Tullian Tchividjian post:  
The Double-Reach of Self-Righteousness
					
The Bible makes it clear that self-righteousness is the   premier   
enemy of the Gospel. And there is perhaps no group of people who better 
  embody the   sin of self-righteousness in the Bible than the 
Pharisees.   In fact,   Jesus reserved his harshest criticisms for them,
 calling  them    whitewashed tombs and hypocrites. Surprisingly to 
some, this   demonstrates that unrighteous badness is not the greatest 
threat to gospel  advancement. Self-righteous goodness is.
In Surprised by Grace: God’s Relentless Pursuit of Rebels,
   I retell the story of Jonah and show how Jonah was just as much in  
need  of God’s grace as the sailors and the Ninevites. But the  
fascinating  thing about Jonah is that, unlike the pagan sailors and  
wicked  Ninevites, Jonah was one of the “good guys.” He was a prophet.  
He was  moral. He was a part of God’s covenant community. He was one who
  “kept  all the rules”,  and did  everything he was supposed to do. He 
 wasn’t  some long-haired, tattooed indie rocker; he was a clean-cut  
prep. He  wasn’t a   liberal; he was a conservative. He wasn’t  
irreligious; he was  religious. If   you’ve ever read S.E. Hinton’s  
novel The Outsiders,  than you’ll   immediately see that the  
Ninevites and the sailors in the  story were like the “greasers”, while 
 Jonah was like a “soashe.”
What’s fascinating to me is that, not only in the story of Jonah, but
   throughout the Bible, it’s always the immoral   person that gets the 
  Gospel before the moral person. It’s the  prostitute  who understands 
  grace; it’s the Pharisee who doesn’t. It’s  the  unrighteous younger  
 brother who gets it before the self-righteous  older  brother.
There is, however, another side to    self-righteousness that  
younger-brother types need to be careful of.
There’s an equally  
dangerous form of self-righteousness that plagues the    unconventional,
  the liberal, and the non-religious types. We “authentic”, 
anti-legalists can  become just as guilty of legalism in the opposite   
 direction. What do I  mean?
It’s simple: we become self-righteous against those who are    self-righteous.
Many younger evangelicals today are reacting to their    parents’  
conservative, buttoned-down, rule-keeping flavor of “older    brother  
religion” with a type of liberal, untucked, rule-breaking flavor    of  
“younger brother irreligion” which screams, “That’s right, I know I     
don’t have it all together and you think you do; I know I’m not good    
and  you think you are. That makes me better than you.”
See the irony?
In other words, they’re proud that they’re not self-righteous! Hmmm…think about that one. 
Listen: self-righteousness is no respecter of persons. It reaches to 
    the religious and the irreligious; the “buttoned down” and the     
“untucked”; the plastic, “boardroom”, CEO Christians and the pious, 
coffee-house, artsy Christians. The entire Bible reveals how 
shortsighted all of us are when     it comes to our own sin. Steve Brown
 writes:
You will find criticism of Christian fundamentalists by 
people whose secular fundamentalism dwarfs the fundamentalism of the 
people being criticized. Political correctness and the attendant 
feelings of self-righteousness have their equivalent in religious 
communities with religious correctness. If you look at victims, you’ll 
find self-righteousness. On the other hand, if you look at the people 
who wield power, they do it with the self-righteous notion that they 
know better, understand more, and more informed than others…arrogance, 
condescension, disdain, contemptuousness, and pomposity are everywhere.
For example, it was easy for Jonah to see   the   idolatry of the 
sailors. It was easy for him to see the perverse   ways  of  the 
Ninevites. What he couldn’t see was his own idolatry, his   own   
perversion. So the question is not whether you are self-righteous but 
rather, in which direction does your     self-righteousness lean? 
Depending on who I’m with, mine goes in both directions. Arghhh!
Thankfully, while our self-righteousness reaches far, God’s grace    
 reaches farther. And the good news is, that it reaches in both     
directions!
 
 
 
 
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