THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY

Isn’t it a joy that we can open up God’s word and learn what God has to say for our lives? We are going to be continuing on in our series today, ‘More Than a Man,’ and the title of my message today is ‘The Rare Jewel of Humility.’

Humility is not something that comes naturally to us. No, by nature we are an independent, self-centered, egotistical, self-reliant kind of people. Right? We just kind of lay it out there like it is. I can tell you before I became a Christian; I wasn’t thinking about God a whole lot. To go along with what they say in AA, I followed this motto: I am not much, but I am all that I think about. And I will tell you that God wants us to be humble people.

What does it mean to be humble? Humility is rightly appraising yourself in light of who God is. Let me say that again. Humility is rightly appraising yourself in light of who God is. Humility recognizes our own sense of nothingness. Humility realizes that without God we are nothing. It is only because of His grace, it is only because of His mercy, and it is only because of His love that He makes our lives count-worthy.

And so humility is something that we all want to see engraved in our lives. Humility is a rare jewel. We don’t see it often. When you are in the presence of humility, you will be humble, because humble people bring about something inside of us that just makes us feel the greatness of God and the smallness of ourselves.

In fact, let me read you a couple of quotes on humility by Andrew Murray from his little book called “Humility.” Check this quote out. “Pride can degrade the highest angels into devils, and humility can raise fallen flesh and blood to the thrones of angels.” Listen to this next one. “Humility is simply the sense of entire nothingness that comes when we see how truly God is all, and in which we make way for God to be all.”

This message will go counter culture against everything we hear. Because our culture feeds us and tells us how great we are. There is no god. You are god. You are great. Life is all about you. Life is all about your desires and what you want. But then God comes along and says no, you are a contingent being, you were created for me, and you were created for my glory. I made you and you will never be fully fulfilled until you find your meaning and purpose connected to me.

And so we come to this character today who was very, very humble in the Bible named John the Baptist. Yes, he was bold as a lion, I mean, this guy was cutthroat. I mean he would walk around and he would just lay it out like it was. But he was also humble. And there is a misconception sometimes that you can’t be bold and humble at the same time. Well, John the Baptist proves us wrong. John shows humility in his life. He realized his own sense of nothingness, but he realized because of God that God made his life great. And John was someone who was bold as a lion. Now I mentioned a few weeks ago that John was a bit of an austere character. I shared with you how he ate

Page 1 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY locusts and wild honey. Right? So when John kind of felt hunger kicking in, he thought, man, I’m craving some good locusts.

That’s a stretch for me. Right? When I start feeling hungry I might think of McDonald’s French fries, or Coldstone’s chocolate cheesecake ice cream. Or a little Outback for a Blooming Onion with mustard sauce. I have to be honest with you I have never thought ‘if I could just find some locusts.’ And I will really be honest and say that I haven’t seen a locust and thought to myself ‘if only I had some wild honey to put on this locust, it would just make it be real nice.’ I just haven’t thought that way.

And I also have not felt the compulsion to show up to church in camel leather and sandals. Or as I said a few weeks ago, ‘thongs.’ Apparently in California they don’t know that thongs and sandals are synonyms because everyone looked at me kind of like ‘he said thongs in church.’ Hey, in California you wear thongs to church, but they are sandals. Right?

But John the Baptist was different. He was different in several ways. And Jesus said of him, “There was not another man born of woman who was greater than he.” John couldn’t have found a slot to preach in the American church because he didn’t fit our mold, because he was out there. And we always want to put people in our mold. We want people to fit who we are. We want people that we resonate with. People can struggle sometimes with why I wear jeans as a pastor. And it is because it is me. It is who I am. I grew up in California and when I went to church for the first couple of times I would wear shorts. And I would wear sandals and I would wear a hat. And I wore a tank top with my tattoo hanging out. And it is weird to me when people make a big deal about attire. It is strange. It is religious. Because God, frankly, used John the Baptist in a great way with his camel skin. So next time someone struggles with me wearing jeans, just think, thank God he didn’t show up in camel leather this morning. Thank God he is not wearing sandals. What an improvement. Right?

