The Right Perspective

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We might not think that’s the case, but my guess is that if we were to tally every time we gave our perspective on a situation in any given day, we would find that there were a lot more tallies at the end of the day than we anticipated. We are quick to issue a verdict, to offer our perspective, or to express our opinion. Even more so, people are often eager to ask for such insight as they navigate their current challenges. More often than not, we want to hear what other people have to say, sometimes with the express purpose of confirming what we already think is right.

The challenge is that many times other’s people perspective is simply that – their perspective. It is not rooted in anything beyond them, but is based on their experiences, the lessons that they’ve learned, or maybe even how they feel on that particular day. What is considered “right” then is not based on some objective standard of truth, but is based on their own insights and opinions.

This is why it is important that we remember what A.W. Tozer wrote about how we can be assured that we get the right perspective. He stated:

We get our moral bearings by looking at God. We must begin with God. We are right when, and only when, we stand in a right position relative to God, and we are wrong so far and so long as we stand in any other position. 

In other words, unless the perspective we espouse is the perspective of God as revealed in His Word, we are in danger of having our opinion become the standard by which we judge an action. Consequently, if those we ask for advice aren’t looking from things in “a right positive relative to God” then it is likely that their advice is similarly wrongly constructed.  Our eyes must be firmly fixed on Him, and He must be the standard by which all other perspectives are evaluated, and considered for acceptance or rejection.

This is a hard thing in a world where we are taught that “everyone is entitled to their own opinion.” However, perhaps this is one of the reasons that Scripture tells us we should be “slow to speak” (Jam. 1:19). If we were, maybe we would be more likely to consider first how God views a given situation, rather than issuing our pronouncement of it.

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Counterfeit Holiness

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Growing up, I was very good at being the “good girl.” For years this had more to do with gaining people’s approval than it had to do with a desire to please Christ.  Perhaps this is commonplace for people who grow up going to church.  Sunday School has done well to teach us the commands of our Savior, but in our immaturity we neglect to realize that doing good things is supposed to be in response to Christ, not in place of Him.

Andrew Murray gives us a barometer of sorts to measure whether this temptation is once again guiding our behavior. He writes:

Humility is the bloom and the beauty of holiness. The chief mark of counterfeit holiness is its lack of humility.

In other words, the process of becoming like Christ, of being made holy, is characterized by humility. This should not surprise us as our Savior was the epitome of humility and “did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped” (Phil. 2:6). However, when we are “faking” holiness – when we are good not for the sake of Christ but for the sake of man’s approval – humility is not present. This is because we are seeking to get acclaim for ourselves, rather than using our lives for the glory of God.

This provides a useful test to examine our behavior. If our lives are about giving God praise, we will not care if we get the applause we think we deserve for our decisions and our actions. If this is our concern, then we need to repent, and ask God to make us more like His Son – in humility, and in holiness.

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