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Christian Humility Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 31, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: God wants all believers to have a sense of dignity and security, but if they find it in power, possessions, or position, rather than in Christ, they have no greater security than the world has which passes away.
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A young girl from a very wealthy family decided to write a story
about poor people for her assignment in school. Her story began
like this: "Once upon a time there was a poor family. The father
was poor, the mother was poor, the children were poor, the butler
was poor, the chauffeur was poor, the maid was poor, and the
gardener was poor. Everybody was poor." The little girls concept
of poverty was obviously colored by her own environment. This is
true for all of us, however, even though it may not be as conspicuous
as it was in her case.
Poverty and prosperity are relative terms, and who is rich and
who is poor is often very hard to define. People with very little
income in our society can own almost everything that people with
large incomes own. They usually pay more for it in the long run,
but they can have it if they wish. I remember the surprise I got one
day when I took a bag of groceries up some dilapidated steps and
pounded on a poor excuse for a door. It almost came off when I did.
I was on an errand of mercy to give these poor people a gift of
necessities from the church. When I stepped into the house I saw the
children dirty and ragged watching a large color television. This
was back in the 70's when most of the church members who were
giving the food did not yet own a colored set.
In our society you don't have to wait until you can afford it. You
can have luxuries today if you are willing to sacrifice necessities. We
can't knock it, for such freedom of choice is a freedom most of the
world does not have. Most would have little if they had to wait until
they could afford it. Richard Armor gives us a humorous insight
into this reality.
The bride white of hair, is stooped over her cane,
Her faltering footsteps need guiding,
While down the church aisle, with a wan, toothless smile,
The groom in a wheelchair comes riding,
And who is this elderly couple, you ask?
You'll find when you've closely explored it,
That here is that rare, most conservative pair,
Who waited till they could afford it.
Such people are more than rare, for they are extinct in our
society, for we live where even the poor are rich with luxuries that
millions never possess in other parts of the world. This means that
most Christians today need to listen to James when he gives advice
to the rich, as well as his advice to the poor. American Christians
are both relatively poor, and relatively rich, and so they can be
defeated by the trials that come with either poverty or prosperity.
in our previous message we focused our attention on the trial of
poverty and lowliness, and we discovered that we can conquer the
tendency toward depression and feeling like a worthless nobody
through an honest realization of our Christian dignity. We have a
right to be proud as children of God, and we have in Christ that
which makes us the richest people on earth. We can say with the
poet,
Lord of the poor, when earth you trod,
The lot you chose was hard and poor;
You taught us hardness to endure,
And so to gain through hurt and pain
The wealth that lasts for evermore.
A proper sense of our Christian dignity will make us rich, and
victorious over the trials that come from lacking the best this world
has to offer.
Now we want to focus our attention on verse 10-11 where the
opposite trial is dealt with, and that is the trial of prosperity. The
treatment of this problem calls for an understanding of Christian
humility. Christian dignity and humility must be combined in that
Christian who hopes to beat both battles-the battle of fearful
depression, and the battle of false pride.
James in verse 10 says the rich Christian is to rejoice in that he is
made low, or to rejoice in his humiliation. This is in contrast to the
poor Christian rejoicing in his exaltation. What does it mean that
the rich Christian has been made low in Christ, when the poor have
been lifted? Certainly the rich are exalted also when they became
children of God. James is not denying this. He is giving advice on
how to gain victory over trials, and the trial of the rich will be the
tendency to put their trust in, and find their prestige in their
material possessions.
James is telling rich Christians they are to gain the victory over
this danger by recognizing that in Christ they have been made equal
with the brother of low degree. They have actually lost something