There is one word when it comes to dress code in the Bible that we need to keep in mind and that is modesty. And that applies to men as well as to women. We are to be modest. So if we are breaking the modesty code, let’s talk. But if we are being modest, let’s not get religious. John the Baptist was simple.

So welcome to Life Fellowship in a suit and tie or welcome to Life Fellowship in shorts and a tee shirt. We are glad you are here and we love the differences. And we don’t expect you all to fit a certain mold here. And I don’t think Jesus does either.

We did not start this church to make everybody look alike. We did not start this church for people who are healthy. We started this church because we believe the church is a hospital for sick people. And I’m sick. I’m a sinner who desperately needs Jesus. I am fallen. I am flawed. I make mistakes and I need God’s grace every waking moment

Page 2 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY of my life. I will let you down. Don’t put your faith and hope in me. Put your faith and hope in Jesus. I will try to follow Christ wholeheartedly, but I will fail because I am feeble and I am human. And I need Jesus to rescue me. “But who will rescue me from this body of death? Thanks be to God.”

Okay, with that being said, as we are thinking about John the Baptist, we find that he is different. He is weird. But guess what? He is humble. And that’s why I dig him. He is a humble guy and we are going to learn some truths about humility today. And one characteristic of a humble person is they are secure in their own skin. You are going to see that with John right now that he is secure in his own skin.

Look with me if you will in John Chapter 1 and verse 19, and this is the testimony of John. “When the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, Who are you?” So let’s stop and let me give you a little bit of context. Here is John the Baptist; he has an influential ministry out in the wilderness, wearing his camel leathers, wearing his sandals, eating locusts and wild honey. And he is razor sharp in his message. And John is out there preaching away God’s way, and basically there are all sorts of people that are flocking to hear this guy. You know, it is kind of like when the Jonas Brothers get big and all the kids start paying attention to them, or to Miley Cyrus. Or when Guns and Roses came on the scene, or when Metallica came on the scene and people start creating a movement and become followers. Well, this isn’t Metallica or Guns and Roses or Miley Cyrus, it is John the Baptist. But nevertheless people are flocking to him. There is a movement that’s arising and people are curious. And so the Pharisees send out these priests and these Levites to go check out John the Baptist. Who is this guy? Is he a renegade? Is he trying to start some new movement or some new ministry? Look into him. Find out what is going on.

Religious people don’t like change. Religious people like everything to stay the same way. And John the Baptist was a maverick. John the Baptist was out there and he was raising questions. And the Pharisees want him checked out. And they say, “Who are you.” That same question is going to be posed to Jesus in John Chapter 8 and verse 25 by religious people as well.

So in verse 20, John is going to let them know that he is humble, he is secure in his own skin, and he says I am going to tell you this. I am not the Messiah. I am not the Christ. “And did not deny, but confessed, I am not the Christ.” Circle the word Christ. It is the Hebrew equivalent of the word Messiah. And the Jewish people were looking for the Messiah to come. Still today, those Jews that have not placed their faith in Jesus are looking for the Messiah to come. And they wanted to know if John was the Messiah. And he says he is not the Messiah.

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John did not have a Messianic complex. It would have been real easy with these crowds of people for him to just say yeah, I’m he. I’m the man. But he was secure in his own skin. And so he didn’t have to project something that he wasn’t. He was able to just say that he was not the Christ. I am not the Messiah.

So then it says this, “They asked him, What then? Are you Elijah?” Now we know the Jews also believed that Elijah was going to come again to prepare the way for Jesus. Right? And so what they were wondering when they went out to meet John was could he be a reincarnation of Elijah. They wanted to know if he was Elijah who had come to prepare the way. And John is like – nope. That is not me. But interestingly enough in the gospel of Matthew, Jesus says that Elijah has come to prepare the way already. So we see some of John’s humility here. John didn’t even recognize how profound the fulfilment of his ministry was that he was the Elijah like figure preparing the way for Jesus.

Isn’t that neat? Sometimes God is using you in ways that you don’t even realize. Sometimes He is just moving through you, working through you. And John didn’t even realize that he was fulfilling certain prophecy that he had no idea that he was doing. God was working through him. So he says that he was not the Christ. I am not Elijah. So again what are we seeing? That he is secure in his own skin.

