Jonah

 •  1 min. read  •  grade level: 6
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Our moral corruption is very deep. It is complete. But at times it will betray itself in very repulsive shapes, from which, with all the knowledge of it which we have, we instinctively shrink, confounded at the thought that they belong to us. Privileges under God’s own hand may only serve to develop instead of curing this corruption.
The love of distinction was inlaid in us at the very outset of our apostasy. “Ye shall be as God,” was listened to; to this lust, this love of distinction, we will, in cold blood, sacrifice all that may stand in our way, without respect, as it were, to sex or age, as at the beginning we sacrificed the Lord Himself to it (Gen. 3).
We take God’s gifts, and deck ourselves with them. The church at Corinth was such a one as that. Instead of using God’s gifts for others, the brethren there were displaying them. But the man who had the mind of Christ, in the midst of them, would say, “I would rather speak five words with my understanding, that others might be edified, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.”
The Jew—the favored, privileged Jew—grievously sinned in this way. Romans 2 Convicted him on this ground. His separation from the nations was of God; but instead of using this as witness to the holiness of God in the midst of a revolted world’s pollutions, he took occasion to exalt himself by it. He boasted in God and in the law; but he dishonored God by breaking the law.