TLIC Daily. December 4.: Humble Yourself.

1 Peter 5:6-7. 6Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God so that at the proper time he may exalt you, 7casting all your anxieties on him, because he cares for you.

If we’re honest, humility might be the most difficult thing for us in all of life. And if I’m honest, I will admit that I spend almost every waking moment thinking about myself, my own agenda, how to get what I want, and how to solve my problems on my own. Humility is definitely not our default. It requires a supernatural force to take over our hearts. It requires to live is Christ.

The word “humble” in Greek, tapeinos, means lowly, base, unfit, of little value, in the dirt. In Greco-Roman culture, tapeinos was always a vice, never a virtue. No person should humble themselves. No person should seek to lower their status or give up their honor. No person should want to be dependent upon another, and those that are, are just worthless slaves. Who in their right mind would choose to make themselves lower? What sane free person would choose to make themselves a slave?

And then came Christ.

The only time in scripture that Christ describes his own heart he called himself “gentle and humble” (Mt. 11:29). And in calling himself humble (lowly), Jesus just turned the greatest vice into the greatest virtue. Without Jesus’ own tapeinos we would never be in Christ. He lowered himself to our level. From Heaven to Earth. From the clouds to the dirt. From the ruler of all to the slave of all. He made himself and thus God himself accessible. Jesus is never looking down on us for he has placed himself at our level. Jesus never approaches us with disdain only tender gentleness, seeking to carry every burden and every anxiety of our lives on his own back.

Jesus didn’t just model and teach humility in his day-to-day living and serving of others. Ultimately he expressed the humility of 1 Peter 5:6-7 at the cross. His humble heart drove him lower and lower. All for us. Christ humbled himself to the point of a sin tortured, shameful death on the cross for us. In faithfulness, he cast all his anxieties on God, marching courageously to the cross, and committing his soul to the Father even while hanging on that cursed tree. For us he humbled himself under God’s mighty hand trusting that at the proper time he would be exalted in resurrection life. All so that you and I might also be exalted with him, thus allowing us to cast all our anxieties on our heavenly Father, knowing that he cares for us just as he cares for Jesus.

Now the Christ in us asks us to humble ourselves under God’s mighty hand in the same way. To trust the deliverance of God earned for us by Jesus. To stop trying to pridefully plan and solve our own way through life, but to cast and leave all our cares and concerns at the throne of our Abba. Christ in us asks us to stop all our self-cleansing and all our fig-leafed shame covering. To live free from the self-centeredness of both superiority and inferiority. To lower ourselves. To reduce our rank. To be the slave of all. To be accessible. Gentle. Caring. Compassionate. Kind. To consider others, not seeking our own way. And to truly embrace our exaltation in Christ. Our resurrection power is found in knowing we are fully and forever loved by God.

To live is Christ is exaltation and glory by God but only through our humility and dependence on Christ. May Christ’s humble heart for us humble our own hearts for him.

You: Where can you see a lack of humility in your own life?

You in Christ: How does knowing you’re in Christ humble you?

Christ in you: What might Christ’s own humility in you look like today?

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