So now they are going to ask him if he is a prophet. Verse 21, “Are you that prophet? And he answered. No.” This is very important. And this was not unreasonable for the Jews to come out and ask John these questions. Why? Because the Jews believed the Messiah was coming. The Jews believed that Elijah would come again to prepare the way for the Messiah. The Jews believed that a prophet was coming. So those were very legitimate questions.

But John says that he is not the prophet. In fact, we see this idea of a coming prophet in Deuteronomy Chapter 18 and verses 15 and 18. “The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your brothers. It is to him you shall listen. I will raise up for them a prophet like you and I will put my words in his mouth and he shall speak to them all that I command him”

Now, Muslims take these verses and what a Muslim would do if you were interacting with someone who is in Islam, they would say that the prophet that has been raised up is Mohammed. They would apply that as Mohammed. They would say that Mohammed is the fulfilment of Deuteronomy Chapter 18. But let me give you an apologetic – remember the word apologetics comes from the Greek word apologia which means ‘to defend.’ So let me give you a defence that you can share with a Muslim when they try to say this verse applies to Mohammed. It doesn’t apply to Mohammed because it says, “The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you,

Page 4 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY from your brothers.” Mohammed was an Arabian from the loins of Ishmael. But Jesus, who is the fulfilment of this, He is the prophet, and He came from the loins of Isaac. So different lines. This is not talking about Arabian lineage that was totally opposed to Isaac. Now it might fly over your head a little bit, but just hang in there, buckle up, we will bring you out of the deep in a moment.

So here you see John the Baptist says that he is not Elijah, He was not the Messiah, and he was not the prophet. So these priests and Levites are scratching their heads. And I love John’s security. I love that he is secure in his own skin. I can tell you before Jesus Christ became my Saviour and I gave my life to Him, I was so uncomfortable in my own skin. I did not rest in my skin. I would see traits in other people that I didn’t see in my own life and I would think, man, I wish I was more like him. I wish I was smarter like that person. I wish that I had that kind of talent. I was completely insecure in my own skin. And I will tell you it was a good thing for God to give me the calling that he showed me for my life. And what that meant. It doesn’t mean that you will never feel insecurities anymore.

But I want to tell you something. When you go around life going, man, I wish I was more like Elijah or like that prophet over there, and not resting in who you are; whenever you are wasting energies thinking about what you wish you were, you are not maximizing the opportunity to be who God made you to be. And God has a special plan for each of you just as He had a special plan for John the Baptist. And what He wants you to be is not someone else. He wants you to maximize you. And so some of you ladies who might struggle going well, I wish I looked more like her. Or I wish I had her figure. Why don’t I have her long pretty, shiny, blond hair? You know what? God made you the way you are and He loves you the way you are. And He will care for you and you can find your rest, your security in Him. Those of you guys who work in the corporate world and wish you were in someone else’s job, I wish I made more money, I wish I had this or I wish I had that. And you start struggling, feeling like you are small because you are not on the corporate ladder. Guess what? You can fulfil God’s plan for your life, and you can be secure in your own skin, and you can know that God has something special for you.

John the Baptist knew who he was. Let’s continue to read in verse 22, “So they said to him, Then who are you?” We need to give an answer to those who ask us. What do you say about yourself? Don’t you hate those kinds of questions? And John answers, “I am the voice of one crying out in the wilderness. Make straight the way of the Lord, as the prophet Isaiah has said.” So what John said was that he was the fulfilment of Isaiah Chapter 40 and verse 3. He was the one who was the voice out in the wilderness. He embraced his role. He was not trying to be prophet. He was not trying to be Elijah. He was not trying to be the Messiah. He was just a simple voice out in the wilderness

Page 5 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY pointing people to Jesus, preparing the way for Him. And John embraced it. Why? Because humble people are secure in their own skins. They are not trying to one-up other people. They are not trying to beat out other people. It is not a competition. It is a completion. It is a completion of becoming who God made you to be. And John was just a voice.

