MORALITY

 

 


 

For the legalist, morality serves the same function that immorality does for the antinomian or the progressive – namely, as the expression of self-reliance and self-assertion.

 

John Piper 

Brothers, We Are Not Professionals, Bethlehem Baptist Church, 2002, p. 153.

 


 

When justice is divorced from morality, when rights of individuals are separated from right and wrong, the only definition you have left for justice is the right for every individual to do as he pleases.  And the end of that road is anarchy and barbarism.

 

John Piper

 


 

Where there is no “moral gravity” – that is, no force that draws us to the center – there is spiritual weightlessness. We float on feelings that will carry us where we never meant to go; we bubble with emotional experiences that we often take for spiritual ones; and we are puffed up with pride.  Instead of seriousness, there is foolishness. Instead of gravity, flippancy. Sentimentality takes the place of theology. Our reference point will never serve to keep our feet on solid rock, for our reference point, until we answer God’s call, is merely ourselves. We cannot possibly tell which end is up. Paul calls them fools who “measure themselves by themselves, to find in themselves their own standard of comparison!”

 

Elisabeth Elliot

Discipline – The Glad Surrender, Revell, 1982, p. 19-20.

 


 

The moral absolutes rest upon God’s character. The moral commands He has given to men are an expression of His character. Men as created in His image are to live by choice on the basis of what God is. The standards of morality are determined by what conforms to His character, while those things which do not conform are immoral.

 

Francis Schaeffer

 


 

Common morality, the glue of family and society, is grounded in self-love and the desire to enjoy pleasant circumstances. It is rooted in a desire for one’s own happiness, a morality based upon hope of a good return. This is not true virtue because it is self-centered.

 

John Hannah

To God be the Glory, Crossway, 2000, p. 30.

 


 

Common morality can be explained without developing an elaborate theory; it is simply part of the structure of our human natures, who we are as God made us. Therefore, an ethic based upon the Golden Rule alone or a God-given moral sense is not truly virtuous in itself. This is so because a moral act done apart from a transcendent object – love for God and His beauty – is a false morality. It is impossible to have a divinely sanctioned morality if God is not the object of and motive for it.

 

John Hannah

To God be the Glory, Crossway, 2000, p. 30.

 


 

Human morality and submission to God’s law are entirely different in principle, though they may appear to be similar in outward appearance. Human morality arises out of culture and family training and is based on what is proper and expected in the society we live in. It has nothing to do with God except to the extent that godly people have influenced that society. Submission to God’s law arises out of a love for God and a grateful response to His grace and is based on a delight in His law as revealed in Scripture. When the societal standard of morality varies from the law of God written in Scripture, we then see the true nature of human morality. We discover that it is just as hostile to the law of God as is the attitude of the most hardened sinner.

 

Jerry Bridges

Transforming Grace, NavPress, 1991, p. 108. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights reserved. 

 


 

I believe that human morality, rather than flagrant sin, is the greatest obstacle to the gospel today. If you ask the average law-abiding person why he expects to go to heaven, the answer will be some form of “because I’ve been good.” The rich young ruler (see Matthew 19:16-20), the prodigal son’s older brother (see Luke 15:28-30), and the Pharisee praying in the temple (see Luke 18:9-12) all had this in common: They were confident of their own goodness. Their attitude is replicated throughout our society. And the more religious a person is, the more difficult it is for that person to realize his or her need for the righteousness of Jesus Christ.

 

Jerry Bridges

Copied from The Gospel for Real Life by Jerry Bridges, © 2002, p. 121. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights reserved.

 


 

Moral guidelines are oppressive and legalistic only to those who still love their sin. For example, the only reason integrity should be a burden to you is if you enjoy being dishonest. Righteous deeds will be bothersome only because you prefer unrighteous ones. Speaking the truth will hurt only because it feels good to lie. Obedience to the righteous commands of God is easy for those whose hearts have been gripped by grace and whose lives are empowered by grace (Dt. 30:11; Mt. 11:29-30; 1 Jn. 5:3).

 

Sam Storms
Integrity, November 6, 2006, www.enjoyinggodministries.com.
Used by Permission.

 


 

The want of a renewed heart is a hair on the moral man’s pen, that blurs and blots his copy when he writes fairest. His unrightness does others more good in this world than himself in the next.

 

William Gurnall

A Puritan Golden Treasury, compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 196.

 


 

As the excellence of steel is strength, and the excellence of art is beauty, so the excellence of mankind is moral character.

 

A.W. Tozer

 


 

Many a man has died from internal bleeding, and yet there has been no wound whatever to be seen by the eye. You may go to hell as well dressed in the garnishings of morality as in the rags of immorality. Unless the very center of your soul and the core of your being be made obedient to the living God, He will not accept you, for He looks not only to your outward condition, but to your heart's secret loyalty or treachery toward Himself.

 

C.H. Spurgeon

 


 

Morality is a neat cover for foul venom, but it does not alter the fact that the heart is vile, and the man himself is under damnation.  Men will be damned with good works as well as without them, if they make them their confidence (rather than Jesus Christ).  

 

C.H. Spurgeon

 


 

Morality may keep you out of jail, but it takes the blood of Jesus Christ to keep you out of hell.

C.H. Spurgeon

 


 

When we move from the physical to the spiritual realm, fixed laws still exist. We cannot exist without laws in the moral and the spiritual dimension of life any more than we can do so in the physical dimension. Our Creator built morality into life.  Just as there are physical laws, so there are spiritual laws… The same God who controls the physical world by fixed laws controls the moral and spiritual world.

 

John MacArthur

You Can Trust the Bible, Moody Press, 1988, p. 5-6.

 


 

Jesus had little trouble reaching the harlots, the thieves, robbers, criminals, outcasts, and sinners of society, including the tax collectors and the extortionists, but He had an almost impossible time reaching the religious, self-righteous, moral people who were under the illusion and self-deception that because of their goodness, everything was OK between them and God. They recognized no sin, so they needed no Savior. That is always the danger of morality. Morality creates an illusion of safety when in fact the person who is moral may be in the greatest danger of all.

 

John MacArthur

Reformation vs. Relationship, The article originally appeared (www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2296) at www.gty.org. © 1969-2008. Grace to You. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

 


 

Morality, in and of itself, is a damning thing. Self-righteousness is a damning thing. You’d be better off to be immoral and face the reality of your needs so that you would come to a Savior, than to live under the illusion that because you have a moral code on the outside, all is well on the inside between you and God.

 

John MacArthur

Reformation vs. Relationship, The article originally appeared (www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2296) at www.gty.org. © 1969-2008. Grace to You. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

 


 

Immoral people didn’t blaspheme and cry for Christ’s death. Immoral people didn’t plot His execution. The harlots, thieves, and murderers didn’t do it; the religious people did it. That's the curse of morality – moral, religious, self-righteous people, confident they are holy in themselves, are utterly deceived into believing that Satan has nothing to do with them, and they have no vigilance or protection, and they can be swarmed by demonic hosts [see Matthew 12:45].

 

John MacArthur

Reformation vs. Relationship, The article originally appeared (www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2296) at www.gty.org. © 1969-2008. Grace to You. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

 


 

America’s greatness has been the greatness of a free people who shared certain moral commitments.  Freedom without moral commitment is aimless and promptly self-destructive.

 

John W. Gardner

 


 

Morality, like art, consists in drawing the line somewhere.

 

G.K. Chesterton