
Thomas Boston
The Crook in the Lot
Works III, pp. 557-561.
“Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.” (1 Peter 5:6-7)
What it is in humbling circumstances to humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God. This is the great thing to be aimed at in our humbling circumstances. And we may take it up in these eight things.
1. Recognize that God has humbled you.
1. Noticing God’s mighty hand, as employed in bringing about everything that concerns us, either in the way of efficacy or permission. “And he said, It is the Lord; let him do what seems him good” (1 Sam. 3:8). “And the king said, The Lord has said to him, Curse David: who shall then say, Wherefore have you done so?” (2 Sam. 16:10). He is the fountain of all perfection, but we must trace our imperfections to His sovereign will. It is He that has posted every one in their relations by His providence; without Him we could not meet with such contradictions; for, “The king’s heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: He turns it wherever He pleases” (Prov. 21:1). He sends afflictions, and justly punishes one sin with another (Isa. 6:10). (cf. Not Without Purpose: God’s Hand In Our Trials).
2. Recognize your worthlessness before God.
2. A sense of our own worthlessness and nothingness before him (Ps. 144:3). Looking to the infinite Majesty of the mighty hand dealing with us, we should say, with Abraham, “Behold, I am but dust and ashes” (Gen. 18:27); and say amen to the cry, “All flesh is grass” (Isa. 40:6). The keeping up of thoughts of our own excellency under the pressure of God’s mighty hand is the very thing that swells the heart in pride, causing it to rise up against it. And it is the letting of all such thoughts of ourselves fall before the eyes of His glory that is the humbling required.
3. Recognize your guilt before God.
3. A sense of our guilt and filthiness (Rom. 3:10; Isa 64:6). The mighty hand does not press us down, but as sinners; it is meet then that under it we see our sinfulness; our guilt, by which we shall appear criminals justly caused to suffer: our filthiness, whereupon we may be brought to loathe ourselves; and then we shall think nothing lays us lower than we well deserve. It is the overlooking our sinfulness that allows the proud heart to swell.
4. Patiently submit to God’s Providence.
4. A silent submission under the hand of God. His sovereignty challenges this of us. “Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God?” (Rom. 9:20). And nothing but unsubdued pride of spirit can allow us to answer again under His sovereign hand. A view of His sovereignty humbled and awed the Psalmist into submission, with a profound silence. “I was dumb, I did not open my mouth, because thou didst it” (Ps. 39:9). “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord” (Job 1:21). And, “What shall I answer thee? I will lay my hand on my mouth. Once have I spoken, but I will not answer; yea, twice, but I will proceed no farther” (Job 40:4-5). And Eli, “It is the Lord; let Him do what pleases Him” (1 Sam. 3:18).
5. Magnify God’s mercies towards you.
5. A magnifying of His mercies towards us in the midst of all His proceedings against us (Ps. 144:3). Has He laid us low? If we are duly humbled we shall wonder He has laid us no lower (Ezra 9:13). For however low the humble are laid, they will see they are not yet so low as their sins deserve (Lam. 3:22).
6. Admire God’s unsearchable ways.
6. A holy and silent admiration of the ways and counsels of God, as to us unsearchable (Rom. 9:33). Pride of heart thinks nothing too high for the man, and so arraigns before its tribunal the Divine proceedings, pretends to see through them, censures freely, and condemns. But humiliation of spirit disposes a man to think awfully and honorably of those mysteries of Providence he is not able to see through.
7. Lay aside your dignity.
7. A forgetting and laying aside before the Lord all our dignity, by which we excel others (Rev. 4:10). Pride feeds itself on the man’s real or imaginary personal excellency and dignity, and, being so use to practising it before others, cannot forget it before God . “God, I thank You I am not as other men” (Luke 18:11). But humiliation of spirit makes it all vanish before him, as does the shadow before the shining sun, and it lays the man, in his own eyes, lower than any. “Surely I am more brutish than any man, and have not the understanding of a man” (Prov. 30:2).
8. Submit to your circumstances.
Lastly, a submitting readily to the meanest offices requisite in or agreeable to our circumstances. Pride at every turn finds something that is below the man to condescend, or stoop to, measuring by his own mind and will, not by the circumstances God has placed him in. But humility measures by the circumstances one is placed in, and readily falls in with what they require. Concerning this our Savior gave us an example to be imitated: “Being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death” (Phil. 2:8). “If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet, you ought also to wash one another’s feet” (John 13:14).
Practical Uses of this Doctrine.
Use. Of exhortation. Let the bent of your heart, then, in all your humbling circumstances, be towards the humbling of your spirit, as under the mighty hand of God. This lies in two things.
1. Carefully notice all your humbling circumstances, and overlook none of them. Observe your imperfections; inferiority in relations; contradictions you meet with; your afflictions; uncertainty of all things about you; and your sinfulness. Look through them designedly, and consider the steps of the conduct of Providence toward you in these, that you may know yourselves, and may not be strangers at home, blind to your own real state and case.
2. Observe what these circumstances require of you, as suitable to them; bend your endeavors towards it, to bring your spirits into that temper of humiliation, that, as your lot is really low in all these respects, so your spirits may be low too, as under the mighty hand of God. Let this be your great aim through your whole life, and your exercise every day.
Motives to Humble Yourself.
