2.14 “When Israel was a child...”
“When Israel was a child, then I loved him…” is to be paralleled with:
“When Ephraim spake trembling, he exalted himself in Israel” (Hos.
11:1; 13:1). When they were humble, then God exalted them. But in
the maturity of time, Israel lost her humility, a callousness and
fleck of arrogance crept into her walk, she grew old and brave in
her own strength, and she plunged headlong in her relationship with
God. Humility is vital. A true, thorough-going, unpretended humility,
not some fawning, Uriah Heep announcement that of course, we’re
all sinners. But it’s a slippery thing: as soon as we think we’ve
got it, we haven’t. And all the rest of the time we spend worrying
that we haven’t got it. So it’s something we need to soberly think
about. Time and again, the Biblical contrasts are between the sinners
and the humble (e.g. Ps. 147:6)- as if humility is the epitome of
the acceptable. It is the meek who shall inherit the earth (Ps.
37:11). This is how significant humility is.
Moses, in his day of final maturity, pleaded with Israel: “Now, Israel,
what doth Yahweh thy God require of thee, but to fear Yahweh
thy God, to walk in all his ways, and to love him, and to serve
[Him]” (Dt. 10:12). These words are interpreted in Micah 6:8: “What
doth Yahweh require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy,
and to walk humbly [‘to humble thyself to walk’] with thy God?”.
Walking in God’s ways is paralleled with walking in humility, humbling
oneself. This, then, is the end result of our obedience to the way of
God: a self humbling through regular submission to God’s principles, as
hour by hour we experience the provocations of our flesh. The Lord took
Micah’s words further, when He spoke of what we “ought” to do (cp. “what
doth Yahweh require…”) in Mt. 23:23: “…the weightier matters
of the law, judgment, mercy and faith”. Micah had spoken
of judgment, mercy and walking humbly with God. Faith,
a real and serious belief in the victory of the cross, in our salvation
by grace, in a real and regular and meaningful experience of forgiveness,
in the ever present “grace to help in time of need” that is available
even now…the result of this will be a humbling of self to walk with God.
For this was parallel in the Lord’s mind with “faith”. Ps. 45:4 speaks
in the Hebrew text of meekness-righteousness, as if meekness is the very
essence of righteousness.
Our fear of what others think of us, of their reactions and possible
reactions to who we are, to our words and our actions; our faithless worry
about where we will find our food and clothing, how we will be cared for
when we are old, whether our health will fail…all these things detract
us from a simple and direct faith in the basic tenets of the Gospel, which
is what should lead us to humility. “The simplicity that is in
Christ…in simplicity and godly sincerity…by the grace of God,
we have had our conversation in the world…[doing our daily work] with
singleness [s.w. ‘simplicity’] of heart, as unto Christ” (2 Cor.
1:12; 11:3; Eph. 6:5,6). Worries about the material things of life, or
deep seated doubt developed during years of atheism or wrong belief…these
all so easily distract us from the simplicity of a true and humbled faith.
If our eye / world-view / outlook on life is single [s.w. ‘simple’
in the passages quoted], then our whole body / life will be full of light
(Mt. 6:22). In daily work, in private reflection and planning for our
immediate futures and present needs, there must be a direct and undiluted
belief of the teachings of the Gospel, connecting those teachings to our
daily life of faith. In this simplicity of the life of faith, in a world
that makes life so complicated [especially for the poor], we will find
humility. With that simplicity and humility will come peace, and the ability
to pray with a concentrated and uncluttered mind, without our thoughts
wandering off into the petty troubles of life as we frame our words before
Almighty God each morning and night. I do so hope we all have that habit,
of sustained, concentrated communion with the Father for say 20 minutes
or more, especially at night. It worries me when sleeping in the company
of other brethren at gatherings, how soon after laying down in bed they
are snoring…within minutes they are asleep. And may I also probe: do you
teach your children to pray, morning and night…? Forgive this digression.
But it’s important.
On at least four separate occasions, the Lord taught that he who exalts
himself will be abased, and he who humbles [s.w. abases]
himself will be exalted (Mt. 18:4; 23:12; Lk. 14:11; 18:14). This was
clearly a major theme in His exposition of the Gospel of the Kingdom;
this is what will happen when that Kingdom is established at His return.
