When Doing Good is Bad for You – Part 7

I know. This sounds contradictory but “God’s ways are not our ways.” This highlights the conflict that comes from walking according to what our mind thinks is “good” but may not be. Adam fell because he depended on his natural sight instead of the “insight” that God gave him. Father-God always knows best! That is why the second perfect man, Jesus, listened to His Father instead of to himself – or to other people’s opinions, including His own disciples. Adam sucked himself and us into this crevasse of “good vs. bad” choices – morality – that is no good substitute for the Tree of Life – Jesus. God’s opinion is the only one that is always trustworthy. Christianity is a walk of trust/faith in the Holy Spirit’s leading, rather than in our own warped perceptions of what is eternally real – the Unseen Realm we are now a part of. LR

Posted on August 7, 2011 by Paul Ellis 

Ever since our ancestors ate the forbidden fruit, we humans have had an innate sense of good and evil.

You help a blind person cross the street and you just know you’re doing something good.

You use a cat for a football and you just know you’re doing something bad.

You don’t need anybody to tell you, hopefully!

Being able to separate the good from the bad is a handy skill when buying apples or recruiting a babysitter. It’s also the basis of every man-made religion under the sun. But your knowledge of good and evil does nothing to promote a life of dependency on Jesus.

Consider the religious person who reads the Bible to learn what pleases God. They are essentially asking, “Teacher, what good thing must I do to get eternal life?” (Matt 19:16).

Their line of thinking runs like this: If I do good and avoid evil I will be judged to be a good person. From a religious perspective, this makes perfect sense. It also explains why so many go to church asking, What must I do?

But there’s a problem.

In the Bible you will find some good things that are bad for you. Other things are good for one person but not for another. And then there are things that used to be good but aren’t good any more.

It’s almost as if the Bible was purposely designed to frustrate the religious quest for being good!

It’s almost as if the Author is trying to say, “Why do you ask me what is good? That’s the wrong question.”

The law is good…

The best example of something that is good yet bad for you is the law. Paul said the law is “holy, righteous, and good” (Rom 7:12). He also said, “the law is good if one uses it properly” (1 Tim 1:8).

When a religious person discovers the law his initial response is delight. Finally, some good instructions to live by!

But when he tries to keep the law he finds himself breaking it despite his best intentions. He tries harder and fails again. Then the law – which is good – begins to condemn him (2 Cor 3:7). Worse, sin which he did not know he had, rises up and begins to kill him (Rom 7:10).

The law is good but those who rely on it place themselves under a curse (Gal 3:10). How can something that is good be bad for us? Is the law defective? No – it’s good! The problem is not with the law but your flesh. Your flesh cannot cope with the law (Rom 8:3).

It’s not just the law. Anything that is good will become bad for you once your flesh gets involved:

For if you live according to the flesh you will die … (Rom 8:13) … but your flesh is weak.

What does it mean to live according to the flesh? And why is this bad?

Every day the Christian chooses between  walking after the flesh or walking after the spirit. It’s a mutually exclusive choice.

We walk after the flesh when we rely on our own resources – our resolve, our abilities, our understanding. We walk after the spirit when we rely on his. It’s the difference between walking by sight or by faith.

The problem is, walking after the flesh comes naturally to us. We’ve had a lot of practice.

You used to walk in these ways, in the life you once lived. (Col 3:7)

Before we were born of the Spirit, the flesh was all we knew – and old habits die hard.

An illustration may help. I lived in Hong Kong for 15 years but now I live in New Zealand. But even though I am in New Zealand, I can still walk after the ways of Hong Kong – and to some extent I do. For instance, I still enjoy celebrating Chinese New Year.

The ways of Hong Kong are no better or worse than the ways of New Zealand, but the same cannot be said of the flesh. Walk after the flesh and your life will be barren and unprofitable:

It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing. (John 6:63).

