The Peril of Self-Indulgence

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The decision to indulge fleshly appetites for pleasure leads to sin against God and destroys and damns the soul.  This is every person’s battle.  It is the inward war!  The lusts of the flesh war against the soul (I Peter 2:11).  This battle is acute at this time in our culture.
Self-Indulgence Defined
Self-indulgence is the unrestrained gratification of one’s own fleshly appetites including desires, passions, and whims.  Whenever these fleshly appetites violate God’s law, they are sinful and put the human soul in peril.  These appetites can become chords which bind us to satan especially when habitually practiced.  They can corrupt the mind, heart, and will.  They put the will of man in direct conflict with the will of God.  They exhaust the energy needed to serve God and others.  We are so preoccupied with our own lusts that there is no time or energy or money left to serve God and others.  We are spent.  We are spent on self-indulgence and self-gratification.
Synonyms of Self-Indulgence
In order to further define the concept of self-indulgence, an examination of synonyms will aid us.  One synonym is hedonism.  Hedonism is succinctly summarized by Paul in II Tim. 3:4 by the phrase, “lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God.”  God should be and must be our “first love” (Matthew 22:36-39).  Whenever we supplant God with sinful pleasure, we have made a god out of sinful pleasure.  This is one of the false philosophies that Paul warns us about in Col. 2:8.  Paul writes, “Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.”  A second synonym is covetousness.  Covetousness is the insatiable appetite for more and more.  Covetousness is a lust of the flesh that focuses on material things and so defines materialism which is another false philosophy that can take us captive.  A third synonym is egotism.  Egotism is living life in a self-centered way.  It feeds on selfishness and violates the law to “love our neighbor as ourselves” and “love one another.”  Yet, another synonym is indolence.  Indolence is stubbornness.  Stubbornness manifests itself in the pursuit of wrong even if it is detrimental to our own good.  Another synonym is frivolity.  Frivolity is a lack of sober-mindedness.  Everything becomes of joke to those who do not take life seriously.  This produces an appetite for risky behaviors that puts our soul in harms way.  Still another synonym is entitlement.  Entitlement is the attitude that the world owes me everything and at the same time I owe others nothing. The last synonym is childishness.  Childishness is self-centered immaturity.  It is the inability to handle the challenges of this world with good emotion.
Antonyms of Self-Indulgence
Sometimes when we are defining a term, it is helpful to consider what the opposite of what term is.  An antonym of self-indulgence is self-restraint.  Self-restraint is the ability to control one’s self.  It is self-mastery.  Paul writes, “But I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway” (I Cor. 9:27).  There were times whenever Paul had to say “no” to himself for his own spiritual benefit.  Another synonym is discipline.  Discipline is training in righteousness that is both positive through truth and negative through reproof, rebuke, and correction.  Both of these previous words relate to another antonym of self-indulgence which is self-control.  Temperance is self-control and it is a fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22-23).  The contrast between the flesh and the Spirit is easily seen in the difference between self-indulgence and self-control.  A lack of self-control will lead to overspending, drug abuse, risky behaviors involving sexual sin, and even procrastination.  This virtue identifies with Christianity and is needed for a well-ordered society.  Often we want the benefits of Christianity without the responsibility of Christian living.
The Remedy for Self-Indulgence. 
True religion eliminates self-indulgence. Jesus came to save sinners from themselves (the lusts of the flesh).  True religion is a hard sell in today’s American culture.  People want cheap grace, ease and convenience, and the promises of God without obedience to the precepts of God.  The first step in solving the problem of self-indulgence is self-denial.  Jesus said, “…if any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me” (Matthew 16:24).  Self-denial is an essential step in preserving the value of the human soul in relationship with God (Matthew 16:25-27).  Jesus is the hope of the world because He is the savior of the world (John 4:42; I John 4:14).

The Peril of Self-Indulgence

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Paul declares by the Holy Spirit, “This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.  For men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, truce breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors, heady, high minded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof from such turn away” (II Tim. 3:1-5).  There are nineteen sins listed by Paul.  Two are the focus of this article:  lovers of self and lovers of pleasure.  These two sins combine to produce the peril of self-indulgence.
Self-Indulgence Defined
Self-indulgence is the unrestrained gratification of one’s own appetites including desires, passions, and whims.  There is a dynamic that needs to be considered.  It is the dynamic of impulsiveness verses intentionality.  The lusts of the flesh war against the soul.  When we act impulsively, we do not think about our words or actions or their consequences.  We merely act on habitual responses or act on the seduction of risky behavior.  The enticement of pleasure adds to the dynamic.  The pleasures of sin factor in to the intensity of temptation and create desire for that which is forbidden by God.  When we act intentionally, we pause to consider the choice of our words and actions and also their consequences.  This mindfulness produces a thought process that enables us to control our words and actions based upon a conscience ruled by God’s standard of righteousness.  Habitual responses become more intense over time and with continued practice they produce a reluctance to resist the object of desire.  In self-indulgence, we put our own interests above others including God.   Self-indulgence exhausts the energy needed in Christian living and service to God and others.  We are so preoccupied with our own needs that there is no time, energy, or money left to serve God.  We are spent.  We have spent all on self-gratification.
Synonyms of Self-Indulgence
Consider some of the following terms that are synonymous with self-indulgence.  Hedonism is the false philosophy where we pursue pleasure.  Indeed, we are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God.  When God is supplanted by anything else, we have made an idol out of that entity.  When we love pleasure more than God, we have made an idol out of pleasure.  God is supposed to be our “first love” (Mt. 22:36-39).  Covetousness is another synonym for self-indulgence.  Covetousness is the insatiable desire for more and more.  Paul actually says that covetousness is idolatry (Col. 3:5).  Egotism is another synonym.  Egotism is when we live in a self-centered way.  We have to have our own way or else we are unhappy.  Entitlement is another synonym.  Entitlement is when a person believes that everyone else in the world owes him/her something if not everything.  One thing is common to all of these terms: the self.  When we become self-indulgent, we become self-serving and we have made an idol out of self.
Antonyms of Self-Indulgence
Self-restraint and self-mastery are both antonyms of self-indulgence.  Both involve the ability to control speech and behavior.  Both involve the ability to say “no” to self and defer gratification.  Moderation is another antonym.  With moderation extremes are eliminated and excesses are eliminated.  We can find balance and practice it.  Discipline is an antonym.  Discipline is training in righteousness that produces the fruit of righteousness in words and works.   Righteousness is right living as God defines it in His Word.  Self-control or temperance is another antonym.  Self-control uses the powers of the mind, heart and will to bring the appetites of the flesh under the control of the Spirit of God.  It is a virtue of the heart.  It helps us avoid:  overeating, overspending, alcohol and drug abuse (including smoking), procrastination, and risky sexual behaviors.
The Antidote to Self-Indulgence
The antidote to self-indulgence is found through Jesus Christ.  The virtue of temperance is a fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22-23).  These fruits are born in the heart of those who are vitally connected to the vine (John 15:1-11).  Jesus is the vine and we must be in Him in order to bear the fruit of the Spirit.  Today, people want cheap grace, convenience in Christian living, and the promises of God without obedience to the precepts of God.  This spiritual state is self-indulgent and lacks discipline.  The Word of God provides the sacred knowledge that will reprove, correct, and instruct in righteousness.  We must hear it, believe it, and obey it in order to be saved from our self-indulgent selves.