I love the humility. Who are you? John can’t even say he is like this great character. He just says he is a voice. He was just a voice. I love the statement of one of the great puritans, who when someone said he was a great person, he replied “I am like a gnat on the tail of a horse.” Or when a lady walked up to George Whitfield and said he was such a great person. He was a great evangelist, the Billy Graham of that time. And Mr. Whitfield replied and said, “Lady, if you could see my heart, you would spit in my face.” He was a man who knew his own sin. A man who knew his own brokenness.

John the Baptist was secure in his own skin. So humble people can be that way. But not only are humble people secure in their own skin, but humble people make little of themselves in order to make much of Jesus. Let me say that again. They make little of themselves in order to make much of Jesus. Look with me at verse 24, “Now they had been sent from the Pharisees. They asked him, Then why are you baptizing, if you are neither the Christ, nor Elijah, nor the prophet?” So these priests and Levites sent by the Pharisees to find out who John was then asked him what he was doing, as he had no credibility. If he was merely some voice howling out in the wilderness what was he doing baptizing people? Why are you doing this? Who do you think that you are, John? What are your credentials to baptize people?

That was basically what they were asking him in that moment. Who do you think you are? And when you are a humble person, just be ready for some attacks from time to time. You just be self-effacing and people will give you a little bit of a hard time. Like, who do you think you are? What makes you think you are so great? What makes you think this of yourself? What makes you qualified to baptize?

So let’s see what John has to say in verse 26, “John answered them, I baptize with water.” Now let me stop for a moment before we kind of develop my point. Understand John’s baptism is different than our baptism today. Okay? John did a water baptism, and we do water baptism today, right? But John’s baptism was preparatory. People would come out in a dedicated sense to cleanse themselves. And by being baptized it showed that they wanted to be cleansed, and they were preparing themselves for the Messiah that was to come. And that is why they were getting baptized. It might seem weird in our culture when you look back, but that is all it was. There were groves of people that went out and they wanted to be ready for the Messiah when He came. And so John was out there and it was just symbolic of the fact that they were ready to be cleansed by the Messiah. And so it was a dedication in nature.

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Now John’s baptism was preparatorial. It was preparing people for the Messiah to come. Our baptism is a realized baptism. We look back at Jesus who already came. Their baptism was looking forward to the Messiah to come. And so it is different. They look forward to a Messiah who could cleanse them. We celebrate through our baptism the Messiah who has already cleansed us. And so there is a distinction that I want to draw before I set this verse up.

So it says, “John answered them, I baptize with water, but among you stands one you do not know. Even he who comes after me, the strap of whose sandal I am not worthy to untie.” And John is referring to Jesus. He made little of himself to make much of Jesus. He speaks about his sandals. And it was common in the ancient world that they would walk around in sandals. And your feet would get really dusty as you were walking the roads. And as John was walking around he basically said this about the Messiah. He said he was so unworthy, he was so undeserving to be a voice for Him. He even felt unworthy to untie the strap of His sandals. I mean can you imagine that? Sometimes we rush into the presence of God as Christians and go, how dare you, God, to cause this in my life? And here is John saying he didn’t feel worthy to untie his sandals. He was humble. He made little of himself in that moment speaking about how small he was and showing how grand Jesus is. Why? He wanted to make much of Jesus, much of Him.

In John Chapter 3 we are going to see a neat verse. I love it. It is a verse that I pray most often before I even get up to preach. I have prayed it for years. And John said this about Jesus. “He must become greater, and I must become less.” Another version says, “He must increase, but I must decrease.” We can never be a pleasing child of God if we are worried about ‘us increasing.’ You see, the way to glorify God is through us decreasing. It is quite an enigma, I know. You’ve come to church today and now you’re thinking you mean to tell me I’ve come to church today to find out how I need to become small so God can be seen as big through me? Yes! You mean to tell me that I need to come to church today so that I can admit that I am utterly weak and nothing without Jesus so that God could be glorified through my life? Yes! Yes, that is exactly right. And when you realize that, you will not be at the center of your world any longer. God will, and He will be in the right place. And in that moment you will feel more alive than ever before.

