Daily Devotional – Mar 28, 2025

Daily Devotional – Mar 28, 2025
February 25, 2025 Lighthouse Network

Humility

Haman was the archetypal egomaniac. He surrounded himself with those who would listen to his incessant talking about himself and would sycophantically acknowledge his significance and greatness. He lived with the mistaken notion that he was the center of the universe. Haman would fit perfectly in contemporary western culture, where social–media feeds and news outlets are often littered with stories of those who apparently have done little of true significance but who live for, and expect, attention and recognition. (Of course, our hearts are not much different in their proud desire for praise. The difference is often not that we are more godly but that we lack the opportunity to showcase ourselves.)

So it was, after Haman attended the exclusive banquet put on by Queen Esther, that he felt “joyful and glad of heart” at the elevated position in the kingdom that had seen him invited as the honored guest. Yet all the enjoyment, prestige, accolades were insufficient to prevent him from becoming entirely destabilized by the fact that Mordecai did not stand when Haman passed by. His joy was so brittle that this one apparent slight caused wrath to consume him. Pride does that to a person. Nothing can ever satisfy. For the proud person there’s always another promotion, another award, another dollar to aim for; something else beyond their reach. King Solomon writes of such a person, “do you see a man who is wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” This was true of Haman’s life. It was pride that drove him to plot murder, even a massacre. It was pride that meant he could not enjoy what he had but only be angry and what he did not have. We may shake our heads at Haman’s pride. But when we read in God’s word of how Jesus, God himself, “emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on the cross,” and we are forced to ask whether we are more like that or like Haman. When we thoughtfully consider Jesus’ pattern of humility, we see the truth of our own prideful hearts.

—Alistair Begg 

Time and again in Jesus’ teachings, He spoke of pride and humility as key indicators of the condition of a man’s heart. Furthermore, the scriptures warn of God’s prerogative towards those of haughty and humble attitudes, that “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble” (James 4:6). Pride drives us to behaviors incompatible with our identity in Christ; humility brings us to a place of gratitude and praise. Check your heart often. —DH

—David Hoskins, Founder & Care Guide, Sanctuary Clinics

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