Self-esteem is an intriguing subject. On the one hand, the gospel passes
the judgment upon all men that we are guilty sinners, inclined by nature to
hate God and to hate the neighbor. To that judgment of the gospel, the proper
response is not self-esteem but self-abasement. On the other hand, this gospel
makes us who believe in Jesus Christ new creatures in Christ. Believers, therefore,
are glorious creatures who cannot be esteemed highly enough.
This is also a subject concerning which it is of the utmost importance that
Reformed people have a clear understanding today. This is especially because
of the error, I do not hesitate to say, heresy, that is bedeviling this topic
at the present time. Because our people must have no misunderstanding on the
matter, I make plain at the outset what my answer is to the question, "Is
good self-esteem important for a Christian?" My answer is that good self-esteem
is proper for the Christian, and that, in fact, it is necessary that
the Christian have a high self-esteem.
Whoever drew up this topic must have assumed that this would be my position
because the topic continues, "and how is it developed?" I only want
to suggest that that was a risky assumption. It is conceivable that a Reformed
preacher would give another answer to the question of this topic, in which
case he would urge the audience to prevent self-esteem and to destroy self-esteem
wherever they saw it cropping up. However, my answer to the questions is "yes."
I will also say something, therefore, about developing self-esteem in Christians.
We may not, however, simply accept what unbelieving psychology and popular
religious thinking are spouting on this subject today. As I will show, this
includes religious thinking that is supposedly Christian, and religious thinking
that is even allegedly Reformed.
UNBIBLICAL SELF-ESTEEM
Today there is a message about self-esteem, both powerful and prevalent,
which constitutes nothing less than an attack upon the biblical gospel and
an assault upon genuine Christian self-esteem. I intend to draw the line sharply
that differentiates the self-esteem that is rooted in the gospel from the
self-esteem that arises from the pride of the natural heart of man.
There is a modern gospel, a false gospel, of self-esteem that is unchristian.
What is meant by self-esteem in this sense, we will let some of the promoters
of this self-esteem themselves tell us. The psychologist, Stanley Coopersmith,
describes a good, positive self-image as one's evaluation of himself with
approval because he regards himself as capable, significant, successful, and
worthy. The Christian psychologist, H. Norman Wright, describes self-esteem
as one's sense of personal worthiness, as the feeling of "I am good."
And one of the most influential purveyors of the unchristian message of self-esteem,
the television preacher, Robert Schuller, describes self-esteem this way:
"Self-esteem is the human hunger for the divine dignity that God intended
to be our emotional birthright as children created in His image." Again,
from Schuller: "Self-esteem is pride in being a human being." Yet
again, "Self-esteem is feeling good about one's self because one has
been working hard and well." Yet, once again, from the Crystal Cathedral:
"Since the opposite of good self-esteem is that in a person which caused
him to say 'I am unworthy,' (which, says Schuller, is the worst sin that a
man or woman can commit), self-esteem is the feeling, 'I am worthy.'"
(These quotations are taken from Schuller's book, Self-esteem: The New
Reformation, Word Books, 1982.)
All of these descriptions and definitions of self-esteem are basically the
same. Therefore, we may sum up self-esteem as it is popularly understood today
as follows: "The proper and healthy self-esteem that every person should
have and can have is the feeling about himself that he is good, worthy, and
capable simply by virtue of the fact that he is a human being. Self-esteem
is feeling good about one's self as a human being." The opposite of self-esteem,
then, for these men is the conviction that one is bad, unworthy, and lacking
in ability. This kind of self-image, or self-esteem, we are told, is a psychological
disorder, indeed, a theological and spiritual weakness. In fact, they do not
hesitate to say that the feeling or the conviction about one's self that one
is not good but unworthy is the worst theological and spiritual sin that one
can possibly commit. A negative self-image must be overcome.
The advocates of good self-esteem in this sense are convinced that a bad
self-esteem is a very serious problem in American society, if not the most
serious problem of all. Their promotion of good self-esteem, therefore, takes
on all the fervor of a crusade. Robert Schuller, for example, suggests that
poor self-esteem is the cause of all the world's problems. And he states that
it is the core of sin, indeed the core of all sin.
