- Jan 1, 2024
- 1,140
- 643
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Messianic
- Marital Status
- Widowed
“He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? ” - Micah 6:8
To “walk humbly” with God is the essence of the Law of God, the spiritual side of it—its Ten Commandments are an enlargement of this verse. The Law is spiritual and touches the thoughts, intents, emotions, words, and actions—but especially God demands the heart. Now it is our great joy that what the Law requires, the gospel gives. “Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that believeth” (Rom 10:4). In Him we meet the requirements of the Law, first, by what He has done for us and next, by what He works in us. He conforms us to the Law of God. He makes us, by His Spirit, not for our righteousness but for His Glory, to render to the Law the obedience which we could not present of ourselves. We are weak through the flesh, but when Christ strengthens us, the righteousness of the Law is “fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit” (Rom 8:4).
Only through faith in Christ does a man learn to do righteously, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God—and only by the power of the Holy Spirit sanctifying us to that end do we fulfill these three divine requirements. These we fulfill perfectly in our desire—we would be holy as God is holy if we could live as our heart aspires to live: we would always do righteously, we would always love mercy, and we would always walk humbly with God. The Holy Spirit daily aids us to do this by working in us “to will and to do of [God’s] good pleasure” (Phi 2:13). And the day will come, and we are pining for it, when, being entirely free from this hampering body, we shall serve Him day and night in His Temple and shall render to Him an absolutely perfect obedience, for, “they are without fault before the throne of God” (Rev 14:5).
Today I shall have a task quite sufficient if I dwell only upon the third requirement, “Walk humbly with thy God,” asking first, What is the nature of this humility? And secondly, Where does this humility show itself? First,
But if we did attain to the ideal that is set before us, and every act was right towards man—and more, every act was delightfully saturated with a love to our neighbor as strong as our love to ourselves—even then there would come in this precept, “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Dear friends, if ever you should think that you have reached the highest point of Christian grace—I almost hope that you never will think so—but suppose that you should ever think so, do not, I pray you, say anything that verges upon boasting, or exhibit any kind of spirit that looks like glorying in your own attainments, but walk humbly with your God! I believe that the more grace a man has, the more he feels his deficiency of grace. All the people that I have ever thought might have been called perfect before God, have been notable for a denial of anything of the sort—they have always disclaimed anything like perfection! They have always laid low before God—and if one has been constrained to admire them, they have blushed at his admiration. If they have thought that they were, at all, the objects of reverence among their fellow Christians, I have noticed how zealously they have put that aside with self-depreciatory1 remarks, telling us that we did not know all, or we should not think so of them. And therein I admire them yet more. The praise that they put from them, returns to them with interest!
Oh, let us be of that mind! The best of men are but men at the best, and the brightest saints are still sinners—for whom there is still the Fountain open. This Fountain is not opened, mark you, in Sodom and Gomorrah, but it is opened for the house of David and for the inhabitants of Jerusalem, that even they may still continue, with all their lofty privileges, to wash therein and to be clean. This is the kind of humility, then, which is consistent with the highest moral and spiritual character. It is the very clothing of such a character, as Peter puts it, to “be clothed with humility” (1Pe 5:5), as if, after we had put on the whole armor of God, we put this over all to cover it all up! We do not want the helmet to glitter in the sun, nor the armor of brass upon the knees to shine before men, but clothing ourselves like officers in civilian clothes, we conceal the beauties that will eventually the more reveal themselves.
Remember how Abraham, when he communed with God and pleaded with Him for Sodom, said, “I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am but dust and ashes” (Gen 18:27). “Dust” set forth the frailty of his nature. “Ashes” were as the refuse of the altar which could not be burnt up, and which God would not have. He felt himself to be, by sin, like the sweeping of a furnace, the ashes, refuse of no value whatever. And that was not because he was away from God, but because he was near to God. You can get to be as big as you like if you get away from God, but coming near to the Lord you rightly sing,
“The more Your glories strike my eyes,
The humbler I shall lie.”