He paralleled conversion with humbling oneself (Mt. 18:3,4). The humble
will be exalted, and the exalted humbled. Because this will happen, we
must now humble ourselves, so that then we might be exalted.
The majority of references to humility in Scripture refer to humbling
oneself; humility, hard as it is to define, is something consciously
done, as an act of the will. Yet the Father confirms us in our efforts.
The Lord humbled himself to die on the cross (Phil. 2), and yet
the cross humbled him (Acts 8:33). If we don’t humble ourselves
now, then God will do this to us through the process of condemnation at
the judgment. In this lies the insistent logic of humility. It was the
logic Israel failed to comprehend... " When Israel was a child..."
. It is prophesied of those who will be condemned: “Enter into the rock,
and hide thee in the dust, for fear of the LORD, and for the glory of
his majesty [as Moses did in this life]. The lofty looks of man shall
be humbled, and the haughtiness of men shall be bowed down, and the LORD
alone shall be exalted in that day. For the day of the LORD of hosts shall
be upon every one that is proud and lofty, and upon every one that is
lifted up; and he shall be brought low” (Is. 2:10-12). “And the mean man
shall be brought down, and the mighty man shall be humbled, and the eyes
of the lofty shall be humbled: But the LORD of hosts shall be exalted
in judgment” (Is. 5:15,16). There are many similar passages; the theme
of ‘bringing down’ pride is a major one in the first half of Isaiah (2:17;
13:11; 25:5,12; 29:4; 32:19). They pave the way for the announcement that
in man’s response to the Gospel of Christ, “Every valley shall be exalted,
and every mountain and hill shall be made low: and the crooked shall be
made straight, and the rough places plain” (Is. 40:4). By the hills of
human pride being brought down, and the giving of confidence to those
so low in the valleys of hopelessness and lack of self respect, there
is a levelling of all those who respond to Christ. But more than this;
in this lifting up of the hopeless and bringing down of the proud, there
is a foretaste of what will happen in the future day of judgment. In essence,
“we make the answer now” by whether or not we bring down our pride, or
whether we summon the faith in God’s grace and imputed righteousness to
believe that we, who are nothing, are lifted up in His sight. “Let the
brother of low degree rejoice in that he is exalted: But the rich, in
that he is made low” (James 1:9-10).
There are many brethren and sisters who live lowly lives, stuck in the
lowest levels of society, living as they do with grim acceptance of their
lot, who struggle with this: that they, really and truly, are seen as
clothed with Christ, that they will be without fault before the throne.
Or there are others who feel that their past failures really make it hard
for them to ever be accepted by God. But believe it! This is
how God eagerly sees you! We will be in His Kingdom, by grace…these
are the valleys that must be exalted. And there are so many of us whose
mountains of pride must be pulled down to the same level, by the same
Gospel. If this happens, we will not need the ‘bringing down’ of condemnation.
Flesh must be humbled- either we do it now, we humble ourselves that we
may be exalted in due time; or it will have to be done to us through the
terror of rejection. Time and again ‘bringing low’ or ‘humiliation’ is
the result of condemnation (Dt. 28:43; 2 Chron. 28:19; Job 40:12; Ps.
106:43).
So how, then, can we ‘humble ourselves’? When Israel was a child... she
was humble, as we should be after our spiritual rebirth at baptism. It
is evidently not something natural; for it is a fruit of the spirit we
must develop. It isn’t a natural timidity or nervousness or shyness. By
realising our own sinfulness, we will realise our condemnation, and thereby
be ‘brought down’. For we are condemned for our behaviour, but saved out
of that condemnation. The exact, vast debt is reckoned up- before we are
forgiven (Mt. 18). We have been invited through the Gospel to sit down
in the Kingdom: “But when thou art bidden, go and sit down in the lowest
room; that when he that bade thee cometh, he may say unto thee, Friend,
go up higher: then shalt thou have worship in the presence of them that
sit at meat with thee. For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased;
and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted” (Luke 14:10-11). Humbling
ourselves is therefore sitting down in the lowest place- not
just a low place. Strictly, the Greek means ‘the farthest’ away from the
Lord Jesus, who sits at the head of the table. Like Paul we must somehow
get that deep and genuine apprehension that we are “chief of sinners”-
and sit in the lowest, farthest place. This would mean that we
‘each esteemed our brother better than ourselves to be’, not in any naďve,
meaningless way; not seeing strengths where they simply don’t exist; but
seeing him [or her] that way simply in comparison to our own lowness.