Another popular advocate of self-esteem is the religious psychologist, James
Dobson. Now in order to escape being excoriated, I want to make it clear that
I did not just say that there is nothing to be learned from James Dobson.
I have only said that James Dobson also advocates self-esteem. And he stresses
the seriousness of what he sees as the problem in American society today.
I quote now from his book Hide or Seek: "An epidemic of
inferiority is raging throughout our society." Also, "lack of self-esteem
produces more symptoms of psychiatric disorder than any other factor yet identified."
This, then, is what is meant by self-esteem popularly today. And this is
the urgency of it, according to many who espouse it.
The view of self-esteem that is popularized in our society is thoroughly
unbiblical. It is nothing less than a denial of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
I want to demonstrate this now by analyzing briefly the teaching on self-esteem
of three influential teachers of self-esteem. Each of these teachers is drawn
from a different category of psychological and religious thought so that the
three taken together will give a broad overview of the unbiblical character
of much that is proclaimed in the name of self-esteem today.
First, there is the humanist psychologist, Carl Rogers. He represents a
certain prominent and influential branch of psychology and psychiatry in North
America and in western society at large. Rogers simply holds that human nature
is basically good. Every human, therefore, may and should feel good about
himself, and accept himself as he is. And he should also fight off any sense
of unworthiness. A sense of unworthiness is unhealthy; it is sickness. At
the very least, it is a psychological disorder. This view of self-esteem,
surely, stands in diametrical opposition to the message of the gospel of Jesus
Christ. That message begins with the truth that "there is none righteous,
no not one. They are altogether become unprofitable, there is none that doeth
good, no not one" (Rom.
3:10ff.). This is to say that humanistic psychology rejects the truth
of the Fall, which includes original sin and total depravity.
A second representative of an unbiblical teaching of self-esteem is Robert
Schuller. Although he is, as a matter of fact, an ordained preacher in the
Reformed Church in America, he is, in reality, no preacher of the gospel at
all, but a religious psychologist. And, therefore, his thinking represents
religious psychology today. Schuller wholeheartedly agrees with humanist-secular
psychology that every human being may and should esteem himself as fundamentally
good, worthy, and capable. Schuller, therefore, explicitly denies that there
is any such thing as original sin. Quoting from Schuller now, "Adam's
sin should not be charged to his children." Schuller states that "the
doctrine of sin is the reason why Christians have behaved so badly for the
past two thousand years." If I had not read this line with my own eyes,
and if I had not re-read this line a second time, I would not have believed
that anyone in his right mind, much less a Reformed preacher of the gospel,
could have written such atrocious garbage. But he wrote that "the doctrine
of sin is the reason why Christians have behaved so badly for the past two
thousand years." Of course, the man is a nominally Christian preacher.
And, therefore, he must do something with the basic doctrines of Christianity.
What he does is to re-define them. According to his re-definition, the truth
of inherited sin becomes this, that everyone is born with a negative self-image,
an inferiority complex that must be overcome. According to his re-definition
of the cross of Jesus Christ, the truth about the cross is that the cross
shows us how worthy every man is, for Jesus died for every man. And He would
not have died for unworthy people; therefore, everyone is shown, by the cross
of Jesus Christ, to be good and worthy. The cross, of course, was not Jesus'
satisfaction for sin, but it was only intended to show you and me that if
we have a dream, as Jesus had a dream, we must be willing to pay a certain
cost in order to attain our dream. The good news, according to the gospel
of Robert Schuller, the message that he hopes will become the heart of the
new reformation, is this message: Every man and woman is good. You only have
to realize this and you only have to exercise your inherent ability.
Schuller is crass. This good self-image, as you know if you have ever listened
to him, leads directly to possibility-thinking. You can be all you want to
be because you are good and capable. You can even be as rich and famous and
successful as Robert Schuller.
Certainly, this stands in conflict with the first of the three basic elements
of the gospel according to the Heidelberg Catechism, in the opening Lord's
Day. The very first thing that is necessary for anyone to know, to enjoy the
only comfort in life and death, is the knowledge of his misery as the guilt
and total depravity of sin. So much for Schuller.