Depend upon it that it is so. It might be a kind of weather gauge showing your communion—whether you are proud or humble. If you are going up, God is going down in your esteem. “He must increase,” said John the Baptist of the Lord Jesus, “but I must decrease.” The two things go together—if this scale rises, that scale must go down. “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Dare to stay with God! Dare to have Him as your daily Friend! Be bold enough to come to Him Who is within the veil! Talk with Him, walk with Him as a man walks with his familiar friend—but walk humbly with Him. You will do so if you walk truly. I cannot conceive such a thing—it is impossible—a man walking proudly with God! He takes his fellow by the arm and feels that he is as good as his neighbor, perhaps superior to him, but he cannot walk with God in such a frame of mind as that! The finite with the Infinite! That alone suggests humility, but the sinful with the Thrice-Holy? This throws us down into the dust.
Now, Beloved, when we are very actively engaged, pressed with business, one thing after another coming in, if the great Master employs us in some large concern (large, of course, only to us), if we have work after work—we are too apt to forget that we are only servants. We are doing all the business for our Master; we are only commission agents for Him.
We are apt to think that we are the head of the firm. We would not think so if we thought steadily for a moment, for we would know our right position. But in the midst of activity, we get cumbered with much serving, and we are too apt to get off our proper level.
Perhaps we have to rule others, and we forget that we also are men under authority. It is easy to play the little king over the little folk, but it must not be so. You must learn not only to be humble in the closet of communion, and to be humble with your Bible before you—but to be humble in preaching, to be humble in teaching, to be humble in ruling, to be humble in everything that you do when you have as much as ever you can do! When, from morning to night, you are still pressed with this and that service, still keep your proper place. That is where Martha went wrong, you know—not in having much serving, but by getting to be mistress. She was, “Mrs. Martha,” and the housewife is a queen! But Mary sat in the servant’s place at Jesus’ feet. If Martha’s heart could have been where Mary’s body was, then had she served aright. The Lord make us “Martha-Marys,” or “Mary-Marthas,” whenever we are busy, that we may walk humbly with God!
You will soon find out, if you make any progress, that you have need to be humble. I believe that when a man goes back he gets proud. And I am persuaded that when a man advances, he gets humbler—and that it is a part of the advance to walk more and more and more humbly. For this the Lord tries many of us. For this He visits us in the night and chastens us, that we may be qualified to have more grace and get to higher attainments by being more humble, “for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble” (1Pe 5:5). If you will climb the mountainside, you shall be thirsty among the barren crags. But if you will descend into the valleys, where the red deer wander and the brooks flow among the meadows, you shall drink to your full! Does not the hart pant for the water brooks? Do you pant for them? They flow in the Valley of Humiliation! The Lord bring us all there!
Is it not very possible for us to be one day, because of our great debt to our Master, begging that He would not be hard with us—and is it not possible, tomorrow, to be taking our brother by the throat? I do not say that God’s people would do that, but I do feel that the spirit that is in them may lead them to think of doing it—one day acknowledging your Father’s authority and doing His will, and another day standing outside the door and refusing to go in when the prodigal son has come home. “You never gave me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends. I have been a consistent believer, yet I never have any high joys; but as soon as your son came, which has devoured your living with harlots, you have killed for him the fatted calf. Here is a wretched sinner only just saved and he is in an ecstasy of delight! How can this be right?” (Luk 15).
O elder son, O elder brother, walk humbly with your Father! Always be so under any circumstances. It is all very fine to have a lot of humility packed away in a box with which to perfume your prayers—and then to come out and to be “My Lord,” some very great one in the midst of the Church and in the world. This will never do! It is not said, “Bow humbly before God now and then.” But as a regular, constant thing, “Walk humbly with thy God.” It is not, “Bow your head like the bulrush under some conscious fault which you cannot deny,” but, in the brightness of your purity and the clearness of your holiness, still keep your heart in lowly reverence bowing before the Throne of God!
Know that He is your God! Be sure of it—come up from the wilderness leaning upon your Beloved. Have no doubt, nor even the shadow of a doubt, that you are your Beloved’s and that He is yours! Rest not for a moment if there is any question upon this blessed subject. He gives Himself to you—take Him to be yours by a covenant of salt that never shall be broken—and give yourself to Him, saying, “I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine” (Song 6:3). “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Let not anything draw you away from that confidence. But then, in comes the humility. This is all of grace! This is all the result of divine election! Therefore, be humble. You have not chosen Christ, but He has chosen you! This is all the effect of redeeming love—therefore, be humble. You are not your own, you are bought with a price, so you can have no room to glory. This is all the work of the Spirit—
“Then give all the glory to His holy name,
To Him all the glory belongs.”
