My old software company created software for the publishing industry. During a visit with one of our Christian publishers, an executive asked my advice about how he should counsel an employee who was pregnant out of wedlock. Just as he asked me this question, the woman herself burst into his office in tears.
The week before, she had confided her secret (and her shame) to this executive. She had told him in confidence, but she had just discovered that he had asked a dozen people at the company for their wisdom in counseling her, just as he was asking me. Soon everybody knew.
Now her secret was talked about openly in the lunch hall and meeting rooms. All because this one executive couldn’t keep his mouth shut, and all under the guise of his “seeking wisdom.”
After the woman left the office, the executive hastened to defend himself, “I just hate secrets. I feel I am very much like Nathaniel in Scripture, ‘A man in whom there is no deceit’” (John 1:47).
My executive friend said he hated deceit, but his numerous self-justifications for disclosing another person’s embarrassment felt that he was overflowing with deceit. Self-deceit that is.
Last week I read this quote by Blaise Pascale:
It is truly an evil to be full of faults; but it is a greater evil to be full of them and unwilling to recognize them, since that is to add the further fault of a voluntary delusion.
We May Be Deluded Too
When the Word War II allies liberated their first concentration camp, they forced the local city inhabitants to dig graves for the numerous stacks of unburied dead. The next day the mayor and his wife hanged themselves, leaving a note with these words:
We didn’t know!
But we knew.
It is a terrible truth that various evils still lurk inside our flesh, but it is more terrible—and perhaps more evil— when we refuse to acknowledge those evils that lurk within, when we are unwilling to admit our flaws, or when we compound our faults with delusions of decency.
Numerous studies have shown that eighty percent of men think that they are in the “Top 20 Percent” of men with excellent social skills.
And those “Top 20 Percent” (mostly delusional) men do almost no work to improve their grace, kindness, and listening. Because they (mistakenly) believe they are charming. Their biggest problem isn’t their lack of social skills—which could be improved if addressed—their primary problem is their utter fantasy of personal-greatness.
Self-deceit is not the biggest sin we commit, but it is the reason we commit our biggest sins. We are always the last to see our own self-absorption.
Hope
While eighty percent of men think they are socially skilled, the same studies show that the remaining twenty percent are depressed. They are depressed because they know their inadequacy. But I reserve my greatest hopes for these depressed twenty percenters. There is a chance they will cry out for help.
God always hears the cry of the needy. He always attends to the humble.
There are two kinds of people: the children of God who know they are sinners, and the children of the liar who think themselves good. Which will we be? The Pharisee or the tax collector?
The single greatest thing we can do this year is to acknowledge our faults, sinfulness, and even the evil that lurks within, and then call on God. We aren’t as good as we tell ourselves. Why not admit to ourselves (and others) the truth?
A couple weeks ago, I stopped at a party store to pick up some supplies for New Year’s Eve. I gave my credit card to the cashier and said, “I don’t need a receipt. Just tell me when I’m good.” She paused, stared at me, and retorted,
“Tell you when you’re good?” That’s gonna be a long wait.
I laughed so hard I literally cried. She laughed with me (and probably a bit at me). I’m pretty sure I heard God chuckle as well.
Sam
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Most people I speak with admit to me that they don’t hear God’s voice much, if at all. And they mainly think they don’t hear Him because they aren’t good enough. Which is a great place to start.
But God doesn’t speak to use because of our goodness. He speaks to us because of His goodness. Which is more than enough. God needs our poverty more than our riches, he wants our weakness more than our strength. Hearing God can become our new normal.
If you haven’t read my book, may I suggest you buy a copy? I believe it will help you learn to hear his voice, and in that intimacy we can finally replace our delusional self-deception with God’s affirming love.
Jack narvel
Great post ? Sam! It is so true that “we seldom see ourselves as others see us”.
It is important that we surround ourselves with others, who can correct us without condemnation and we can do the same for them. That is the mark of a great relationship ?
Samuel Williamson
Yeah, we are so blind to ourselves.
Partly because we are cowards. We want the world’s answer of “self-esteem” … when in fact the only answer to the restlessness of our soul is God’s answer: God-esteem. Which requires our honesty of our sin.
Thanks
Linda
Here’s a headline from Scientific American. “Living a Lie: We Deceive Ourselves to Better Deceive Others.” It’s called on-the-job training.
Samuel Williamson
Hilarious.
Lori
Thanks Sam. Excellent!
Samuel Williamson
🙂
Jack Narvel
Thanks Sam,
I think the search for “God Esteem” is often hindered by focus on “our works”, rather than on engendering a deeper relationship with our creator.
Quiet time, reading the Word, (or better for some “LISTENING” to the word as an audiobook, or engaging with God Fearing ministers on DVD’s, or downloads.)
The key, as you know, is to ask ourselves “how” and “where” our time is being spent.
Blessings
Havs
This is such a powerful article, with really powerful stories that made me literally say “Wow” out loud. Thank-you so much for this reminder. Personally, being honest with myself reminds me of why I don’t play basketball. I run around the court of my life hoping that I’m not far from the right net and playing according to all of the rules and then when I shoot the basket of humility I’m either short or shooting too far – in that I either absolutely lack confidence in myself and my humility is transformed into selfish self-pity, or I’m way to confident and the ball flies far and away. I pray that my average goes up someday. (I am six foot two, so I get asked ALL the time if I play basketball… the answer is always no 🙂
Samuel Williamson
Hi Havs,
TERRIFIC! Thanks. We need God for everything, including helping us see how much we need HIM.
We are over-confident, under-confident, self-confident, insecure, proud, self-pitying, etc.
O Father, help us just look to you! (“And the things of earth will grow strangely dim, in the light of Your glory and grace.”)
Sam