The third representative of popular thinking on self-esteem today is Anthony
A. Hoekema. I choose him because he represents the intrusion of the unchristian
view of self-esteem into conservative, Reformed circles. Anthony Hoekema was
professor of theology at Calvin Theological Seminary. He did not have the
reputation of being "liberal," but rather the reputation of being
a more conservative theologian. In his book titled, The Christian Looks
at Himself, Hoekema taught that the proper self-image for Christians is
one in which we do not suppose that we any longer have an old man with which
we must strive. We no longer have an old man of sin to contend with. A proper
self-image, according to him, is one in which we no longer view ourselves
as totally depraved, or even depraved. And a proper self-image is one in which
we do not loathe and abhor ourselves. This, he says, was the destructive self-image
that Reformed Christians were taught to have in the past. But this was a mistake.
A Christian must look at himself differently from this. In proposing this
new Reformed self-image, Hoekema denies that
Romans 7:14ff. applies to a regenerated, converted Christian. Rather,
he writes, "This is the experience of the unregenerated man." In
Romans
7:14, the apostle says, "We know that the law is spiritual, but I
am carnal, sold under sin.," It is an unregenerated man who is speaking
there. The apostle goes on in verse
15: "that which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not;
but what I hate, that do I." In verse
18, the apostle writes, "To will is present with me," that is,
the will to do the good and to please God, "but how to perform that which
is good I find not." Then follows the familiar words of verse
19, "For the good that I would I do not, but the evil which I would
not, that I do." This, he says, is not the experience of the Christian.
This is the experience of the unbeliever. And the apostle cries out in verse
24, "O wretched man that I am!" That is the unregenerated person
speaking. And again, in verse
25, in answer to the question that this supposedly unregenerated
person has raised, "Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
Paul writes, "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with
the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin."
All this, says Hoekema, is the experience of the unregenerate sinner.
This is an error. This is a deadly serious, theological error. For
Romans 7 now teaches that an unregenerated person is able to will the
good. The unregenerated does have, after all then, a free will. This opens
up the door wide to Arminianism. But this view is deadly serious in its error
also practically. For, in fact, this view, adopted in the interests of a good
self-image, exposes the Christian to the most dreadful threat of a bad self-image
of all, namely, the danger that I will come to the conclusion that I am not
a regenerated and saved person at all. For the fact is that every true Christian
will have, and does have, in the depths of his soul, the experience
that Paul expresses in
Romans 7, "I will to do the good, but I do not perform it; and there
is in me a mighty principle and power of opposition to the law of God."
If, now, this is not the experience of a Christian, I am no Christian. On
this view, the Christian will doubt his very salvation. And, surely, this
is not a healthy self-image.
All three of these representatives of unChristian self-esteem err grievously
against the gospel of Christ in these respects, at least. First, they all
derive a positive self-image, or self-esteem, from creation. And, therefore,
they conclude that every human being, unbeliever as well as believer, ought
to have a positive self-image.
This comes out in the slogan that you may have heard. A little boy, usually
a little black boy, says, "I am me. And I am good. 'Cause God don't make
no junk!" Well, God didn't "make no junk," to be sure. But
creation is not the whole story in the history of mankind. There is also a
fall. And in the Fall, although man did not become junk, man became a depraved
sinner. And that's worse than junk. These people ignore the Fall.
Second, they err against the gospel in this way, that, if they pay any attention
to the cross of Jesus Christ at all, they explain the cross as indicating
how worthy all men are. So worthy are all men, they say, that we deserve to
be died for. But this is to destroy the grace of the cross. This turns the
gospel of the cross upside down and stands the cross on its head. Christ did
not die for men because they deserved it. Christ did not give Himself because
we were good, but because we were unworthy, so unworthy that only the Son
of God in human flesh could redeem us.
And, third, these representatives of an unChristian view of self-esteem
have as their good news, their gospel to all men, "You are good. You
only have to believe it and act on it." They preach self-esteem instead
of repentance. They preach self instead of Christ. Our opposition to this
kind of self-esteem is radical, This kind of self-esteem destroys the gospel.
