James 4:10
Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will exalt you.
Exalting the Lowly
The way that God looks at and deals with
people is completely opposite of the way the world does. If a person is
full of pride, they are brought low, but if they’re already lowly in
spirit, God will honor them (Prov. 29:23). He will set on high those who
are small in their own eyes (Job 5:11). Depending on how a person looks
at themselves, God will either humble them or exalt them (1 Sam. 2:7). I
would put it this way: Humble yourself, or God will do it for you.
One’s a lot more painful than the other.
The Rock and the Hammer
We take prayer requests, and sometimes
our prayers are so self-focused or focused on the problems of others
that we fail to see that God might be working in our or others’ lives.
Maybe we should consider how God uses trials in a person’s life, whether
they are saved or not. If time and again we are always bailing out our
unsaved friends, we might be getting in God’s way, getting between the
rock and the hammer, so to speak. That is, we might be trying to solve a
person’s problems when God is trying to use their problems to humble
them so that they might seek Him. Some people need to hit rock bottom
before they’ll turn to God. That’s often how many people finally
overcome alcoholism. They hit rock bottom before they’re actually moved
to stop drinking. Men like John Newton, who was near death in the hull
of a ship before he finally trusted in Christ. His crisis became the
path to salvation for him. If we saw the difficulties that people were
going through, especially those who are not yet saved, would we change
the way we look at them? In other words, could we see that God’s
possibly working in their lives to make them come to an end of
themselves? God cannot fix what is first not broken, and until a person
is emptied of self, God cannot fill them.
Whom God Opposes
Did you know that God is actually
opposed to the proud and will only extend His grace to those who are
humble (James 4:6)? If you voluntarily humble yourself, God will exalt
you someday (1 Pet. 5:6), even though it might not be in this life. If
we are full of pride, then God is opposed to us, and that’s not good
because God favors the humble and oppressed (Prov 3:34) and looks kindly
on the lowly of heart (Psalm 138:6). Since this is true, then the
opposite must also be true; he shows no favor on the proud and high. No
one really wants God to be opposing them, I wouldn’t think.
A Closing Prayer
Father, I know that too many times I
have been full of myself, and I have no reason at all to be so. Please
forgive my arrogance and self-pride because I know You oppose me when I
am. Help me to stay humble, contrite, and lowly in my own eyes so that
someday you will exalt me at Jesus’ return, in Whose name I pray.
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