Hannah More's sermon "Self-Love" addresses the theological topic of the dangers of self-love and its detrimental influence on the Christian life. She articulates that self-love operates as a deceitful and malignant disease that corrupts one's heart, leading to pride and rebellion against God. Using scriptural references, including James 4:1, where the apostle inquires about the source of conflicts stemming from lusts, she illustrates the pervasive nature of self-love in causing discord not just in personal relationships but throughout society. The sermon's practical significance lies in calling Christians to seek self-knowledge and humility, emphasizing that true freedom and virtue come from self-denial and submission to God's will, which also aligns with key Reformed doctrines concerning total depravity and the necessity of grace.
“To worship images is a more obvious idolatry, but scarcely more degrading than to set up self in opposition to God.”
“Self-will is the ever-flowing fountain of all the evil which deforms our hearts, of all the boiling passions which inflame and disorder society.”
“We lie as open to his next treachery… as if he had never betrayed us.”
“The great, the only effectual antidote to self-love is to get the love of God and of our neighbor firmly rooted in the heart.”
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