This question is a common response when people like ourselves are confronted with the gospel.
We know we are sinners, but we comfort ourselves that we are no worse than most people. In spite
of our sins and shortcomings, we may try to live by a consistent set of moral values. As long as we
have standards and try to be consistent to them, we may assume that we are all right from Gods
perspective, or at least as good as anyone else.
Although this reaction is typical, it is wrong. Being a "moral person" excludes no one from the
need for God's grace. Almost everyone considers himself a "moral person." Even monsters like
Stalin and Hitler had rationalizations to justify their atrocities. If they didn't have "moral standards"
to lend some consistency and predictability to their behavior they would never have been able to
attract followers and create a political power base. Everyone knows that there is "honor among
thieves" or criminals wouldn't be able to cooperate. The most ghastly cannibals or ruthless pirates
have moral standards.
Anyone who asks why God would condemn them for being no worse than other people hasn't
taken into account how seriously evil has contaminated every member of our race. They also don't
see how seriously the cumulative effect of individual sin has corrupted human society.
Consciousness of sin is a gift of Gods word, but it is a gift that we don't naturally want to receive.
Although consciousness of sin is necessary for repentance, salvation, and spiritual growth,
consciousness of sin also involves suffering.
Isaiah was one of the greatest of the prophets and one of the most gifted writers of Scripture. His
giftedness was a sign of divine honor and blessing, but he paid a price for it. He was given an
overwhelming vision of Gods holiness--and an agony of awareness of his own sinfulness and of the
sinfulness of his people:
"Woe to me!" I cried. "I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among
a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the LORD Almighty."
(Isaiah 6:1-5)
Awareness of one's moral sickness always comes before spiritual growth. Jesus made this clear
in many of his statements and parables (Matthew 9:13; Luke 15:3-7; Luke 18:10-14). So did the
apostles Peter (2 Peter 3:9) and Paul (Romans 3:10-31).
Few of us attain the infamy of a Hitler, a Pol Pot, or an Idi-Amin. But the sin in each of our lives
contributes to an evil world that brings such monsters to power. Each of us is so disfigured by sin
that it isn't surprising we don't want to acknowledge our ugliness. We can only begin to see
ourselves objectively with Gods word.