Micah 6:1-8 · The Lord’s Case Against Israel
Humility You Can Be Proud Of
Micah 6:1-8
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Comedian Bob Hope was accepting a plaque at an honorary dinner. He listened as his many contributions to humanity were lauded. When it was his turn to speak, he said that he had stopped letting such honors go to his head. "I just got a call from a fellow who said I'd been named Man of the Year by his organization," Hope said, "because I was America's outstanding citizen, greatest humanitarian, and so forth. It was going to be the biggest dinner, biggest civil reception ever. I told him I was sorry, but I was going to be tied up that night. There was a short pause. Then the caller said, By any chance would you have Red Skelton's phone number?'"

An Episcopal priest was asked by a high school class in Cambridge, Maryland, to deliver the graduation sermon. Afterwards he spoke of the invitation as one of the truly significant moments of his ministry. Little did he know that students made the selection by picking a Sunday and attending a number of churches. Their purpose was to time the sermons. The minister who gave the shortest sermon was chosen to deliver the graduation sermon. (1) Some honor!

Author and radio preacher John MacArthur was watching an MTV documentary sometime back titled "The Seven Deadly Sins." Because those seven sins ” pride, covetousness, lust, anger, envy, gluttony, and sloth ” are standard fare on MTV, MacArthur wondered what the documentary would say.

It turned out to be vintage MTV; a montage of celebrity quotes, movie outtakes, man-on-the-street interviews, one-liners, quips, and witticisms. But in one sense, it was an enlightening program, says MacArthur. It revealed most clearly the profound moral confusion of our culture.

Rap singer Queen Latifah was asked about the sin of pride. "Pride is a sin?" she responded. "I wasn't aware of that."

Actress Kirstie Alley added, "I don't think pride is a sin . . . I think some idiot made that up."

Rapper Ice-T echoed the same idea: "Pride is mandatory. That's one of the problems of the inner city. Kids don't have enough pride." (2)

Interesting. ONE OF THE BASIC TEACHINGS OF SCRIPTURE SEEMS TO BE TOTALLY OUT OF TOUCH WITH THE VALUES OF OUR MODERN CULTURE. Consider this great verse from Micah that many of us memorized in our youth: "He has told you, O man, what is good; And what does

the Lord require of you But to do justice, to love kindness, And to walk humbly with your God?" We would be in trouble if we put this verse up for a vote today. Who wants to walk humbly?

Or take this verse from the Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." If you try being meek in today's world, you will pay a price.

Or how about this passage from I Corinthians? ". . . but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong . . . God has chosen, the things that are not, that He might nullify the things that are, that no one should boast before God."

According to the Bible there is something to be said for being humble. There is something noble, something saintly about being meek. Even though such attributes are out of style in our current culture, our Scriptures praise these qualities. But before we get into the virtues of humility and meekness, however, we need to add a qualifier.

BEING HUMBLE DOESN'T MEAN BEING A DOORMAT! There are a lot of people who are taken for humble just because they have back trouble ” they have no spine! They're not humble. They're simply cowards. That is not the kind of meekness Jesus was praising! If Jesus had been meek in the sense of being timid, a pushover, a Casper Milquetoast ” he never would have ended up on a cross! Jesus was a strong man, a man of conviction who did not let others intimidate him.

There is a sense in which Rap star Ice-T is right. Many young people, and adults as well, do need more pride. That is, they need a healthy pride that allows them to stand up for themselves and for their convictions and motivates them to give their best. We have seen a concentrated effort in our schools over the past couple of decades to raise our children's sense of self-esteem. And for the most part, that's good. People without the right kind of pride will never be able to serve Christ effectively. They will never make effective witnesses for their Lord. Who will be won by a whiny, apologetic, timid testimony? Such people are more to be pitied that to be emulated. No, that's not the kind of meekness, the kind of humility Jesus was calling for. Let's look at the kind of humility that Micah and Paul and most especially Jesus were calling for.

FIRST OF ALL, WE NEED A HUMILITY THAT ALLOWS US TO DO WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE WITHOUT THE REWARD OF RECOGNITION.

There was an interesting article in LIFE magazine sometime back. It was about Dan Dyer, a maintenance man for Roper Hospital in Charleston, SC. Until 1989 Dan had been responsible for the hospital heating and air conditioning for 8 years ” and yet the hospital staff was oblivious to Dan's existence. Dan was usually out of sight in the boiler room or some such place, and his contribution to the healing of sick and hurting people just wasn't all that obvious.

In September of 1989, though, Hurricane Hugo hit Charleston. Electricity went out all over town. Roper Hospital was reduced to a system of backup generators, and for some reason the diesel pump for the generators was not pumping the needed fuel to them. That threatened to leave a large hospital and its intensive care unit (The unit where patients are on life-support systems) with no electricity. It was in the midst of that crisis that Dan Dyer made 5 trips out into a hurricane to hand-pump diesel fuel back to the small tank that fueled the generator. Every trip through the high-velocity winds, water, and crashing debris was a risk of his life to safeguard the lives of the patients in the hospital. After that night, nurses, the hospital administrator, and even the governor of the state knew who Dan was. Dan Dyer became a bit of a celebrity and was recognized from that point on as the man who keeps Roper Hospital running.

