Then Moses raised his hand and struck the rock twice with the staff, and water gushed out. So the entire community and their livestock drank their fill. Numbers 20:11 NLT
Henry was a close friend of my father’s, but they
were different. Dad was quiet and reserved; Henry was outgoing and comical. Dad
held post-graduate degrees; Henry never made it out of college. Dad held no
position in his state denomination, while Henry had moved up in the ranks. Dad
was a relatively unknown pastor. Henry was known by most and had served for
many years as the parliamentarian for his denomination on the state level. But
Henry never got the big head. Regardless of how important the people were whom he
hobnobbed with, he remained the same old Henry. He must have known that getting a big head can push us away from God and others.
Moses forgot how to be humble. God had chosen him
to lead the Israelites from Egyptian slavery to the Promised Land. He also gave
him the power to perform miracles. One was striking a rock with his staff. When
he did, water gushed out for the thirsty people. But on this occasion, God told
him to merely speak to the rock. Moses, full of himself and angry at stubborn
people, hit the rock instead. God doesn’t appreciate orneriness and politely
informed Moses he had forfeited his chance to lead the captives into the
Promised Land.
The Bible doesn’t use the word big head, but it
does use the word pride—and they’re identical. When pride infiltrates our
lives, life becomes about us. Initially, Moses wanted nothing to do with the
assignment of freeing the captives, but as time moved on, he thought more of
himself than he should.
Pride leads us to distrust God, causing us to
make poor decisions. No inherent power resided in Moses’ staff. Trust in God
made the staff work—along with anything else God told him to use. Many of my
poor decisions have been selfish and made in a moment when I failed to let God
guide me.
God has a way of shrinking our heads when they
get too big. He shrunk Moses’ by taking away the privilege of living in the
Promised Land. He’s used various methods on me as well. But God isn’t in the
head-shrinking business because He’s mean. He simply wants us to trust in him
instead of in ourselves.
When your head gets too big, let God remind you
about who you are without Him.
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