Motive 1. God is certainly at work to humble one and all of us. However high any are lifted up in this world, Providence has hung certain badges for humiliation on them, whether they will notice them or not (Isa. 40:6). Now, it is our duty to fall in with the design of Providence, that while God is humbling us we may be humbled ourselves, and that we may not receive humbling dispensations in vain.
2. The humiliation of our spirit will not take effect without our own agency in there: while God is working on us that way, we must work together with Him; for He works on us as rational agents, who, being moved, move themselves (Phil. 2:12-13). God by His providence may force down our lot and condition without us, but the spirit must come down voluntarily and of choice, or not at all; therefore, strike in with humbling providences in humbling yourselves, as mariners spread out the sails when the wind begins to blow that they may go away before it.
3. If you do not, you resist the mighty hand of God (Acts 7:51). You resist in so far as you do not yield, but stand as a rock, keeping your ground against your Maker in humbling providences. “You have stricken them, but they have not grieved; you have consumed them, but they have refused to receive correction. They have made their faces harder than a rock; they have refused to return” (Jer. 5:3). Much more when you work against Him to force up your condition, which you may see God means to hold down. And of this resistance consider:
(1.) The sinfulness; what an evil thing it is. It is a direct fighting against God, a shaking off of subjection to our sovereign Lord, and a rising in rebellion against him (Isa. 14:9).
(2.) The folly of it. How unequal is the match! How can the struggle end well? (Job 9:4). What else can possibly be the issue of the potsherds of the earth dashing against the Rock of ages, but that they are broken to pieces? All men must certainly bow or break under the mighty hand of God.
4. This is the time of humiliation, even the time of this life. Everything is beautiful in its season (Eccl. 3:11); and the bringing down of the spirit now is beautiful, as in the time of it, even as the ploughing and sowing of the ground is in the spring. Consider,
(1.) Humiliation of spirit “is in the sight of God of great price” (1 Peter 3:4). As he has a special aversion to pride of heart, he has a special liking of humility (1 Peter 5:5). The humbling of sinners and bringing them down from their heights, in which the corruption of their nature has set them, is the great end of His Word and of His providences.
(2.) It is no easy thing to humble men’s spirits; it is not a little that will do it; it is a work that is not soon done. There is need of a digging deep for a thorough humiliation in the work of conversion (Luke 6:48). Many a stroke must be given at the root of the tree of the natural pride of the heart before it falls; often it seems to be fallen, and yet it arises again. And even when the root stroke is given in believers, the rod of pride buds again, so that there is still occasion for new humbling work.
(3.) The whole time of this life is appointed for humiliation. This was signified by the forty years the Israelites had in the wilderness (Deut. 8:2). It was so to Christ, and therefore it must be so to men (Heb. 12:2). And in that time they must either be formed according to His image, or else appear as reprobate silver that will not take it on by any means (Rom. 8:29). So that whatever lifting up men may now and then get in this life, the habitual course of it will still be humbling.
(4.) There is no humbling after this life (Rev. 22:11). If the pride of the heart is not brought down in this life it will never be; no kindly humiliation is to be expected in the other life. There the proud will be broken in pieces, but not softened; their lot and condition will be brought to the lowest pass, but the pride of their spirits will still remain, from which they will be in eternal agonies, through the opposition between their spirits and lot (Rev. 16:21).
Therefore, beware lest you sit your time of humiliation: humbled we must be, or we are gone forever; and this is the time, the only time of it; therefore, make your hay while the sun shines; strike in with humbling providences, and do not fight against them while you have them (Acts 13:41). The season of grace will not last; if you sleep in seedtime, you will beg in harvest.
5. This is the way to turn humbling circumstances to a good account; so that, instead of being losers, you would be gainers by them. “It is good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn thy statutes” (Ps. 119:71). Would you gather grapes of these thorns and thistles, set yourselves to get your spirits humbled by them.
(1.) Humiliation of spirit is a most valuable thing in itself (Prov. 16:32). It cannot be bought too dear. Whatever one is made to suffer, if his spirit is by that means duly brought down, he has what is well worth bearing all the hardship for (1 Peter 3:4).
(2.) Humility of spirit brings many advantages along with it. It is a fruitful bough, well loaden, wherever it is. It contributes to one’s ease under the cross (Mat. 11:30; Lam. 3:27-29). It is a sacrifice particularly acceptable to God (Ps. 51:17). The eye of God is particularly on such for good. “To this man I will look, even to him that is poor, and of a contrite spirit, and trembles at My word” (Isa. 66:2). Yea, He dwells with them (Isa. 57:15). And it carries a line of wisdom through one’s whole conduct: “with the lowly is wisdom” (Prov. 11:2).
6. Consider, it is a mighty hand that is at work with us—the hand of the mighty God; let us then bend our spirits towards a compliance with it, and not wrestle against it. Consider,
(1.) We must fall under it. Since the design of it is to bring us down we cannot stand before it; for it cannot miscarry in its designs. “My counsel shall stand” (Isa. 46:10). So fall before it we must, either in the way of duty or judgment. “Thine arrows are sharp in the heart of the king’s enemies, by which the people fall under thee” (Ps. 46:4).
(2.) They that are so wise as to fall in humiliation under the mighty hand, be they ever so low, the same hand will raise them up again (James 4:10). In a word, be the proud ever so high, God will bring them down; be the humble ever so low, God will raise them up.