So he says “He must increase, but I must decrease.” He says “I am not worthy to untie the straps of His sandals.” I couldn’t help in my studies to think about John saying that statement. And then thinking about Jesus in the upper room and there what does He do for the disciples? He washes their feet. Jesus is God in the flesh, right? John says about Jesus, “I am not worthy to untie the strap of His sandals,” but then Jesus later walked up to His disciples in the upper room and washed their feet. It was common

Page 7 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY in that culture to have your feet washed after walking around the dusty roads. Your feet would get very dirty and they didn’t have Air Jordan back then. You wouldn’t have seen Jesus sporting some Converse. I know if He came back today he would wear Chuck Taylors, but He wore sandals back then. Okay? And in that moment in the upper room He takes a water basin and He begins to wash the filthy, dirty feet of the disciples. Can you imagine how small they felt in that moment, how unworthy they felt? Here was God in the flesh washing their filthy feet.

That is what God does. He comes down and He washes away our filthy, rotten sins. He loves us so much that He comes in and He knows that we have a guilt problem, we have a sin problem, and He knows He can take care of all of it. He came to the world to take our sins away. That is humility. Can you imagine that moment. See, humility, when you are in its presence, you feel it. You feel overwhelmed by it. And the disciples felt that they were in the presence of a very humble person. Do people feel in your presence that they are around someone who is very self-effacing, someone that is humble? Do people feel like you are someone that is not just this nit-picker that groans and complains and grumbles and who is always uptight? Someone who just has a sour attitude all the time? Or do they just sense something in you that is so grateful that you can even have a Bible to read, so grateful that you can have a church to go to, so grateful that you can even roll out of bed and have life?

I see this even as a pastor. Imagine having someone over for dinner. You cook a nice meal, ladies, you offer someone dinner, you do everything you can to serve it, and then the biscuits aren’t good. Or the steak isn’t good. I feel like that sometimes with my sermons. I work real hard, put together this message to serve the body of Christ, and then I realize I left that verse out. I tried to serve you a meal this morning. If I am doctrinally off, then confront me because I need it. But sometimes we just nit-pick and we get self- centered. We can do that. But John the Baptist shows humility in his life and I just can’t help but think of Jesus bowing before His disciples and washing their feet. I would be very uncomfortable with Jesus bowing before me to wash my feet, very, very uncomfortable.

So we see this idea that humble people are secure in their own sins. Humble people make little of themselves to make much of Jesus. And then finally humble people eagerly and readily point people to Jesus. Okay? So we stop and we go are you secure in your skin? We want you to be that way. God has a plan for your life and we want you to rejoice in who He has made you to be. We want you to make much of Jesus. That is your role in life. Be a person who brags on Jesus. Be a person that is excited about God. Don’t be a boring, deadbeat Christian, a lifeless, passionate-less, lethargic follower of Christ. Have life in your bones, excitement for Christ. And then eagerly and readily point people to Jesus.

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Verse 29, “The next day he saw Jesus coming toward him and said, Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” What a fantastic moment this must have been. Go there with me. Get yourself in the wilderness and know for hundreds of years, thousands of years, they have been prophesying about this Messiah that is going to come. They have this sacrificial system that has been in place where people would sacrifice lambs, goats and turtledoves. And they would offer these sacrifices so that they could be right with God. And in this moment we see Jesus coming and John says, “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” Can you imagine that moment where John looks up and sees Jesus and says, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” At last He is here. I mean just imagine Jesus walking toward John, just coming toward him, and John melts in this moment and says the words that he has been longing to say, the phrase he was created to say, the sentence that he was built for. And in this moment he takes the community around him and says it.

What a moment that much have been. I wonder if people fell on their face in that moment and shout, he is here. Did they start shouting and celebrating that God in the flesh was walking? That was what they were seeing. God is on the move and He is coming closer to me with every step. What a moment. Imagine you being there. So that is what God looks like when He walks. “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. This is He of whom I said, After me comes a man who ranks before me, because He was before me.”

What is John doing? He is saying that Jesus is eternal. “He ranks before me, He was before me.” Who was born first? John was, he was born three months before Jesus. And yet he says He was before me. Why? Because Jesus was more than a man. Jesus was fully God and fully man. He eternally existed as God, but He became a man.