It's ironic, isn't it? For 8 years Dan Dyer faithfully performed functions vital to a large hospital, but until a crisis occurred, the other hospital personnel didn't have a clue as to who he was. (3) Some of you know how it feels.

We have people in this church who work behind the scenes just like Dan Dyer. These backstage people keep our church running. They work in our nursery, they work with our children and youth, they count our money and arrange the flowers on our altar. What if they refused to serve because they don't receive recognition? What if they refused to serve because they don't see their names in lights? But they do serve ” not for recognition but because of a sense of commitment. They are humble people in the best sense of the word. That's one kind of humility that all of us need. But there is another.

WE NEED A HUMILITY THAT WILL ALLOW US TO BE TRULY GRATEFUL FOR THE THINGS WE HAVE. How often we take things for granted. Danny E. Bush in his book, INVITATION TO THE FEAST, tells about a cousin and aunt of his who had a childhood dream come true. Both of these women were born in a rural area near Spartanburg County, South Carolina. As children it was a real treat at Thanksgiving and Christmas for them to receive an apple, an orange, or maybe some stick candy. Times were hard, but there was an abundance of family love and an appreciation for even the simplest of gifts.

On their South Carolina farm they had apple, peach, and fig trees. But these ladies had never seen an orange tree. Though they had enjoyed oranges maybe twice a year, but they had never actually seen oranges growing.

After many years on the farm and in cotton mills, this cousin and aunt retired. They had looked forward to going places they had never been and seeing things they had never seen. One of the things they wanted to do was to go to Florida to see oranges growing on trees. Finally, they got together with other family members and drove down to Florida. When they approached the first orange grove they stopped the car. The grove owner gave them permission to look at the oranges and to pick a few.

Those retired ladies acted like children in that Florida orange grove. They were at long last able to see in person the trees from which came the oranges they had delighted in as children in South Carolina. In that grove, they thanked God for oranges. They also thanked God for their health that, even in old age, enabled them to travel to see oranges growing on trees. (4)

Could you find delight in such a simple pleasure? As a people we are richer than we have ever been before but are we happier? Are we more content? People today are more apt to be frustrated that they don't have more than be grateful for what they already have. Oh, the joy of true humility. Truly humble people recognize that all of life is a gift and therefore are able to delight in even simple pleasures.

But there is one more type of humility we need. WE NEED A HUMILITY THAT WILL ALLOW US TO PUT OUR TRUST IN GOD. Here is where pride truly is our deadliest enemy. It causes us to put our trust in ourselves rather than God.

John Claypool tells of a missionary who went out years ago to teach in a school in China. She had begun the whole venture with a deep sense of God's calling. However, in the long voyage over the Pacific by boat, all kinds of fears began to crop up. Just like Peter, who had begun in confidence but then took his eyes off Christ and let the winds drive him to terror, she too was beset by anxieties: "How will I provide for myself? Will I be able to learn the language? What will be the response of the people?" One night she went to sleep deeply troubled by all these uncertainties, and she had a vivid dream. It was as if she were standing in the middle of the Pacific Ocean all by herself with nothing but a two-by-four supporting her at the surface of the water. In that condition, a voice said to her, "Start walking to China." She answered back, "But I can't. I'm not able to walk on water. If I leave this secure standing place, I will surely drown." But the voice insisted, "I said walk. Start walking toward China." With fear and trembling, but in obedience, she lifted her foot and put it forward, and just at the moment that it was touching the surface of the water, another two-by-four, like the one on which she had been standing, appeared out of the depth. Every step she took was met by support emerging from the deep. She woke with a new sense of confidence and trust in God. (5)

At times in our lives all of us will be in deep water. At such times where will we put our trust? Will we put it in our keen intellect? Will we put it in our robust health? Will we put it in our stocks and bonds or the equity in our home? There may come a time when all of these will fail us. If we put our trust in ourselves ” our accomplishments, our possessions, our investments ” there will come a time, regardless of how much we have accumulated, when we will stare into the darkness and feel the waters of defeat and death rise around us. But if we put our faith in God, if we confess that our strength and our ability are inadequate but that God's strength and God's ability will never fail, then we will discover why the humble and the meek of this world are blessed.

Christian humility is not cowardice. It is not a summons to be a doormat. Rather it is an invitation to work behind the scenes in an enterprise greater than any of us could ever accomplish on our own; it is an invitation to appreciate the simple blessings in life; and it is an invitation to trust God whose strength will never fail.


1. EPISCOPAL LIFE. Cited in THE UNITED CHURCH OBSERVER, July 1995, p. 50

2. "Humility," by John MacArthur, MOODY, September 1995, p. 20

3. Gary Smith. "In the Eye of the Storm," LIFE (Sept., 1990), pp. 40-41.

4. Danny E. Bush, INVITATION TO THE FEAST (Nashville: Broadman, 1985), p. 77.

5. Robert C. Morgan, LIFT HIGH THE CROSS, (Nashville: Abingdon, 1995), p. 75.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan