into despair because they never find it.
It is a fact that we see what we look at, and cannot see
what we look away from; and we cannot look unto Jesus while we are looking at
ourselves. The power for victory and the power for endurance are to come from
looking unto Jesus and considering Him, not from looking unto or considering
ourselves, or our circumstances, or our sins, or our temptations. Looking at
ourselves causes weakness and defeat. The reason for this is that when we look
at ourselves, we see nothing but ourselves, and our own weakness, and poverty,
and sin; we do not and cannot see the remedy and the supply for these, and as a
matter of course we are defeated. The remedy and the supply are there all the
time, but they are not to be found in the place where we are looking, for they
are not in self but in Christ; and we cannot be looking at ourselves and looking
at Christ at the same time. Again I repeat that it is in the inexorable nature
of things that what we look at that we shall see, and that, if we want to see
the Lord, we must look at the Lord and not at self. It is a simple question of
choice for us, whether it shall be I or Christ; whether we shall turn our backs
on Christ and look at ourselves, or whether we shall turn our backs on self and
look at Christ.
I was very much helped many years ago by the following
sentence in a book by Adelaide Proctor: “For one look at self take ten looks at
Christ.” It was entirely contrary to all I had previously thought right; but it
carried conviction to my soul, and delivered me from a habit of morbid
self-examination and introspection that had made my life miserable for years. It
was an unspeakable deliverance. And my experience since leads me to believe that
even a better motto would be, “Take no look at self at all, but look only and
always at Christ.”
The Bible law in regard to the self-life is not that the
self-life must be watched and made better, but that it must be “put off.” The
apostle, when urging the Ephesian Christians to walk worthy of the vocation
wherewith they had been called, tells them that they must “put off” the old man
which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts. The “old man” is, of course,
the self-life, and this self-life (which we know only too well is indeed corrupt
according to deceitful lusts) is not to be improved, but to be “put off.” It is
to be crucified. Paul says that our old man is crucified, put to death, with
Christ; and he declares of the Colossians that they could no longer lie, seeing
that they had “put of the old man with his deeds.” Some people’s idea of
crucifying the “old man” is to set him up on a pinnacle, and then walk around
him and stick nagging pins into him to make him miserable, but keeping him alive
all the time. But, if I understand language, crucifixion means death, not making
miserable; and to crucify the old man means to kill him outright, and to put him
off as a snake puts off its dead and useless skin.
It is of no use, then, for us to examine self and to
tinker with it in the hope of improving it, for the thing the Lord wants us to
do with it is to get rid of it. Fenelon, in his Spiritual Letters, says
that the only way to treat self is to refuse to have anything to do with it. He
says we must turn our backs on this great big “I” of ours, and to say to it, “I
do not know you, and am not interested in you, and I refuse to pay any attention
to you whatever.” But self is always determined to secure attention, and would
rather be thought badly of than not to be thought of at all. And
self-examination with all its miseries often gives a sort of morbid satisfaction
to the self-life in us, and even deludes self into thinking it a very humble and
pious sort of self after all.
The only safe and scriptural way is to have nothing to do
with self at all, either with good self or with bad self, but simply to ignore
self altogether; and to fix our eyes, and our thoughts, and our expectations on
the Lord and on Him alone. We must substitute for the personal pronouns “I,”
“me,” “my,” the pronoun “He,” “Him,” “His”; and must ask ourselves, not “am I
good?” but “is He good?”
The psalmist says: “Mine eyes are ever toward the Lord,
for he shall pluck my feet out of the net.” As long as our eyes are toward our
own feet, and toward the net in which they are entangled, we only get into worse
tangles. But when we keep our eyes toward the Lord, He plucks our feet out of
the net. This is a point in practical experience that I have tested hundreds of
times, and I know it is a fact. No matter what sort of a snarl I may have been
in, whether inward or outward, I have always found that while I kept my eyes on
the snarl and tried to unravel it, it grew worse and worse; but when I turned my
eyes away from the snarl and kept them fixed on the Lord, He always sooner or
later unraveled it and delivered me.
Have you ever watched a farmer plowing a field? If you
have, you will have noticed that in order to make straight furrows he is obliged
to fix his eyes on a tree, or a post in the fence, or some object at the farther
end of the field, and to guide his plow unwaveringly toward that object. If he
begins to look back at the furrow behind him in order to see whether he has made
a straight furrow, his plow begins to jerk from side to side, and the furrow he
is making becomes a zigzag. If we would make straight paths for our feet we must
do what the apostle says he did. We must forget the things that are behind, and,
reaching forth to those which are before, we must press toward the mark for the
prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.
To forget the things that are behind is an essential part
of the pressing forward toward the prize of our high calling; and I am convinced
this prize can never be reached unless we will consent to this forgetting. When
we do consent to it, we come near to putting an end to all our self-examination;
for, if we may not look back over our past misdoings, we shall find but little
food for self-reflective acts.
We complain of spiritual hunger, and torment ourselves to
know why our hunger is not satisfied. The psalmist says: “The eyes of all wait
upon thee, and thou givest them their meat in due season.” Having our eyes upon
ourselves and on our own hunger will never bring a supply of spiritual meat.
