RELGION
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GOSPEL
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“I obey; therefore I’m accepted.
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“I’m accepted; therefore I obey.
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Motivation is based on fear and insecurity.
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Motivation is based on grateful joy.
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I obey God in order to get things from God.
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I obey God to get God—to delight [in] and resemble him.
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When circumstances in my life go wrong, I am angry at God
or myself, since I believe, like Job’s friends, that anyone who is good
deserves a comfortable life.
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When circumstances in my life go wrong, I struggle, but I
know that while God may allow this for my training, he will exercise his
fatherly love within my trial.
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When I am criticized, I am furious or devastated because
it is essential for me to think of myself as a “good person.” Threats to that
self image must be destroyed at all costs.
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When I am criticized, I struggle, but it is not essential
for me to think of myself as a “good person.” My identity is not built on my
performance but on God’s love for me in Christ.
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My prayer life consists largely of petition and only heats
up when I am in need. My main purpose in prayer is to control circumstances.
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My prayer life consists of generous stretches of praise
and adoration. My main purpose is fellowship with him.
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My self-view swings between two poles. If and when I am
living up to my standards, I feel confident, but then I am prone to be proud
and unsympathetic to people who fail. If and when I am not living up to
standards, I feel humble but not confident—I feel like a failure.
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My self-view is not based on a view of myself as a moral
achiever. In Christ I am at once sinful and lost, yet accepted. I am so bad
he had to die for me, and so loved
he was glad to die for me. This
leads me to deeper humility as well as deeper confidence, without either
sniveling or swaggering.
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My identity and self-worth are based mainly on how hard I
work or how moral I am, so I must
look down on those I perceive as lazy or immoral. I disdain and feel superior
to others.
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My identity and self-worth are centered on the One who
died for his enemies, including me. Only by sheer grace am I what I am, so I can’t
look down on those who believe or practice something different from me. I
have no inner need to win arguments.
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Since I look to my pedigree or performance for my
spiritual acceptability, my heart manufactures idols—talents, moral record,
personal discipline, social status, etc. I absolutely have to have them, so they
are my main hope, meaning, happiness, security, and significance, whatever I
say I believe about God.
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I have many good things in my life—family, work, etc. but
none of these good things are ultimate
things to me. I don’t absolutely have to
have them, so there is a limit to how much anxiety, bitterness, and despair
they can inflict on me when they are threatened and lost.
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- Tim Keller
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