GUEST
ARTICLE
Be Humble and
Kind
(Luke
14:7-11,15-24)
Probing Your
Own Heart
Are you humble?
How do you prioritize God's
invitation to you?
Building on
Some Foundational Concepts
Self-exaltation leads to shame.
The surest way down is pushing
myself up. The surest way to shame is glorifying myself.
Jesus illustrates both of these precepts in both of the
life lessons He presented. We see these precepts clearly
enough in His first parable; they are a little more hidden
in His second lesson. Notice that the first batch of invitees
exalted themselves above the inviter by refusing his invitation.
They glorified themselves by heeding their own preferences
rather than his invitation. Whether the self-exaltation
shown was open or disguised, shame came just the same.
Let someone else judge your
importance.
We are poor judges of our own
importance. One reason is we tend to lack objectivity about
ourselves. Another is that importance is so subjective
and difficult to measure, varying as it does from situation
to situation. For these and other reasons, we show wisdom
by not presuming on our own importance. Again, both accounts
presented by Jesus reveal this truth: The proper person
to determine your importance is not you.
Life requires prioritizing.
Prioritizing requires attending
to some things at the expense of other things. The individuals
in Jesus' second illustration had other concerns and duties
that legitimately required their attention. But those concerns
and duties should have taken second place to that particular
supper invitation. Our lives require prioritizing as well. "One
thing have I desired of the LORD..." (Psalm
27:4). "But seek ye first..." (Matthew
6:33). "But one thing is needful..." (Luke
10:42).
Questions
and Responses
Can I know that I am humble?
Humility is not a hidden virtue
or an invisible fruit. Even so, a simple question -- Are
you humble? -- makes us uncomfortable and squeamish. Answer "yes" and
someone will almost hand you a scarlet "P" to
pin on your forehead (the "P" to identify you
as PROUD and the pin to deflate your swelled head). Answer "no" and
you openly acknowledge your disobedience to Scriptures
such as Matthew 23:12, Colossians 3:12, James 4:10, and
1 Peter 5:5.
Most of us seem to take for
granted that the truly humble live blissfully unaware of
their humility. Perhaps we do not understand humility.
Far too many have a mystical view of humility -- they see
it as something intangible, nebulous, obscure. That is
not so! Humility is extremely visible, definable, and tangible.
Humility is not an abstract concept, it is a very concrete
reality!
Humility is not thinking poorly
of yourself. "I'm no good" or "She's a better
seamstress than I" do not illustrate humility. "I'm
all thumbs when it comes to singing" may be a great
example of a mixed metaphor but not of an humble spirit.
Humility recognizes one's value, abilities, and accomplishments.
Humility is choosing others
first. Humility is the choice to not live a self-focused
life. Humility is choosing to be consumed with and by the
well-being of others. Humility is making the above choices
when my position, abilities, rights, and power all entitle
and enable me to put myself first.
"Put on therefore
. . . humbleness of mind" (Colossians
3:12) and "Be clothed with
humility" (1 Peter 5:5) both call into question
the idea that humility is some mystical grace undetectable
by those who possess it. I believe an humble person can
recognize his own humility without immediately losing it
for having done so. (Just don't go around trumpeting your
humility. That's playing in the key of mi, which
isn't humility at all.)
How do I get my priorities
straightened out?
"Love not the
world, neither the things that are in the world. If any
man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him" (1 John 2:15).
"Set your affection
on things above, not on things on the earth" (Colossians 3:2).
"And be not
conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing
of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and
acceptable, and perfect, will of God" (Romans 12:2).
"I press toward
the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus" (Philippians 3:14).
"For it is God
which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good
pleasure" (Philippians 2:13).
Lesson 13 -- third quarter
2005, August 28, 2005
--Mark Roth, © Copyright 2005, Christian Light Publications
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