When a man’s larder is empty and he is starving, his eyes are not occupied with
looking at the emptiness of his larder, but are turned toward the source from
which he hopes or expects to get a supply of food. To examine self is to be like
a man who should spend his time in examing his empty larder instead of going to
the market for a supply to fill it. No wonder such Christians seem to be
starving to death in the midst of all the fullness there is for them in Christ.
They never see that fullness, for they never look at it; and again I repeat that
the thing we look at is the thing we see.
I feel as if I could not repeat this evident truism too
often, for somehow people seem to lay aside their common sense when they come to
the subject of religion, and seem to expect to see things upon which they have
deliberately kept their backs turned. They cry out, “O Lord, reveal thyself”;
but instead of looking at Him they look at themselves, and keep their gaze
steadily fixed on their own inward feelings, and then wonder at the “mysterious
dealings” of God in hiding His face from their fervent prayers. But how can they
see what they do not look at?
It is never God who hides His face from us, but it is
always we who hide our face from Him, by “turning to him the back and not the
face.” The prophet reproaches the children of Israel with this, and adds that
they “set up their abominations in the house which is called by God’s name.”
When Christians spend their time examining their own condition, raking up all
their sins, and bemoaning their shortcomings, what is this but to set up the
“abomination” of their own sinful self upon the chief pedestal in their hearts,
and to make it the center of their whole religious life, and of all their care
and efforts. They gaze at this great, big, miserable self until it fills their
whole horizon, and they “turn their back” on the Lord, until He is lost sight of
altogether.
I will venture to say that there are many Christians who,
for one look at the Lord, will give a thousand looks at self, and who, for one
hour spent in rejoicing in Him, will spend hundreds of hours bemoaning
themselves.
We are never anywhere commanded to behold our emotions,
nor our experiences, nor even our sins, but we are commanded to turn our backs
upon all these, and to behold the Lamb of God who taketh away our sins. One look
at Christ is worth more for salvation than a million looks at self. Yet so
mistaken are our ideas, we seem unable to avoid thinking that the mortification
which results from self-examination must have in it some saving power, because
it makes us so miserable. For we have to travel a long way on our heavenly
journey before we fully learn that there is no saving power in misery, and that
a cheerful, confident faith is the only successful attitude for the aspiring
soul.
In Isaiah we see God’s people complaining because they
fasted, and He did not see; afflicted their souls, and He took no knowledge; and
God gave them this significant answer: “Is it such a fast that I have chosen, a
day for a man to afflict his soul? Is it to bow down his head as a bulrush, and
to spread sackcloth and ashes under him? Wilt thou call this a fast, and an
acceptable day to the Lord?” Whoever else is pleased with the miseries of our
self-examination, it is very certain that God is not. He does not want us to bow
down our heads as a bulrush, any more than He wanted His people of old to do it;
and He calls upon us, as He did upon them, to forget our own miserable selves,
and to go to work to lessen the miseries of others. “Is not this the fast that I
have chosen,” He says, “to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy
burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke? Is it
not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast
out to thy house; when thou seest the naked, that thou cover him?”
This service for others is of infinitely greater value to
the Lord than the longest seasons of self-examination and self-abasement. And I
am convinced that He has shown us here what is the surest way of deliverance out
of the slough of misery into which our habits of self-examination have plunged
us. He declares emphatically that if we will only keep the sort of “fast” He
approves of, by giving up our own “fast” of afflicting our souls and bowing down
our heads as a bulrush, and will instead “draw out our souls to the hungry,” and
will try to bear the burdens and relieve the miseries of others, then shall our
light rise in obscurity, and our darkness be as the noonday; and the Lord shall
guide us continually, satisfying our souls in drought, and making fat our bones;
we shall be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water whose waters fail
not.
All this is exactly what we have been striving for, but
our strivings have been in our own way, not in God’s. The fast we have chosen
has been to afflict our souls, to bow down our heads as bulrushes, and to sit in
sackcloth and ashes; and, as a consequence, instead of our bones being made fat,
and our souls refreshed like a watered garden, we have found only leanness, and
thirst, and misery. Our own fasts, no matter how fervently they may be carried
on, nor how many groans and tears may accompany them can never bring us anything
else.
Now let us try God’s fast. Let us lay aside all care for
ourselves, and care instead for our needy brothers and sisters. Let us stop
trying to do something for our own poor miserable self-life, and begin to try to
do something to help the spiritual lives of others. Let us give up our hopeless
efforts to find something in ourselves to delight in, and delight ourselves only
in the Lord and in His service. And if we will but do this, all the days of our
misery will be ended.
But some may ask whether it is not necessary to examine
ourselves in order to find out what is wrong and what needs mending. This would,
of course, be necessary if we were our own workmanship, but since we are God’s
workmanship and not our own, He is the One to examine us, for He is the only One
who can tell what is wrong. The man who makes watches is the one to examine a
watch when it is out of order, and to set it straight. We have too much good
sense to meddle with our watches; why is it that we have not enough good sense
to give up meddling with ourselves? Surely we must see that the examining of the
Lord is the only kind of examination that is of any use. His examination is like
that of a physician who examines in order to cure; while our self-examination is
like that of the patient who only becomes more of a hypochondriac the more he
examines the symptoms of his disease.