Such self-esteem is self-deification, the sin of the natural man. And
the gospel demolishes this pride and self-deification.
PROPER CHRISTIAN SELF-ESTEEM
The alternative to this kind of self-esteem is not that we deny a proper
self-esteem altogether. There is a proper, positive, Christian self-esteem.
The gospel of Jesus Christ graces us, every one who believes the gospel, with
a positive self-esteem that far outstrips the self-esteem of a Robert Schuller.
These are the aspects of a proper, positive, Christian self-esteem. First,
as a believer, I may and must know myself to be chosen by God and, therefore,
as precious to God. God has loved me from eternity. Second, as a believer,
I may and must know myself as redeemed, not with silver or gold, but with
the precious blood of God's own Son in our flesh, and, therefore, as precious
to the Lord Jesus Christ. Third, as a believer, I know myself as regenerated
and indwelt by the Holy Spirit. I am, therefore, a new creature in Christ.
I possess the life of the risen Jesus Christ Himself. I am the temple of God.
The image of God bas been restored in me. Nothing less than this belongs
to the proper Christian self-image. Fourth, as a believer, I am justified
by faith and, therefore, am accepted of God. I am not guilty; and I am not
worthy of hell or of any condemnation. Fifth, as a believer, I have been adopted
by God and, therefore, am a son of the God of heaven and earth and am heir
of all things. I am no child of the devil. Sixth, as a believer, I am sanctified
and, therefore, am actually good with the pure, spotless goodness of the Holy
Spirit. And my walk, my life, as the apostle says so plainly in the first
couple of chapters of I Peter, is an excellent, noble walk and life in the
world. Seventh, as a believer, I am destined for glory, soul, but also body.
A proper self-esteem extends to the body of a Christian as well as the soul.
Besides that, as a believer, I know that God in His sovereignty has so arranged
my life in all its circumstances that all that I am and everything that belongs
to my place and circumstances has been determined in that love of God for
me so that I need not be discontented about any aspect of my circumstances.
Every believer must know or evaluate himself or herself this way. You may
not deny these things. Believing the gospel, you must believe these things
about yourself. And this is why we may and must love ourselves. When Jesus
says that the second commandment of the law, like to the first, is this, "You
shall love your neighbor as yourself," clearly He implies that
we do love and esteem ourselves.
This proper Christian self-esteem makes the self-esteem of a Rogers or a
Schuller ridiculous in comparison. I reject the self-esteem of Robert Schuller
because that does not exalt me nearly highly enough. That is miserably poor
in comparison with the honor and the excellency that are the believer's in
the gospel of Jesus Christ. But this proper self-esteem comes out of the gospel.
This self-esteem, then, is not pride, but humble, thankful acceptance in faith
of the goodness of God to us. This self-esteem is not natural, but that which
is ours in Christ. This self-esteem is not a self-esteem that denies sin,
but a self-esteem that is rooted in Christ's victory over sin and in Christ's
covering of sin. Because this self-esteem comes out of the gospel, I prefer
not to define proper Christian self-esteem as my own regard of myself as good
and as my own affirmation of myself. Rather, I would define proper Christian
self-esteem this way: Proper Christian self-esteem is God's regard of me as
good and beloved. It is God's judgment of me in the gospel as forgiven and
as adopted as His son. It is God's acceptance of me in mercy. And it is my
thankful, humble reception of that verdict and acceptance and esteem of God
in a true faith.
Is self-esteem proper for a Christian? Yes. And it is important. But it
must be the self-esteem that the gospel gives. And the way to have this self-esteem
is always to be believing the gospel.
This self-esteem, then, is proper only for the Christian. The topic that
was given me puts it exactly correctly, "Is good self-esteem proper for
Christians?" And it is proper for Christians only because of what
Christians are by grace, and not by nature.
