This summer, a group of ladies and I are studying the book of Hosea. It is a prophetic book written by Hosea, who lived during the ancient reigns of the Kings of Judah right before the nation of Israel went into exile. Hosea illustrates with vivid and shocking word pictures the depths of Israel’s unfaithfulness towards the Lord which justifiably stirred His righteous jealousy and anger. Yet, its prophetic word points to Israel’s future reconciliation and redemption in the coming Messiah (Hos 3:5).
Hosea was written with a purpose: to shock the sensibilities and expose the ugliness in Israel so that they comprehend the reason for their exile, see their error in technicolor, confess it, repent, and return to the Lord. It was an opportunity for self-examination at its most intense.
One way we may try to make this book relevant to our modern lives is to use this text to guide our own self-examination; to see where we have rejected our Lord and “sought other lovers.” The study asked us, “How are you like Gomer?” which, on its surface, is meant as an effort to awaken ourselves out of our slumber in an illegitimate bed. Yet, I have an uneasiness in this comparison; not because I’m uncomfortable with the idea that Gomer’s explicit sins are representative of Israel’s unfaithfulness to the Lord God (as awkward as they are to study). And it’s not because I am unwilling to admit my own sin and rebellion towards the Lord. I’m uncomfortable with identifying with Gomer because Gomer represents an unrepentant people who are living in open rebellion to God. As a Christian, I am not a Gomer.
Why is this important distinction? It is important because as we go to the Lord for Him to examine us by His truth, we need to go to Him by faith in the assurance that our relationship to Him and His love for us is based upon the finished work of Christ on our behalf. Our unfaithfulness — past, present, and future — has been completely forgiven and is not counted against us. EVER. If we are in Christ, our identity is in Him and not in our sin. We are Gomers no more. We are beloved daughters, with new hearts inclined away from our sin and towards the love of our heavenly Father, and because of our union to Christ, we have everything we need for life and godliness to live a life that is worthy of this calling. Our identity – who we really are, how we see ourselves and how we interact in this life – affects our self-examination. How then, knowing that our position as daughters cannot be shaken, do we approach this important discipline in our sanctification?
The Posture of Self-Examination
When we consider the Christian practice of on-going self-examination, we are typically speaking of God’s sanctifying work within us to renew us or to restore us to what God intends for us as His people. As created beings made in the image of God, we are to live our lives as changed people who have received love, grace and mercy instead of the wrath we deserve. Christian self-examination is a way in which we learn to live out renewed lives evident of the change God has begun in us. The self-examination that renews and restores is not about “how do I make myself right with God again and again” but “how do I live a life as His redeemed daughter?”
Our posture before the Lord as He examines us is always from a secure, loving covenant relationship with God because Jesus has made it so. Because we are His daughters, we are always “right” with God. Our relationship is secure. Because of that specific truth, self-examination is a discipline grounded in love – His love for us that is not dependent on our own perfection but Christ’s, and our love for Him as the One who died for us. Sanctifying self-examination has love, not shame or insecurity at its core. John tells us, “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not been perfected in love” (1 John 4:18). In Christ, we are beloved, forgiven daughters and Gomers no more.
The Practice of Self-Examination
Christian self-examination is really better defined as “God-examination” – when God examines us, not we ourselves. King David says it this way: “Search me, O God, and know my heart; see if there is any wicked way in me” (Psalm 139:12-13). God is the One who has all authority, wisdom, and power to examine us rightly, justly, and equitably. If left to ourselves, our examination would be shallow, incomplete and often in error – we don’t even know our own hearts (Jer. 17:9) so how can we judge it accurately? And when I judge myself, can I restore myself to God? No. Only God can do all these things. As Christians, this has two major implications. The first is that God’s truth is the only just standard in which to examine ourselves and secondly, with Him, there is no safer place to be examined because He applies the exact salve of mercy and forgiveness needed for every sin. Any other examination only wounds but does not heal.
Although God does the examining, this Christian practice is a partnership of sorts between God and His children. God commands us to “work out our salvation” because He “works in us to will and to act according to His good purpose” (Phil 2:12-13). So, while the Holy Spirit is the primary actor in our sanctification, we have a part to play in the examination of our hearts. We humbly submit to God’s examination through the reading of His Word, soaking in the gospel truths of our identity in Christ, and trusting God to sanctify us through the power of His Holy Spirit, for His glory and our good.