But the question may be asked whether, when there has
been actual sin, there ought not to be self-examination and self-reproach at
least for a time. This is a fallacy which deceives a great many. It seems too
much to believe that we can be forgiven without first going through a season of
self-reproach. But what is the Bible teaching? John tells us that if we confess
our sins (not bewail them, nor yet try to excuse them), but simply confess them,
He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness. All that God wants is that we should turn to Him at once,
acknowledge our sin, and believe in His forgiveness; and every minute that we
delay doing this, in order to spend the time in self-examination and
self-reproach, is only adding further sin to that which we have already
committed. If ever we need to look away from self, and to have our eyes turned
to the Lord, it is just when we become conscious of having sinned against Him.
The greater the multitude of our enemies, the greater and more immediate our
need of God.
All through the Bible we are taught this lesson of death
to self and life in Christ alone. “Not I, but Christ,” was not intended to be a
unique experience of Paul’s, but was simply a declaration of what ought to be
the experience of every Christian. We sing sometimes, “Thou O Christ, art all I
want,” but as a fact, we really want a great many other things. We want good
feelings, we want fervor and earnestness, we want realizations, we want
satisfying experiences; and we continually examine ourselves to try to find out
why we do not have these things. We think if we could only discover our points
of failure, we should be able to set them straight. But there is no healing or
transforming power in gazing at our failures. The only road to Christlikeness is
to behold, not our own hatefulness, but His goodness and beauty. We grow like
what we look at, and if we spend our lives looking at our hateful selves, we
shall become more and more hateful. Do we not find as a fact that
self-examination, instead of making us better, always seems to make us worse?
Beholding self, we are more and more changed into the image of self. While on
the contrary if we spend our time beholding the glory of the Lord, that is,
letting our minds dwell upon His goodness and His love, and trying to drink in
His spirit, the inevitable result will be that we shall be, slowly perhaps, but
surely, changed into the image of the Lord upon whom we are gazing.
Fenelon says that we should never indulge in any
self-reflective acts, either of mortification at our failures, or of
congratulation at our successes; but that we should continually consign self and
all self’s doings to oblivion, and should keep our interior eyes upon the Lord
only. It is very hard in self-examination not to try to find excuses for our
faults; and our self-reflective acts are often in danger of being turned into
self-glorying ones. The only way is to ignore self altogether and to forget
there is any such being in existence.
No one who does not understand this can possibly
appreciate the comfort and relief it is to be done with self and all
self-reflective acts. I have known Christian workers whose lives have been one
long torment because of these self-reflective acts; and I am convinced that the
“Blue Mondays,” of which so many clergymen complain, are nothing but the result
of an indulgence in self-reflective acts concerning their services in the church
the day before.
The only way to treat all forms of self-reflective acts,
of whatever kind, is simply to give them up. They always do harm and never good.
They are bound to result in one of two things: either they fill us full of
self-praise and self-satisfaction, or they plunge us into the depths of
discouragement and despair; and whichever it may be, the soul is in this way
inevitably shut out from any sight of God and of His salvation.
One of the most effectual ways of conquering the habit is
to make a rule that, whenever we are tempted to examine ourselves, we will
always at once begin to examine the Lord instead, and will let thoughts of His
love and His all-sufficiency sweep out all thoughts of our own unworthiness or
our own helplessness.
I have been trying in this book to set the Lord before
our eyes in all the beauty of His character and His ways in the hope that the
sight will be so ravishing as to take our eyes off everything else. But no
revelation of God will be of any use if we will not look at it, but will persist
in turning our backs on what has been revealed, and in gazing instead at our own
inward experiences. For again I must repeat that we cannot see self and see the
Lord at the same time, and that while we are examining self we cannot be looking
at Him.
Fenelon says concerning self-examination: “There is
something very hidden and very deceptive in the suffering it causes; for while
you seem to yourself to be wholly occupied with the glory of God, in your inmost
soul it is self alone that occasions all your trouble. You are indeed desirous
that God should be glorified, but you wish it should take place by means of your
perfection, and you thus cherish the sentiments of self-love. It is simply a
refined pretext for dwelling in self ... It is a sort of infidelity to simple
faith when we desire to be continually assured that we are doing well. It is, in
fact, a desire to know what we are doing, which we shall never know, and of
which it is the will of God we should be ignorant. It is trifling by the way, in
order to reason about the way. The safest and shortest course is to renounce,
forget, and abandon self, and, through faithfulness to God, to think no more of
it. This is the whole of religion—to get out of self and self-love in order to
get into God.”
What we must do, therefore, is to shut the door
definitely and resolutely at once and forever upon self, and all of self’s
experiences, whether they be good or bad; and to say with the psalmist: “I have
set the Lord [not self] always before me; because he is at my right hand, I
shall not be moved. Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth: my flesh
also shall rest in hope.”