Seeing others as higher than ourselves is a sure remedy for every case
of ecclesial friction and division. So often pride develops from a worry
about what others will think of us, a desire to be seen as acceptable
and not unusual. It leads to a hyper-sensitivity regarding what others
may be implying about us [I am verily guilty of this]. The humbled mind
will not see things in these terms. If only we would each, personally,
learn this lesson, or at least grasp the truth and beauty and power of
it. The publican was so worried about his own position before God
that he paid no attention, so we sense, to the hypocritical brother next
to him: “The publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much as
his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful
to me a sinner…this man went down to his house justified rather than the
other: for …he that humbleth himself shall be exalted” (Luke 18:13-14).
That sin-conscious man is an essay in self-humbling. This is why David
sometimes parallels “the meek” and the repentant sinner (e.g. Ps. 25:8,9).
The Lord in His time of dying was and is the definition of self-humbling:
“But he that is greatest among you shall be your servant. And whosoever
shall exalt himself shall be abased; and he that shall humble himself
shall be exalted” (Mt 23:11-12). Being a servant to others is the ‘abasing’
or [s.w.] humbling that will lead to exaltation. The Lord became a servant
of all in His death (Mk. 10: 44,45). These things are brought together
in Phil. 2:5-11, where we are invited to have nothing less than the mind
of Christ in the self-humbling of the cross: “Let this mind be in you,
which was also in Christ Jesus: who…thought it not robbery to be equal
with God: but made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form
of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men…he humbled himself,
and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore
God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name…”. The seven stages
of the Lord’s self-humiliation are matched by seven stages of the Father’s
exaltation of Him (read on in Phil. 2 and note them!). And this pattern
is to be ours. This mind is to be in us. Because of this, “Let nothing
be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each
esteem other… look not every man on his own things, but every man also
on the things of others” (Phil 2:3-4). Every time we look on the things
of others rather than just our own, not seeking our own glory but esteeming
others enough to see them as worth suffering for…we have achieved the
spirit of the cross, we have reached self-humbling. As the Lord died for
Himself and others, so we are to look on the things of our salvation as
well as those of others. This must be the foundation principle of
all aspirations to preach or strengthen our brethren: esteeming others,
thinking they are worth the effort, seeking their salvation. Be concerned
just as much that the guys at work get to the Kingdom, the old woman in
the flat next door, that sister in the ecclesia you can’t understand…as
you are concerned that you get there. This will give us the motivation
to humble ourselves to suggest meeting to break bread with others, humble
ourselves to give a tract to someone or start a conversation, to start
a spiritual conversation at a gathering with an unknown brother or sister
or one with whom you have difficulties...for it is only pride and self-estimation
that hold us back in these things. We live in a world which has made the
fulfilment of personal aims of paramount importance. It has affected the
fabric of every society, and become embedded in every mind. To live
to serve, to put oneself down that others may rise…this is strange
indeed. John the Baptist had this spirit, for he rejoiced that he decreased
whilst the Lord’s cause increased. Paul abased himself that others might
be exalted (2 Cor. 11:7), after the pattern of the cross. God’s gentleness,
His humility / bowing down (Heb.) has made us great, lifted us up (Ps.
18:35). And we respond to it by humbling ourselves. The man who
‘humbled himself’ smote upon his breast in knowledge of his own sin and
his Lord’s grace (Lk. 18:13). The Greek phrase occurs elsewhere only once,
again in Luke’s thought, in describing how those humbled by the vision
of the cross beat upon their breasts (23:48)- surely in recognition of
their sin and contrition before the grace of God outpoured. In the cross,
we see self-humbling that we might be exalted. And we respond by likewise
humbling ourselves, that others may be exalted. In practice this means
guiding our words and example so that others are exalted, not speaking
of our own achievements, considering each other as to how we
may provoke them to righteousness (Heb. 10:24; earlier in 3:1 the writer
speaks of considering the Lord Jesus, and this leads on to considering
each other). And so, brethren dearly beloved…consider Him. Humble yourselves
and become as that little child who stood so bashfully in the midst of
men. Know that when Israel was a child, then God loved him. When
he spoke trembling, as we should morning and night, then he was exalted…
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