“Walk humbly with thy God.” I lie at His feet as one unworthy and cry,
“Why did this come to me? I am not worthy of the least of the mercies that You have made to pass before me.”
I think this is the humility prescribed in the text. May the Spirit of God work it in us!
And now, secondly, with great brevity upon many points, I have to answer the question,
Introduction
To “walk humbly” with God is the essence of the Law of God, the spiritual side of it—its Ten Commandments are an enlargement of this verse. The Law is spiritual and touches the thoughts, intents, emotions, words, and actions—but especially God demands the heart. Now it is our great joy that what the Law requires, the gospel gives. “Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that believeth” (Rom 10:4). In Him we meet the requirements of the Law, first, by what He has done for us and next, by what He works in us. He conforms us to the Law of God. He makes us, by His Spirit, not for our righteousness but for His Glory, to render to the Law the obedience which we could not present of ourselves. We are weak through the flesh, but when Christ strengthens us, the righteousness of the Law is “fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit” (Rom 8:4).
Only through faith in Christ does a man learn to do righteously, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God—and only by the power of the Holy Spirit sanctifying us to that end do we fulfill these three divine requirements. These we fulfill perfectly in our desire—we would be holy as God is holy if we could live as our heart aspires to live: we would always do righteously, we would always love mercy, and we would always walk humbly with God. The Holy Spirit daily aids us to do this by working in us “to will and to do of [God’s] good pleasure” (Phi 2:13). And the day will come, and we are pining for it, when, being entirely free from this hampering body, we shall serve Him day and night in His Temple and shall render to Him an absolutely perfect obedience, for, “they are without fault before the throne of God” (Rev 14:5).
Today I shall have a task quite sufficient if I dwell only upon the third requirement, “Walk humbly with thy God,” asking first, What is the nature of this humility? And secondly, Where does this humility show itself? First,
I. What Is the Nature of This Humility?
The text is very full of teaching in that respect.A. Humility belongs to the highest form of character.
Observe what precedes our text: “to do justly, and to love mercy.” Suppose a man has done that; suppose that in both these things he has come up to the divine standard, what then? Why, then he must walk humbly with God! If we walk in the Light of God, as God is in the light, and have fellowship with Him (1Jo 1:7a), we still need to walk before God very humbly, always looking to the blood—for, even then, the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanses and continues to cleanse us from all sin (1Jo 1:7b). If we have done both these things, we shall still have to say that we are unprofitable servants—we must walk humbly with God. We have not reached that consummation yet, always doing justly and loving mercy, though we are approximating to it by Christ’s gracious help.But if we did attain to the ideal that is set before us, and every act was right towards man—and more, every act was delightfully saturated with a love to our neighbor as strong as our love to ourselves—even then there would come in this precept, “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Dear friends, if ever you should think that you have reached the highest point of Christian grace—I almost hope that you never will think so—but suppose that you should ever think so, do not, I pray you, say anything that verges upon boasting, or exhibit any kind of spirit that looks like glorying in your own attainments, but walk humbly with your God! I believe that the more grace a man has, the more he feels his deficiency of grace. All the people that I have ever thought might have been called perfect before God, have been notable for a denial of anything of the sort—they have always disclaimed anything like perfection! They have always laid low before God—and if one has been constrained to admire them, they have blushed at his admiration. If they have thought that they were, at all, the objects of reverence among their fellow Christians, I have noticed how zealously they have put that aside with self-depreciatory1 remarks, telling us that we did not know all, or we should not think so of them. And therein I admire them yet more. The praise that they put from them, returns to them with interest!