The supernatural and abundant life that we’re called to live can only be received by faith – and experienced by walking in the spirit. This is why the New Testament writers admonish us to put off the old ways of the flesh and put on the new ways of the spirit (Eph 4:22-24).

We don’t “put off and put on” to become spiritual; we do this because we are new spiritual beings.

Everyone who is born again is born of the spirit (John 3:7-8). Since we are already in the spirit, let us walk after the spirit:  If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit. (Gal 5:25)

The great religious blind spot

One of our biggest blind spots is we’ve bought into the idea that good things are good for us while bad things are bad for us. But this good-versus-evil logic is fruit off the wrong tree.

It gets us keeping score in a game God isn’t playing.

The real issue is life versus death. And if you sow to the flesh you will reap corruption regardless of what you do.

“Wait a second Paul. Are you saying I can do no good walking after the flesh?”

You can do a lot of good walking after the flesh, but it won’t do you any good. “The flesh profits nothing.” Live like this and you will be functionally identical to a moral sinner. You will miss opportunities to reveal the kingdom of God supernaturally. You will be acting like a “mere man” (1 Cor 3:3).

Jesus didn’t suffer and die to make sinners good but to make the dead live. Christ is in you and he is your life.

When you walk after the flesh, you are acting like the dead man you used to be. You are wasting your life in dead end pursuits.

You can spend all your days doing good works but none of it will result in praise to your Father in heaven because they are your works and not his. (Eph 2:10) You may feel like you’re making a mark but in reality you’re just accumulating fuel for the fire. (Not Hell fire but the fire that burns up your dead works. LR)

Sadly, this is exactly how many Christians live. Ask them to define the works of the flesh and they will recite Paul’s list from Galatians 5. Immorality, idolatry, jealousy and so on. These are the biggies. It never occurs to them that walking after flesh can also bring death to the humdrum activity of everyday life.

Do you see the danger? Here’s a simple test to find out: Which of the following works of the flesh gives you greater concern as a Christian?

1. Doing something bad in a moment of rash passion, or
2. Wasting my life doing my good works that God has not prepared for me to do. (Eph 2:10)

I suspect more people are fearful of doing something bad in a rash moment than they are of wasting their lives doing good. But a Christian who, in a momentary loss of sanity, fools around with “bad” sin, may be more likely to come to his senses than one who has been dulled by years of good service done in the flesh. I am not encouraging you to do bad things. I am discouraging you from walking after the flesh even if what you are doing is good. What seems right to you will, in the end, lead to death.

It’s time we discarded the forbidden fruit and got our nourishment from the Tree of Life. Our innate tendency to judge ourselves as good or bad – based on the good or bad things we are doing – is doing nobody any good at all.

________________________________________________________

If this Post makes your head hurt it is because we have all been conditioned, since birth, to walk according to our 5 senses in this Seen Realm and to “do our own thing” – like Adam did. That mode of operating does not automatically change when we are reborn of God – i. e. are completely re-created spiritually. In our true, new being we are incompatible with this fallen world – but we are still in it. It is like becoming an instant alien in the neighborhood where we grew up.

Now, as Ambassadors from God’s eternal Kingdom, we can learn – by revelations from the Holy Spirit to our new spirit – how to think and operate as recruiters to win others into this eternal Kingdom. Like learning to fly an airplane, we need a “coach” to teach us the basics and come to depend on His every word – not just to survive but to be victorious in and through Christ Jesus. Just because you knew how to crawl around on the ground in your old “caterpillar life” does not mean you know how to “fly” with your new wings as a holy butterfly – a beautiful new creation in Father-God’s sight. That is why we offer this series of “flying lessons” in the Holy Spirit-led life …  the Super-Natural Life! Only He is our wise Sanctifier, Counselor and Friend, sent to lead us into all Truth – and to help enlarge God’s family of reborn saints.

Next Post: Another book resource titled Lifetime Guarantee which expands on the thread above. LR