February 16 2024
February 16 2024
By

I just finished Thaddeus Williams’ new book, Don’t Follow Your Heart:  Boldly Breaking the Ten Commandments of Self-Worship. He offers a creative and penetrating critique of the popular quest to find your­self and fashion your own identity by looking within.

Bible readers know the genuine Ten Commandments, as recorded in Exodus 20:1-17.  And followers of Jesus recognize that he takes up and affirms (and even intensifies) God’s moral law:  hate is a kind of killing, and lust is a kind of adultery (Matthew 5:21-30).

Williams takes a Screwtape twist:  what are the foundational laws of the self-serving, sin-driven life? What commands are being kept by those who bow at the altar of self-worship?  He names ten:

*Always act to glorify and enjoy yourself forever.  *Never be out­dated.  *Obey your emotions at all costs.  *Be courageous enough to defy other people’s expectations.  *Live your truth and let others live theirs.  *Pursue the rush of boundary-free experience.  *Trust yourself and never let anyone oppress you with the notion of being a sinner.  *“Thou shalt invent and advertise thine own identity.”  *Force the universe to bend to your desires. *Celebrate all lifestyles and love-lives as equally valid.

As you ponder those “commandments,” it’s easy to see how they become intoxicating.  All that elevation of ME, magnifi­cation of ME:  makes us dizzy!  We want to be Henley’s “Invictus”:  “I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.”

This allure swayed our first parents.  The serpent assured them (in words flagrantly contradicting God’s warning):  “You will not die” (Genesis 3:4).  But the Tempter lied, and death took hold.  And still now, the sirens of self-worship lie to us day in and day out.

Following your heart is dangerous:  “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick” (Jeremiah 17:9).  Better than looking within is looking up, into the face of Jesus.  Trust him!


Comments:

Leave a Comment

Name*
Email Help Tip
Website
Comment*
Characters Remaining: 5000
   

Archives

April 26, 2024

Let Us Sing

Let Us Sing
Our “Faith Journey” sermons brought us face to face with Job last week.  His story is breathtaking:  such vast wealth, and yet such great grief and pain!  God inspired the Book of Job to be a part ...
April 22, 2024

Children's Ministry Update, April 21, 2024

Children's Ministry Update, April 21, 2024
Acts 11 recounts the first time people were called “Christians” because they were recognized as followers of Jesus. In this passage, Peter was criticized by some of the believing Jews for going into ...
April 26, 2024

My Kingdom Is Not of This World

My Kingdom Is Not of This World
As followers of Jesus, here and now this side of heaven, we need regular reminders that his reign as Messiah, Lord, King (etc.) is radically different from patterns of power that permeate this ...
April 22, 2024

The Overflow of Gospel Love

The Overflow of Gospel Love
While wrapping up the sermon series on Matthew’s Gospel last Sunday, I closed by focusing on a key verse—10:8.  Jesus sends his disciples on mission with this charge:  “Freely you have received, ...
April , 2024

Questioning Faith

Questioning Faith
Last Sunday I mentioned Randy Newman’s excellent new book, Questioning Faith:  Indirect Journeys of Belief through Terrains of Doubt. Now that’s a densely packed title.  Let’s take it apart. ...