Oh, let us be of that mind! The best of men are but men at the best, and the brightest saints are still sinners—for whom there is still the Fountain open. This Fountain is not opened, mark you, in Sodom and Gomorrah, but it is opened for the house of David and for the inhabitants of Jerusalem, that even they may still continue, with all their lofty privileges, to wash therein and to be clean. This is the kind of humility, then, which is consistent with the highest moral and spiritual character. It is the very clothing of such a character, as Peter puts it, to “be clothed with humility” (1Pe 5:5), as if, after we had put on the whole armor of God, we put this over all to cover it all up! We do not want the helmet to glitter in the sun, nor the armor of brass upon the knees to shine before men, but clothing ourselves like officers in civilian clothes, we conceal the beauties that will eventually the more reveal themselves.
B. The humility here prescribed involves constant communion with God.
Observe that we are told to walk humbly with God. It is of no use walking humbly away from God. I have seen some people “very proudly humble,” very boastful of their humility. They have been so humble that they were proud enough to doubt God! They could not accept the mercy of Christ, they said. They were so humble. In truth, theirs was a devilish humility, not the humility that comes from the Spirit of God. Oh, no! This true humility makes us walk with God. Beloved, can you conceive a higher and truer humility than that which must come of walking with God? Remember what Job said, “I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear: but now mine eye seeth thee. Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 42:5-6).Remember how Abraham, when he communed with God and pleaded with Him for Sodom, said, “I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am but dust and ashes” (Gen 18:27). “Dust” set forth the frailty of his nature. “Ashes” were as the refuse of the altar which could not be burnt up, and which God would not have. He felt himself to be, by sin, like the sweeping of a furnace, the ashes, refuse of no value whatever. And that was not because he was away from God, but because he was near to God. You can get to be as big as you like if you get away from God, but coming near to the Lord you rightly sing,
“The more Your glories strike my eyes,
The humbler I shall lie.”
Depend upon it that it is so. It might be a kind of weather gauge showing your communion—whether you are proud or humble. If you are going up, God is going down in your esteem. “He must increase,” said John the Baptist of the Lord Jesus, “but I must decrease.” The two things go together—if this scale rises, that scale must go down. “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Dare to stay with God! Dare to have Him as your daily Friend! Be bold enough to come to Him Who is within the veil! Talk with Him, walk with Him as a man walks with his familiar friend—but walk humbly with Him. You will do so if you walk truly. I cannot conceive such a thing—it is impossible—a man walking proudly with God! He takes his fellow by the arm and feels that he is as good as his neighbor, perhaps superior to him, but he cannot walk with God in such a frame of mind as that! The finite with the Infinite! That alone suggests humility, but the sinful with the Thrice-Holy? This throws us down into the dust.
C. This humility implies constant activity.
“Walk humbly with thy God.” Walking is an active exercise. These people had proposed to bow before God, as you notice in the sixth verse, “Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the high God?” But the answer is not, “Bow humbly before God,” but “Walk humbly” with God.Now, Beloved, when we are very actively engaged, pressed with business, one thing after another coming in, if the great Master employs us in some large concern (large, of course, only to us), if we have work after work—we are too apt to forget that we are only servants. We are doing all the business for our Master; we are only commission agents for Him.
We are apt to think that we are the head of the firm. We would not think so if we thought steadily for a moment, for we would know our right position. But in the midst of activity, we get cumbered with much serving, and we are too apt to get off our proper level.
Perhaps we have to rule others, and we forget that we also are men under authority. It is easy to play the little king over the little folk, but it must not be so. You must learn not only to be humble in the closet of communion, and to be humble with your Bible before you—but to be humble in preaching, to be humble in teaching, to be humble in ruling, to be humble in everything that you do when you have as much as ever you can do! When, from morning to night, you are still pressed with this and that service, still keep your proper place. That is where Martha went wrong, you know—not in having much serving, but by getting to be mistress. She was, “Mrs. Martha,” and the housewife is a queen! But Mary sat in the servant’s place at Jesus’ feet. If Martha’s heart could have been where Mary’s body was, then had she served aright. The Lord make us “Martha-Marys,” or “Mary-Marthas,” whenever we are busy, that we may walk humbly with God!
