This sounds like a contradiction. How can virtue be evil?
For one thing, I am not referring to true
virtue but the appearance of virtue
and self-sacrifice. It appeals to our human desire for self-righteousness, by
which we convince ourselves that we are more virtuous and deserving than
others.
The research of Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, and Tom
Pyszczynski, psychologists at the University of Kansas, has demonstrated that culture
has provided us with the means of counteracting the terror of death through
various ways to enable us to believe that we are good people:
·
These cultural worldviews portrayed the world as
a meaningful, purposeful place in which death is not the ultimate end. Until
very recently, these worldviews virtually always included the idea of a literal
afterlife for some aspect of oneself -- a soul -- but also included modes of
transcending death via permanent symbolic marks of the self, such as heroic
deeds, great achievements, memorials, and heirs. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/05/how-the-unrelenting-threat-of-death-shapes-our-behavior/256728/
Religion has performed the same service by providing us with
the assurance that we are good and deserving once we have fulfilled certain
moral requirements. Therefore, when we die, we will occupy a superior place in
heaven. This means that we have to attain a superior status. How? Through
self-sacrifice! However, this also requires us to deceive ourselves into
believing that we are superior and deserving.
Paul had warned about how the appearances of virtue could
deceive us away from the Gospel of God’s mercy:
·
Now the Spirit expressly says that in latter
times some will depart from the faith, giving heed to deceiving spirits and
doctrines of demons, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their own conscience
seared with a hot iron… (1 Timothy 4:1-2 NKJV)
Certainly, such demonic deceptions should be easy to spot,
right? No! Instead, they are packaged as virtue:
·
…forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain
from foods which God created to be received with thanksgiving by those who
believe and know the truth. (1 Timothy 4:3)
Well, isn’t it both Biblical and righteous to forego food
and marriage for the sake of the Kingdom? It looks that way. Paul had even written
that “it is good for a man not to touch a woman” to marry her, (1 Corinthians
7:1). So how can forbidding marriage be demonic?
Besides, isn’t abstaining from certain foods the very thing
that God had commanded Israel to do? How, then, the command to not eat certain
foods be a doctrine of demons? James, the head of the Jerusalem Church, had
even commanded their brethren:
·
…to abstain from things polluted by idols, from
sexual immorality, from [eating] things strangled, and from blood. (Acts 15:20)
However, Paul had written that what we eat or don’t eat
isn’t important:
·
But food does not commend us to God; for neither
if we eat are we the better, nor if we do not eat are we the worse. (1
Corinthians 8:8)
Even so, why was Paul so set against the “doctrine of demons,” which taught against marriage and eating certain foods? He was even concerned that such teachings would cause Christians to abandon the faith.
How do we reconcile these accounts? While we are free to eat
and drink everything, we mustn’t believe and trust that, if we abstain, that we
are earning God’s righteousness and salvation. This is a false hope designed by
demons to replace our hope in Jesus alone. (This demonic doctrine had been “forbidding” marriage and certain foods.
This language suggests that if the people marry or eat, they could no longer
hope to be saved.) In other words, where we place our trust and hope is of key
importance.
Likewise, marrying or not was not a Biblical condition for
salvation, lest any boast; just grace operating through faith, apart from any
good deeds (Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans 3:27-28).
The appearance of virtue can be very deceiving. Therefore,
Paul had warned:
·
For such are false apostles, deceitful workers,
transforming themselves into apostles of Christ. And no wonder! For Satan
himself transforms himself into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great
thing if his ministers also transform themselves into ministers of
righteousness, whose end will be according to their works. (2 Corinthians
11:13-15)
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