Let’s keep reading in verse 31, “I myself did not know Him.” What does John mean? How do you say you did not know Jesus? Wasn’t He your second cousin? Look at verse 33, “I, myself did not know Him.” So two times John says that. But John was His second cousin, his mother Elizabeth and Jesus’ mother Mary were first cousins. So they were second cousins. What did John mean he did not know Him? Well, John did not know Him in this way. He had no idea that Jesus was the Saviour of the universe that came to save us.

So how did John even recognize Jesus to begin with? Because humble people readily and eagerly point people to Jesus. Verse 32, “And John bore witness saying, I saw the Spirit descend from Heaven like a dove, and it remained on Him.” So John is talking about Jesus’ baptism. Right? This is talking about Jesus’ baptism. John’s gospel doesn’t describe the baptism, but you can go to the other gospels and see Jesus’ baptism. So here John is describing Jesus’ baptism. Why? John was giving a prophetic word that

Page 9 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY when Jesus comes, when the Messiah comes, you will know it is Him because you will see a dove descending upon Him. And so in this moment John realizes there He is.

Now a few weeks ago I was asked a very good question and it was this. Why in the world did Jesus have to get baptized? You ever ask yourself that? Why did Jesus get baptized? Let me share with you two reasons. He got baptized to identify with the Jewish nation and the people He came to save. And He also was baptized because it shows through His baptism that He was the one who came to take our place. And through His baptism, when John said “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world,” and was then baptized, it was a picture that now going forth when you are baptized it is remembering that He is the one that takes away your sins. And Jesus was perfect. It says that “He was tempted in all of our ways yet without sin” in John Chapter 4 and verse 12.

So John was all about pointing people to Jesus. He was about making much of Jesus. I love this statement about Billy Graham when someone said hey, Billy, you must feel pretty proud when you go into stadiums with a hundred thousand people and see all those crowds. And Mr. Graham said, “Oh, no, no, no. I don’t feel any more proud than the donkey felt carrying Jesus into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. I am just a donkey carrying the messenger.” He was humble. He knew his role was to lift God up, to lift Christ up.

And so John says in verse 33, “I myself did not know Him, but He who sent me to baptize with water said to me, He on whom you see the Spirit descend and remain, this is He who baptizes with the Holy Spirit. And I have seen and bear witness that this is the Son of God.” What is the theme of the gospel of John? Jesus is the Son of God. Here you have it.

And what does it say about Jesus? John says that he only baptizes with water but Jesus is going to baptize you with the Holy Spirit. And that is what Jesus did. He dies on the cross, forgives us of our sins, and when we believe Him, the Holy Spirit comes and indwells in us, and lives in us. And now we have God living inside of us, empowering us to live a Godly kind of life. And that is what happens. If you are not a Christian, you are absent of God. When you become a believer, God becomes present within you. You want a relationship where Jesus Christ sends His Holy Spirit to live in your heart and life, to guide you through life, so that you can live above sin, so that you can walk in a way that pleases God.

So John was about pointing people to Jesus. Why? Because that is what humble people do. It wasn’t about pointing people to Himself. He wanted to point people to Jesus. Is that your life? Are you marked by a person who is secure in your own skin? That is a sign of humility. Another sign of humility is if you make little of yourself, but

Page 10 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY much of Jesus. Another sign of humility would be that you eagerly and readily point people to Jesus. You are on the lookout to say, hey, He is the way out of this place. He is our only hope.

Now, let me step back as I wrap up and answer this question for you. You want to be humble and you just say, but how? How do I get humility in my life? Turn with me to Isaiah Chapter 6. If you want humility in your life, you have to behold God. You have to cultivate a habit of sitting in the presence of God. You have to get that down. And I am not talking about religion. We have our quiet time, so let’s check that off the list. No, I am just talking about we need to bask in the presence of God. We need time in the Word, we need time in prayer, and then we can pray spontaneously throughout the day. But it reeks of arrogance when we don’t sit ourselves down in the presence of God. Jesus said “Apart from me you can do nothing.” And when we roll out of bed and we coast through our day and live our own merry way without camping out in the presence of God, it reeks of arrogance. It shows God, I will take it my way today. We must get in the presence of God if we want humility in our lives.

