Paul N. F. (7
Sep 2025)
"Test Your Conduct:
What Are Your Motives?"
Test Your Conduct:
What Are Your Motives?
By A. W. Tozer
But ye denied the Holy One. . .And killed the Prince of life,
whom God hath raised from the dead: . . . Acts 3:14, 15
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!
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. They gave generously to the service
of the temple, but they sometimes did it to escape their
dutytoward their parents, and this was an evil. They judged
sin and stood against it when found in others, but this they
did from self-righteousness and hardness of heart.
That this is not a small matter may
be gathered from the fact that those orthodox and proper
religionists went on in their blindness, until at last they
crucified the Lord of glory, with no inkling of the gravity of
their crime!
Yours in Christ,
Paul N. F.