Proper self-esteem is important. The Bible gives us this self-esteem. The
Bible calls us elect. The Bible assures us of our redemption. The Bible reminds
us that we are children of God with an excellent walk in the midst of the
ugliness and shamefulness of the world. The Bible wants us to know that we
are different from the corrupt and God-denying world and that our walk is
different from that dark walk. Besides, if one lacks this proper self-esteem,
he or she will be swallowed up in doubt, in self-hatred, and in fear, so that
his or her Christian life is crippled, if it is not hindered altogether. With
this proper, positive self-esteem obtained from the gospel, the believer even
has a proper "possibility-thinking." The apostle writes in
Philippians 4 (and this holds true for every Christian) "I can do
all things through Christ which strengtheneth me," referring, of course,
to all of those things that belong to the Christian calling and life.
There can be an improper self-esteem among Christians in the church.
Sometimes, for example, there are church members who despise and hate themselves
for their sins, or for some particular sin in the past, or for some especially
vile passion that is working within them. They despise and hate themselves
for these sins as though these sins were not forgiven and as though the cross
of Christ was not sufficient to blot out those sins. Then these poor, miserable
people live without the peace and the comfort of the gospel. Or there may
be members in the church who have a contempt for themselves because they are
earthly failures - failures as human beings count failures. They are down
on themselves because they are not smart enough, or because they are not rich
enough, or because they are not handsome enough, or because they are not athletic
enough. This is not true, Christian humility. This is not the self-abasement
that is proper and healthy. Theirs is a definitely improper self-image.
This points out that the church must be very careful to teach a proper self-esteem.
The church must preach sin; but it must also preach pardon and the overcoming
of sin by the blood and Spirit of Jesus Christ. It is not only the pulpit
that can make serious mistakes here, with destructive consequences in the
lives of certain members of the church. But also the saints themselves can
be at fault here. God's people, we, the members of the congregation, must
be careful not to inculcate upon other members of the church a destructive,
improper self-image by our attitudes. We must not leave the impression with
each other that what really counts, even in the Christian life, is earthly
success. Nor may we show the attitude that some who have fallen into even
a gross, public sin have to carry the stigma of that gross, public sin forever,
even when they have repented and been forgiven. There is still, sometimes,
the tendency to pin the scarlet letter on the Hester Prynnes in the fellowship
of the church.
Parents must guard against leaving the impression with our children that
what really matters with us is their intelligence, their looks, their popularity,
their athletic prowess, and their earthly success. What we are teaching them
then is something that is contradicted by the gospel we believe. We are teaching
them that we accept them on the basis of their works. This is contrary to
the gospel of justification and acceptance by faith in Jesus Christ alone.
Then we are busy raising proud children who can perform these works, or despairing
children who find themselves unable to accomplish these works. We must be
clear in our own minds, and we must clearly show to our children, that what
ultimately matters with us is that they are covenant children in very deed,
adopted children of God who believe in Jesus Christ for salvation and who
walk, imperfectly, but victoriously in obedience to the commandments of God.
Also when we discipline our children, we must be very careful to show them
that our anger is against their sin or against them on account of their sin
and not against their person as such. Then we do not say such things to them,
even under extreme provocation, as, "You rotten, evil child, you."
And when we are disciplining, we are also showing the way out from sin and
shame, which is the way of repentance, so that immediately we receive them
back again into our fellowship.
I only mention in passing, that it is also possible that husbands and wives,
even in the church, rather than to build each other up, can live with each
other wickedly so that, I will not say they destroy the other's self-esteem
(you cannot do that to a child of God - God's word is victorious) nevertheless,
they can tear at each other's self-esteem and damage it dreadfully.
THE CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE OF SELF-ESTEEM
In this Christian, proper self-esteem, there is still place for the consciousness
of sin and for the consciousness of unworthiness because of sin. Daily, as
long as I live, although I am a born-again, converted believer, I must deeply
and thoroughly know my misery as a sinner. I come short of God's glory in
all my deeds, even the best of them. I have, still, a depraved nature. I have,
still, a nature that is totally depraved.
Romans 7, in fact, is describing the regenerated child of God; indeed,
it is describing one of the holiest of the children of God. It is the description
by himself of the apostle Paul and that, towards the end of his Christian
life and ministry. Of him, it was true, he found it to be true by living experience,
that he was carnal, sold under sin, that the good that he did will to do he
did not perform, that there was in him two men, as it were, an old man that
was opposed to the law of God and the new man that delighted in the law of
God. As our Heidelberg Catechism says, "The holiest of the saints have
only a small beginning of the new obedience" (Question 114).