Submit Humbly
The practice of self-examination begins when we “humbly submit ourselves under the mighty hand of God” (1 Pet 5:6), acknowledging that He is God and there is no other (Is. 45:5). We place ourselves humbly into His hands because He is “right when He judges, and justified when He speaks” (Ps. 51:4). Because the Bible tells us that Jesus has already paid the penalty for any sin God exposes, we can approach God’s judgment throne in safety (Heb 10:22). There is nothing that He does not already know about us as our heavenly Father (Ps. 139), so we go humbly, yet securely in His love for us in Christ. “A broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise” (Ps 51:17). So, we come to our heavenly Father in humility but not fear when He exposes our sin. “As a father shows compassion to his children, so the Lord shows compassion to those who fear him” (Ps 103:13).
Start with Truth
I don’t know of one Christian woman who does not struggle with guilt of one kind or another. We can beat ourselves up and dwell in our negative emotions thinking the worst about ourselves, or wondering if we will ever change or, on really discouraging days, if we are even redeemed. But God tells us that we are not to lean on our own understanding even of ourselves (Prov 3:5) but instead to “walk in the light as He is in the light” where “He cleanses us from all our sins” (1 John 1:7). We walk according to His light when we go to His written Word to help us align our thinking, emotions and our perceptions of ourselves with His truth.
His Word tells us what is right and true as we examine ourselves in light of His truth: Truth about God’s reality and character; truth about who we are as image bearers; truth about what is good and evil in His sight; truth about the motivations of our hearts; truth about everything! God uses His Word to sanctify us: “Sanctify them in the truth; your Word is truth” (John 17:17). When we are prone to judge ourselves or others, we go to His Word, and let His Word examine us so that He can correct and apply His truth to our lives. As women of God, we need to use His truth, not our emotions or our own wisdom in our self-examination.
Soak in the Gospel
As we willingly submit ourselves to God’s examination through the reading and applying of His Word, it is so important to remember that through Christ, all of our sins have already been forgiven. “There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death” (Rom 8:1-2). We need to soak and saturate ourselves in this truth! This is the point of why our identity in Christ, not in our sin, is so vital to this spiritual discipline. We are His daughters, lavishly loved by Him. My heart can run unbound, without fear of rejection to my heavenly Father so that He can restore me. My identity as a redeemed daughter affects the frequency and depth of my self-examination, and leads me nearer and nearer to my Father’s side. “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
Say Your Prayers
Another important element of self-examination is that, although it is an internal work, it is not an independent work. He is with us as we do this internal work. We are not left to figure it out on our own. We’ll never hear from Him, “If you don’t know why I’m upset, I’m not going to tell you!” He so graciously speaks to us through His word and through the prompting of His Holy Spirit, we respond to Him in prayers for forgiveness and restoration. And, not to be left out of this conversation, Jesus intercedes for us as we pray, perfecting all of our imperfect prayers and requests to be in line with the Father’s sanctifying will for us (Heb. 7:25). How incredible is that? The complete God-head is engaged with us as we humbly submit ourselves to our Father, who desires to make us more and more beautiful for His glory and our good. We are never alone in this process.
Seek the Long View
Self-examination is a lifelong process. If you’re anything like me, I would love to not struggle with sin. I would love to be able to say to it, “one and done!” and move on. But that’s not the nature of sin so it is not the nature of our sanctification. There will be some sins that God will graciously root out and we will find victory over them. But there will be some that will plague us until we go home to be with the Lord. For me, those deep, indwelling sins that I can’t seem to shake once discouraged me so much in my walk with the Lord. Now, as God has deepened my reliance upon Him and His grace, and as I go to Him over and over again for forgiveness and mercy, I’ve come to see these indwelling sins as “frienemies.” On this side of heaven, I may never be free of them, but they take me to the cross where, with each confession, our loving Father severs one more thread of their tether.
Dear Sisters, examining ourselves before the Lord is central to maturing in our relationship with the Lord. God is near and He is good. When we humbly examine ourselves in full view of who we are in Christ, by God’s truth and in prayer, He changes us for His glory. He takes the ugliness of our sin away and makes us beautiful. We are no longer Gomers – beset by the stain of sin and unfaithfulness. Let’s help one another grow in our identity as beloved daughters as we learn how to examine ourselves according to God’s truth.
Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful. (Heb 10:22-23).
Sharon Smith Leaman is a member of New Life in Christ Church, Fredericksburg, Virginia. She would love to hear from you if this article sparked an interest in you. You may reach her at leamans@yahoo.com or subscribe to her blog at https://nowamirrordimly.com/subscribe/.