D. This humility denotes progress.
I do not think it far-fetched to say so. The man is to walk, and that is progress, advancing. “Walk humbly.” I am not to be so humble that I feel that I cannot do any more, or enjoy any more, or be any better. They call that humility, but it begins with an “s” in English and the full word is sloth. “I cannot be as believing, as bold, as useful as such a man is.” You are not told to be humble and sit still, but to be humble and walk with God! Go forward! Advance! Not with a proud desire to excel your fellow Christians, not even with the latent expectation of being more respected because you have more grace—but still walk, go on, advance, grow! Be enriched with all the precious things of God. Be filled with all the fullness of God. Walk on, always walk. Lie not down in despair! Roll not in the dust with desperation because you think high things impossible for you. Walk—but walk humbly.You will soon find out, if you make any progress, that you have need to be humble. I believe that when a man goes back he gets proud. And I am persuaded that when a man advances, he gets humbler—and that it is a part of the advance to walk more and more and more humbly. For this the Lord tries many of us. For this He visits us in the night and chastens us, that we may be qualified to have more grace and get to higher attainments by being more humble, “for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble” (1Pe 5:5). If you will climb the mountainside, you shall be thirsty among the barren crags. But if you will descend into the valleys, where the red deer wander and the brooks flow among the meadows, you shall drink to your full! Does not the hart pant for the water brooks? Do you pant for them? They flow in the Valley of Humiliation! The Lord bring us all there!
E. The humility here prescribed implies constancy.
“Walk humbly with thy God.” Not sometimes be humble, but always walk humbly with your God. If we were always what we are sometimes, what Christians we would be! I have heard you say, I think, and I have said the same myself, “I felt very broken down and lay very low at my Master’s feet.” Were you so the next day? And the day after, did you continue so?Is it not very possible for us to be one day, because of our great debt to our Master, begging that He would not be hard with us—and is it not possible, tomorrow, to be taking our brother by the throat? I do not say that God’s people would do that, but I do feel that the spirit that is in them may lead them to think of doing it—one day acknowledging your Father’s authority and doing His will, and another day standing outside the door and refusing to go in when the prodigal son has come home. “You never gave me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends. I have been a consistent believer, yet I never have any high joys; but as soon as your son came, which has devoured your living with harlots, you have killed for him the fatted calf. Here is a wretched sinner only just saved and he is in an ecstasy of delight! How can this be right?” (Luk 15).
O elder son, O elder brother, walk humbly with your Father! Always be so under any circumstances. It is all very fine to have a lot of humility packed away in a box with which to perfume your prayers—and then to come out and to be “My Lord,” some very great one in the midst of the Church and in the world. This will never do! It is not said, “Bow humbly before God now and then.” But as a regular, constant thing, “Walk humbly with thy God.” It is not, “Bow your head like the bulrush under some conscious fault which you cannot deny,” but, in the brightness of your purity and the clearness of your holiness, still keep your heart in lowly reverence bowing before the Throne of God!
F. The humility that is here prescribed includes delightful confidence.
Let me read the text to you, “Walk humbly with God.” No, no, we must not maul the passage that way! “Walk humbly with thy God.” Do not think that it is humility to doubt your interest in Christ—that is unbelief! Do not think that it is humility to think that He is another man’s God and not yours—“Walk humbly with thy God.”Know that He is your God! Be sure of it—come up from the wilderness leaning upon your Beloved. Have no doubt, nor even the shadow of a doubt, that you are your Beloved’s and that He is yours! Rest not for a moment if there is any question upon this blessed subject. He gives Himself to you—take Him to be yours by a covenant of salt that never shall be broken—and give yourself to Him, saying, “I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine” (Song 6:3). “Walk humbly with thy God.”
Let not anything draw you away from that confidence. But then, in comes the humility. This is all of grace! This is all the result of divine election! Therefore, be humble. You have not chosen Christ, but He has chosen you! This is all the effect of redeeming love—therefore, be humble. You are not your own, you are bought with a price, so you can have no room to glory. This is all the work of the Spirit—
“Then give all the glory to His holy name,
To Him all the glory belongs.”
“Walk humbly with thy God.” I lie at His feet as one unworthy and cry,
“Why did this come to me? I am not worthy of the least of the mercies that You have made to pass before me.”
I think this is the humility prescribed in the text. May the Spirit of God work it in us!
And now, secondly, with great brevity upon many points, I have to answer the question,