Because I come short of the glory of God and because I still have a depraved
nature, I abhor, loathe, and hate myself as I am by nature. This is what we
confess with the Reformed "Form for the Administration of the Lord's
Supper" every time we are about to celebrate the Lord's Supper. One of
the requirements for a worthy celebration of the Supper is that I loathe and
abhor myself on account of my sin. Because of my sin I cry out to my dying
day, "O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me?" I can sing,
without my tongue in my cheek, "Amazing Grace," which speaks of
Christ's grace that saves a wretch like me. This belongs to my self-image.
After all, this sinful nature is mine. These wicked deeds are my own. I am
carnal, sold under sin as regards my corrupt nature.
This is a good self-image. Rogers does not think so. Schuller does not think
so. Hoekema does not think so. But Christ thinks so. This is a very good aspect
of the self-image of the Christian because it is humbling and because it is
realistic. This is a healthy aspect of a Christian self-image. It is healthy
because it causes me to despair of myself and to turn to Jesus Christ. This
is a highly necessary aspect of the Christian self-image because in the end
the greatest danger for us is not that we are going to think too little of
ourselves. I ask you, who know the Bible thoroughly, "What is the great
evil against which the Scriptures are warning us everywhere? Is it indeed
that we tend to think too little of ourselves, or is it, on the contrary,
that we are always inclined to think more highly of ourselves than we ought
to think?" This surely is the great danger that the Scriptures see in
the life of Christians. And against this great danger now, the consciousness
of our own sinfulness guards us. And just exactly by this consciousness of
our sinfulness that causes us to despair of ourselves, we are turned to Jesus
Christ daily for our salvation. Daily, as long as I live, then, I deeply and
thoroughly also know my salvation in Jesus Christ so that I am comforted in
my misery and I am given the assurance of my high status as an adopted son
of God in Jesus Christ.
Self-knowledge of sinfulness and self-esteem as a forgiven, sanctified,
elect child of God go together in the Bible. Read the Scriptures from that
point of view yourselves. And see whether it is not true that time and time
again the strongest statement of self-abasement is linked closely with the
most exultant shout of self-esteem in Christ. I offer one example. In II
Corinthians 12:9, Paul says this, "I am not behind the chiefest of
the apostles, though I am nothing." And there you have it. Self-abasement
- I am nothing in myself. And yet, no false modesty, but the claim that he
is not behind the chiefest of the apostles because that is what he is by the
grace of Jesus Christ. And he knows it. He is not afraid to say it. And always
this acceptance in faith of God's exaltation of us in Christ prevails. This
is triumphant always over our sense of sinfulness. What follows
Romans 7? Romans 8!
Romans 8 with its assured confidence of the child of God, with its victorious
life of the child of God walking in the Spirit.
This is the Christian life; and yet in this life the Christian does not
concentrate on his own worth and dignity. This is not the main thing for the
Christian. In fact, usually the child of God is living quite oblivious to
his own dignity and to his own worth. For, first of all, if you are living
the Christian life as you ought to live it, and if I am, we are always esteeming
each other better than ourselves, as Paul writes in
Philippians 2. And, second, the Christian who is living the Christian
life as he should is always concentrating, not on his own goodness, not on
his own worth, not on his own ability, not even the ability that he has by
grace, but he is concentrating on the goodness and the worth and the ability
of his God and of his Savior Jesus Christ. I freely confess that there is
something about the emphasis on self-esteem to day, even in good Christian
circles, that makes me apprehensive. No, the Christian does not doubt his
worthiness in Christ. But neither does he spend much of his time asserting
it. C.S. Lewis wrote this:
The real test of being in the presence of God is that you either forget about
yourself altogether or you see yourself as a small, dirty object. It is better
to forget about yourself altogether.
We live in the presence of God. There our attention and our energies are
turned, not to self, but to God. The great concern of our lives is not self-esteem,
but God-esteem. The sin that troubles us most is not that we think too little
of ourselves, but that we fail to think highly enough about God.