Isaiah Chapter 6 and verse 1, “In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and exalted, lifted up. And the train of His robe filled the temple. Above Him stood the seraphims, which were six winged angels, with two he covered His face, with two he covered his feet, and with two he flew.” Think about this. Angels that have never sinned cover themselves in the presence of God. They are so overcome with His holiness.

And it says, “They called out to one another, saying Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts. The whole earth is full of His glory.” Check this out. They are in Heaven and they realize that the whole earth is full of His glory. We are on earth and we struggle to realize God’s glory here on earth. “And the foundations of the threshold shook at the voice of Him who called. And the house was filled with smoke. And I said, Woe is me for I am undone, for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of people of unclean lips, for my eyes have seen the king, the Lord of hosts.”

So here is Isaiah and what makes him humble himself? He had to get a vision of God. He had to see God in His holiness and in His splendour, and in His radiance. He needed to see the blazing center of God’s glory. And in that moment, God made Himself known to him. He had this vision of God, and what does he do? He becomes small. He says, “Woe is me, for I am undone.” If you want to be a humble person, you have to spend time in the presence of God. And the way to spend time in the presence of God is getting in your Word, praying, chasing His heart and worshipping Him. Just remember when you wake up tomorrow, and if you want to just go live your day your way, and not pause for God, it is arrogant. It is completely prideful. It is saying, God, I don’t need you. I will do it my way. But when we bow before him, and don’t do this religiously,

Page 11 of 12 pages 9/20/2009 THE RARE JEWEL OF HUMILITY when we get in prayer we need to say I want you to be magnified in my life. I want you to help me to see my sin. I want you to be glorified through my life. That is what God wants you to do.

And I want to tell you something. Humility is a rare jewel. It is a rare jewel because you can’t get many people to get in the presence of God. We don’t stay there long enough. We get anxious, we get impatient, we get restless, and we don’t sit still. We don’t really believe that when we wake up that getting in the Word is life. We don’t really believe that God has promises for us. But guess what? He does. And so I encourage you to do whatever you can to pursue at all costs a passionate, God-centered life. That is our mission. That is what we are about. And the way that you do that is you have to know who God is so you can know how to even follow Him to begin with.

So as the Worship Team comes, I want to talk about humility. I talked about how John was one of the most humble people in all of Scripture, but there was one who was even more humble. And it was the one John pointed to, and it was Jesus. And the humblest act ever in the history of the world was when Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, was dying on the cross for our sins. Think about how profound this is. Jesus eternally existed as God, and then He became a man. Why? To die for those who cared nothing about Him. To shed His blood for their sins. To become their Saviour. And He shed His blood on the cross for our sins. Utter humility, that He would give His life on our behalf.

I would ask you, have you humbled yourself and said Jesus, I need you? Have you humbled yourself and said Jesus, I want you to be the Lord of my life? Have you humbled yourself and confessed that you believe Jesus died on the cross and arose from the grave and said I want you to be my Saviour? If you want to know how Jesus will become your Saviour, you just want to match one humble act with another humble act. He humbly died for our sins, would you humbly call out to Him as your Saviour.

And you can pray in the quietness of your heart right now with me. Just pray this if you want to know Jesus and you want to be forgiven of your sins, and you want to know when you die you are going to Heaven: Dear Jesus, thank you for humbling yourself, even to death on behalf of the sins of the world. I have sinned, I have offended you with my life, I have not thought about you, I have not lived for you. You made me yet I live as if you don’t exist. Would you forgive me? I receive your grace and I ask you to get rid of my guilt. I ask you to help me to feel renewed. And I thank you that you arose from the grave. And right here, right now, Jesus, I am giving you my life. Here it is, take it, and send your Spirit to come live in me. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

The preceding transcript was completed using raw audio recordings. As much as possible, it includes the actual words of the message with minor grammatical changes and editorial clarifications to provide context. Hebrew and Greek words are spelled using Google Translator and the actual spelling may be different in some cases.

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