John Calvin starts out his Institutes by saying, "Our wisdom, insofar as it ought to be deemed true and solid wisdom, consists almost entirely of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves."
I read that a few years ago and confess that I did not understand why the "knowledge of self" would be of any importance at all. I am now reading Volume 6 of John Owens works called Temptation and Sin. Reading Owen has helped me understand why a "knowledge of self" was important to Calvin, and why it should be important to us.
Owen says, "Let him that would not enter into temptation labour to know his own heart, to be acquainted with his own spirit, his natural frame and temper, his lusts and corruptions, his natural, sinful, or spiritual weaknesses, that, finding where his weakness lies, he may be careful to keep at a distance from all occasions of sin."
(This is not my wife) |
(And this is not me) Incase you were wondering |
Whichever way you are, I would encourage you to spend time pondering your own heart. Calvin says this springs forth true wisdom, and Owen says it keeps us from entering into temptation and sin. These seems like good reasons from good and godly men that have gone before us.
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