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Octavius Winslow

Psalm 131:2

Psalm 131:2
Octavius Winslow July, 31 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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July, 31 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about self and reliance on God?

The Bible emphasizes the need to relinquish self-reliance to find true strength in God.

The Scriptures illustrate the importance of weaning ourselves from idolizing our own wisdom and strength. Psalm 131:2 uses the imagery of a weaned child, highlighting that just as a child must learn to be independent from the nurturing of its mother, so believers are called to detach from self-sufficiency. Self is often described as an idol, a competing deity within our hearts that must be dethroned to allow God to reign supremely. This process is essential for spiritual growth, as we come to realize our folly compared to God’s wisdom and strength. As we are weaned from self, we are led back to our original source of comfort and strength—God Himself.

Psalm 131:2

How do we know self-denial is true in Christianity?

Self-denial is central to the Christian faith, as it calls for a trust in God's guidance over our own.

Christian doctrine teaches that true faith involves self-denial and a complete reliance on God. In addressing our sinful tendency to elevate self, we must acknowledge that our understanding and plans are often flawed. The call to deny oneself is echoed in the teachings of Christ, who urged His followers to take up their crosses daily and follow Him. By recognizing the limitations of our own wisdom and strength, we embrace a life that glorifies God and honors His sovereignty. As noted in physical and spiritual discipline, the weaning from self leads to a deeper submission to God’s will and allows His glory to be revealed in our lives.

Matthew 16:24, Romans 12:1-2

Why is it important for Christians to rely on God's wisdom?

Relying on God's wisdom leads to spiritual maturity and effective service.

For Christians, relying on God's wisdom is imperative for spiritual maturity and effective ministry. The proclamation of God's glory is contingent on our submission to His superior understanding. When we prioritize our wisdom, we often limit ourselves to human perspectives that fall short of divine insight. Relinquishing our reliance on self allows God to manifest His power and purpose through us. As believers, when we lean not on our own understanding but acknowledge Him in all our ways, we invite His directing grace, which aligns our efforts with His redemptive plan. This reliance transforms our approach to serving others, emphasizing humility and a readiness to attribute any success to His grace alone.

Proverbs 3:5-6, James 1:5

“Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that is weaned of his mother: my soul is even as a weaned child.”

— Psalm 131:2

The first object from which our heavenly Father weans His child is self. Of all idols, he finds self the hardest to abandon. When man in Paradise aspired to be as God, God was dethroned from his soul, and the creature became as a deity to itself. From that moment, the idolatry of self has been the great and universal crime of our race, and will continue to be until Christ comes to restore all things. In the soul of the regenerate, Divine grace has done much to dethrone this idol, and to reinstate God. The work, however, is but partially accomplished. The dishonored and rejected rival is not eager to relinquish his throne, and yield to the supreme control and sway of another. There is much yet to be achieved before this still indwelling and unconquered foe lays down his weapons in entire subjection to the will and the authority of that Savior, whose throne and rights he has usurped.

Thus, much still lingers in the heart which the Spirit has renewed and inhabits, of self-esteem, self-confidence, self-seeking, and self-love. From all this our Father seeks to wean us. From our own wisdom, which is but folly; from our own strength, which is but weakness; from our own wills, which are often as an uncurbed steed; from our own ways, which are crooked; from our own hearts, which are deceitful; from our own judgments, which are dark; from our own ends, which are narrow and selfish, He would wean and detach us, that our souls may get more and more back to their original center of repose–God Himself.

In view of this mournful exhibition of fallen and corrupt self, how necessary the discipline of our heavenly Father that extorts from us the Psalmist's language, "Surely I have behaved and quieted myself as a child that is weaned of this mother"! Self did seem to be our mother–the fruitful parent of so much in our plans and aims and spirit that was dishonoring to our God. From this He would gently and tenderly, but effectually, wean us, that we may learn to rely upon His wisdom, to repose in His strength, to consult His honor, and to seek His glory and smile, supremely and alone. And oh! how effectually is this blessed state attained when God, by setting us aside in the season of solitude and sorrow, teaches us that He can do without us. We perhaps thought that our rank, or our talents, or our influence, or our very presence were essential to the advancement of His cause, and that some parts of it could not proceed without us! The Lord knew otherwise. And so He laid His hand upon us, and withdrew us from the scene of our labors and duties, engagements and ambition, that He might hide pride from our hearts–the pride of self-importance. And oh, is it no mighty attainment in the Christian life to be thus weaned from ourselves! Beloved, it forms the root of all other blessing. The moment we learn to cease from ourselves–from our own wisdom, and power, and importance–the Lord appears and takes us up. Then His wisdom is displayed, His power is put forth, His glory is developed, and His great name gets to itself all the praise. It was not until God had placed Moses in the cleft of the rock, that His glory passed by. Moses must be hid, that God might be all.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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