Paul
N. F. (1 Oct 2011)
"THE ALL-IMPORTANCE OF
MOTIVE"
- THE
ALL-IMPORTANCE OF MOTIVE
- By A. W. Tozer
- The
test by which all conduct must finally be judged is motive.
-
As water cannot
rise higher than its source, so the moral quality in an act
can never be higher than the motive that inspires
it. For this reason no act that arises from an evil
motive can be good, even though some good may appear to come
out of it. Every deed done out of anger or spite, for
instance, will be found at last to have been done for the
enemy and against the Kingdom of God.
-
Unfortunately
the nature of religious activity is such that much of it
can be carried on for reasons that are not good,
such as anger, jealousy, ambition, vanity and avarice.
All such activity is essentially evil and will be counted
as such at the judgment. In this matter of
motive, as in so many other things, the Pharisees afford us
clear examples. They remain the world's most dismal
religious failures, not because of doctrinal error nor
because they were careless or lukewarm, nor because they
were outwardly persons of dissolute life. Their
whole trouble lay in the quality of their religious motives.
- They prayed,
but they prayed to be heard of men, and thus their motive
ruined their prayers and rendered them not only useless but
actually evil. They gave generously to the service of
the temple, but they sometimes did it to escape their duty
toward their parents, and this was an evil. They
judged sin and stood against it when they found it in
others, but this they did from self-righteousness and
hardness of
heart. So with almost everything they did. Their
activities had about them an outward appearance of holiness,
and those same activities if carried an out of pure motives
would have been good and praiseworthy. The whole
weakness of the Pharisees lay in the quality of their
motives.
-
That this is not
a small matter may be gathered from the fact that those
orthodox and proper religionists went on in their blindness
till they at last crucified the Lord of glory with no
inkling of the gravity of their crime.
-
Religious acts
done out of low motives are twice evil, evil in themselves
and evil because they are done in the name of God, This is
equivalent to sinning in the name of the sinless One, lying
in the name
of the One who cannot lie and hating in the name of the One
whose nature is love.
-
Christians, and
especially very active ones, should take time out frequently
to search their souls to be sure of their motives.
Many a solo is sung to show off; many a sermon is preached
as an exhibition
of talent; many a church is founded as a slap at some other
church. Even missionary activity may become
competitive, and soul winning may degenerate into a sort of
brush-salesman project to satisfy the flesh. Do not
forget, the Pharisees were great missionaries and would
compass sea and land to make a convert.
-
A good way to
avoid the snare of empty religious activity is to appear
before God every once in a while with our Bibles open to
the thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians. This
passage, though rated one of the most beautiful in the Bible,
is also one of the severest to be found in Sacred
Writ. The apostle takes the highest religious service
and consigns it to futility unless it is motivated by
love. Lacking love, prophets, teachers, orators,
philanthropists and martyrs are sent away without reward.
-
To sum it up, we
may say simply that in the sight of God we are judged not so
much by what we do as by our reasons for doing it. Not
what but why will be the important question when we
Christians appear at the judgment seat
to give account of the deeds done in the body.
- Yours in
Christ,
- Paul N. F.