Picture a man standing tall, chest puffed with pride, declaring his soul whole—while the Savior he claims to follow passes him by, seeking the broken instead. Jesus said it plainly: “I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matthew 9:13). Again, “It is not the healthy who need a physician, but the sick” (Matthew 9:12). His mission was clear—yet so many miss it, blinded by a righteousness of their own making. This is the paradox of pride: those who need Him most often see Him least, while the wretched and weary find their way to His feet. And worse, even those who’ve tasted His grace can forget its source, trading humility for a gavel. Sanctimony, it seems, is both a barrier to salvation and a temptation after it—a curse that only God’s grace can break.
The Unsaved: Sanctimony as a Curse
The New Testament reveals a stark truth: not everyone senses their need for a Savior. Some souls stand content, convinced of their own wholeness. They are the “righteous” Jesus spoke of—not righteous in God’s eyes, but in their own. To them, their virtues gleam like polished armor, hiding the decrepitude beneath. Scripture calls all humanity depraved—“There is no one righteous, not even one” (Romans 3:10)—yet these refuse to see it. Their sanctimony is their doom, a self-made prison barring them from the light.
Think of the Pharisee in Jesus’ parable, praying loudly in the temple: “God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers” (Luke 18:11). He’s not pleading for mercy; he’s boasting of merit. Contrast him with the tax collector, head bowed, crying, “God, have mercy on me, a sinner” (Luke 18:13). One leaves justified; the other does not. We see this today: the moralist insisting, “I’m a good person,” the religious legalist tallying deeds, the secular humanist smug in self-sufficiency. Pride isn’t just a religious trap—it’s cultural. In an age of cancel culture, where moral superiority fuels outrage, sanctimony thrives, blinding people to their own flaws. They cannot turn to God like a child (Matthew 18:3)—humility is an impossibility to such. Their pride, like a stone wall, keeps grace at bay.
The Saved: The Leaven of the Pharisee
The trap doesn’t end with salvation. Those made whole by the Spirit of Christ can fall into a subtler snare: the leaven of the Pharisee. Jesus warned, “Beware of the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees” (Matthew 16:6)—a creeping pride that rises unnoticed. Some, once broken and redeemed, begin to sit as sanctimonious judges, condemning the weak who stumble beneath their lofty standards. They forget the grace that lifted them from the mire, deeming themselves holier than the rest.
Consider Augustine, the early church theologian. Before conversion, he was a proud rhetorician, reveling in intellect and sensuality, blind to his need for God. Even after salvation, he wrestled with pride, confessing how easily it returned. Today, it’s the believer, rescued from addiction, sneering at the struggling drunk; the church elder, once lost in sin, wielding doctrine like a whip rather than a balm. Worse, this evil stance can hinder the whole work of God to save the lost and brokenhearted. Their mission—to heal those in the slough of despond, deep in sin—shifts to playing church organizations, upholding structures over souls. How can anyone feel the pain or wretched state of another when the one called to tend the lost is hardened by pride and loftiness? It’s a devastating betrayal: they obstruct the Spirit’s work, shutting their hearts to His fruits meant to reach a dying world. They’ve traded the cross for a pedestal, forgetting Paul’s words: “By grace you have been saved through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God” (Ephesians 2:8-9). Had God not intervened, they’d be no different from the wretched they scorn. Their righteousness isn’t theirs—it’s His—yet the leaven of pride blinds them to this truth.
The Impossibility of Salvation—And Its Possibility
Now we see why not everyone can be saved. Pride, that impossible wall, bars the soul from grace. The sanctimonious—whether unsaved or backslidden—cannot humble themselves as children must. Their self-sufficiency is a curse no human effort can break. To kneel, to cry out, “I am the sick one, the sinner”—this is beyond them. Left to themselves, they are lost.
Yet Jesus offers a breathtaking twist: “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26). Even a soul drenched in pride can be pierced by grace—if the Father wills it. “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them,” Christ declares (John 6:44). How does He draw them? Sometimes through suffering, as with Job, whose pride was broken by loss until he saw God anew (Job 42:5-6). Sometimes through revelation, as with Paul, struck blind on the Damascus road to face his zeal’s folly (Acts 9:3-9). Sometimes through love, as with the prodigal son, welcomed home despite his shame (Luke 15:20-24). Salvation isn’t a human achievement; it’s a divine act. The sanctimonious soul, hardened beyond hope, might yet crumble—if God chooses to draw them near. This isn’t a promise that all will be saved, but a testament to God’s power: no heart is too proud for Him to reach, though many will resist His call.
The Remedy: Grace and Humility
What, then, is the way forward? For the unsaved, it’s a breaking—shattering the illusion of self-righteousness to see their need. For the saved, it’s a staying broken—clinging to grace as their lifeline. Both must return to the childlike faith Jesus demands, a dependence that boasts in nothing but Him. “Let the one who boasts boast in the Lord” (1 Corinthians 1:31), Paul writes, for apart from God’s mercy, we are all the base things of the world—chosen not for our merit, but His glory (1 Corinthians 1:27-28).
How do we live this? Through prayer, confessing our pride daily—“Search me, God, and know my heart” (Psalm 139:23). Through community, where the broken sharpen one another, as iron sharpens iron (Proverbs 27:17). Through service, washing the feet of the fallen as Jesus did (John 13:14), remembering we were once them. The saved must never forget: it’s grace that saves and grace that sustains. To judge the broken is to deny the cross that redeemed us—and to hinder the Spirit’s work. Instead, let us weep with, lift up, and walk alongside those still lost.
Conclusion: The Father’s Draw
Salvation eludes the proud not because God cannot save, but because they will not see. Their sanctimony—before or after grace—is a veil only the Father can lift, a hardness that can derail His mission to the lost. In a world where pride fuels both religious hypocrisy and cultural wars, the call remains: yield to the One who chooses the weak to shame the strong. Where human will fails, divine grace prevails—if only He draws them near. For the unsaved, it’s a summons to surrender. For the saved, it’s a plea to abide, lest we obstruct the Spirit’s healing flow to a broken world. Will we resist, or kneel? The answer lies not in our strength, but in His.
