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Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.
Page 2: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Keeping a Quiet Humble Keeping a Quiet Humble HeartHeart

Songs of Ascent: Practices of Songs of Ascent: Practices of

the Lifelong Journey Series [12]the Lifelong Journey Series [12]

Psalm 131Psalm 131

Page 3: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Psalm 131 [ESV]A Song of Ascents. Of David

1 O LORD, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high;I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvelous for me.

2 But I have calmed and quieted my soul, like a weaned child with its mother; like a weaned child is my soul within me.

3 O Israel, hope in the LORD from this time forth and forevermore.

Page 4: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

HUMILITY: A SECRET GATEWAY TO REST & CONTENTMENT

Humility is the obverse side of confidence in God, whereas pride is the obverse side of confidence in self.

John Baillie

Page 5: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

HUMILITY: A SECRET GATEWAY TO REST & CONTENTMENT

• Pride is the obverse side of confidence in self. Pride is the default mode of a depraved human heart. Pride is promoted by the worldly values as a desirable

quality, such as “ambition”. In the end, pride brings restlessness & discontentment.

• Humility is the obverse side of confidence in God. Humility is a result of experiencing God’s righteousness &

grace (Psalms 129 & 130). Humility is a primary self-description of Jesus on himself:

“Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.”

- Matthew 11:29 In the end, humility brings rest & contentment.

Page 6: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

HUMILITY: A SECRET GATEWAY TO REST & CONTENTMENT

• Psalm 131 is a confession of a seasoned pilgrim [David] who has learned to keep a quiet humble heart in his spiritual pilgrimage to God.

Page 7: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

1) We must choose to humble ourselves BEFORE GOD.

O LORD, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high;I do not occupy myself with things

too great and too marvelous for me. (v.1)

Page 8: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

1) We must choose to humble ourselves BEFORE GOD.

Humility begins in heart—our eyes and behaviors are reflections of our hearts (pride is the unattended condition of our hearts).

Our hearts must be checked before God; otherwise, our humility is prone to be ostentatious (vs. self-forgetful).

True humility is NOT weak, faint-hearted, timid, fatalistic nor cynical—i.e., a genuinely humble person takes risks and aspires to impact the world for God’s glory.

Unruly ambition is aspiration tainted by pride.

Page 9: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Anti-Psalm 131

Self,my heart is proud (I’m absorbed in myself),

and my eyes are haughty (I look down on other people),

and I chase after things too great and too difficult for me.

So of course I’m noisy and restless inside; it comes naturally,

like a hungry infant fussing on his mother’s lap,like a hungry infant, I’m restless with my demands

and worries.I scatter my hopes onto anything and everybody all

the time.David Powlison

 

Page 10: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

2) We must trust and submit to God’s weaning process for our maturity.

But I have calmed and quieted my soul, like a weaned child with its mother;

like a weaned child is my soul within me. (v.2)

Page 11: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

2) We must trust and submit to God’s weaning process for our maturity.

The psalmist learned the secret of rest and contentment. How? Through humility, he has calmed his heart and quieted his ambitions.

But his humility has been a work of God as well—he had been weaned by God. Weaning starts with disappointment but ends with contentment.

What is the child being weaned from? Not from the mother but on mother—but from the comfort of milk for solid/better food.

So, when God takes something from us, it weans us from the world & self so we can seek God himself.

Page 12: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Be still, my soul: the Lord is on thy side.Bear patiently the cross of grief or pain.Leave to thy God to order and provide;

In every change, He faithful will remain.Be still, my soul: thy best, thy heavenly Friend

Through thorny ways leads to a joyful end. Katharina von Schlegel (1752)

Page 13: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

3) We must wait restfully and hope in the LORD.

O Israel, hope in the LORD from this time forth and forevermore. (v.3)

Page 14: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

THREE THINGS WE MUST DO TO KEEP A QUIET HUMBLE HEART

3) We must wait restfully and hope in the LORD.

The result of humility is the freedom from self-absorption which leads us to genuine concern for others.

We ought to—and will want to, if we experience this sweet freedom—share our “secret” of rest and contentment with our fellow-strugglers.

The learned-lesson of the weaning process is to wait restfully for a deeper satisfaction—to hope in God himself.

When to hope in God? It begins now & lasts forevermore!

Page 15: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

There Is Another Way!The experts in our society who offer to help us

have a kind of general-staff mentality from which massive, top-down solutions are issued to solve our problems. Then when the solutions don’t work, we get mired in the nothing-can-be-done swamp. We are first incited into being grandiose and then into intimidated into being infantile. But there is another way, the plain way of quiet Christian humility. We need pruning. Cut back to our roots, we learn this psalm and discover the quietness of the weaned child, the tranquility of maturing trust. It is such a minute psalm that many have overlooked it, but for all its brevity and lack of pretence, it is essential. For every Christian encounters problems of growth and development.

- Eugene Peterson

Page 16: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS FOR OUR EVERYDAY LIFE

1. Humble yourself BEFORE GOD. Deal with the pride and unruly ambitions in your

heart. Choose humility by dying to self. Live before God—give up all motives to impress

people.

2. Trust and accept GOD’S WEANING PROCESS by quieting your soul. Expect momentary discomfort, disappointment,

and irritation as growing pains. Learn to calm your heart and quiet your unruly

ambitions. Wait, rest, and put your hope in God… now!

Page 17: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.

Praying the Songs of Ascent #12 — Psalm 131 [MSG]

A Pilgrim Song

1 God, I'm not trying to rule the roost, I don't want to be king of the mountain.

I haven't meddled where I have no business or fantasized grandiose plans.

 

2 I've kept my feet on the ground, I've cultivated a quiet heart.

Like a baby content in its mother's arms, my soul is a baby content.

 

3 Wait, Israel, for God. Wait with hope. Hope now; hope always!

Page 18: Keeping a Quiet Humble Heart Songs of Ascent: Practices of the Lifelong Journey Series [12] Psalm 131.