Matthew 18:3 ,4 - Becoming as A Little Child.
Matthew 18:3, 4 (KJV) And said, Verily I say
unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as
little children, ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble
himself as this little child, the same is greatest
in the kingdom of heaven.
Matthew 18:3, 4 (AMP) And said, Truly I say
to you, unless you repent (change, turn about)
and become like little children [trusting,
lowly, loving, forgiving], you can never enter the
kingdom of heaven [at all]. Whoever will humble
himself therefore and become like this little child
[trusting, lowly, loving, forgiving] is greatest in the
kingdom of heaven.
WORD STUDY
Become As Little Children. This is how Jesus
characterized conversion. Like the Beatitudes, it pictures
faith as the simple, helpless, trusting dependence
of those who have no resources of their own.
Like children, they have no achievements and no
accomplishments to offer or commend themselves with.
[MacArthur Daily Bible 2003]
INTRODUCTION
Very tenderly, yet with solemn emphasis,
Jesus tried to correct the evil. He showed what is
the principle that bears sway in the kingdom of
heaven, and in what true greatness consists, as
estimated by the standard of the courts above.
Before honor is humility. To fill a high
place before men, Heaven chooses the worker who,
like John the Baptist, takes a lowly place before
God. The most childlike disciple is the most
efficient in labor for God. The heavenly intelligences
can co-operate with him who is seeking, not to
exalt self, but to save souls.
But when men exalt themselves, feeling
that they are a necessity for the success of
God's great plan, the Lord causes them to be set
aside.
It was not enough for the disciples of
Jesus to be instructed as to the nature of His
kingdom. What they needed was a change of heart that
would bring them into harmony with its
principles. The simplicity, the self-forgetfulness, and
the confiding love of a little child are the
attributes that Heaven values. These are the
characteristics of real greatness
The sincere, contrite soul is precious in
the sight of God. He places His own signet upon
men, not by their rank, not by their wealth, not
by their intellectual greatness, but by their
oneness with Christ. {DA 436, 7}
COMMENTARY PEARL
Our teenage granddaughter, Grace, cleans
our house to earn extra spending money. But when
I correct her or show her how I want something
done, she responds with grimaces and loud sighs.
Oh, all right, she says. Although she
complies, her reluctant attitude hurts me.
I cant help but miss little
three-year-old Gracie, the younger version of my
granddaughter who lives in my mind. When I asked that
darling girl to pick up her toys or brush her teeth,
she chirped, Okay! and ran off to obey.
As I mused about these changes, Jesus
showed me that Grace wasnt the only one who
needed an attitude adjustment. How many times has
His Spirit prompted me to change my plans and
follow His lead? When He asked me to serve Him in a
way Id not anticipated, did I drag my feet,
stall for days or weeks, and finally comply, only
out of duty, not love? Did that hurt Him the way
Gracie hurt me?
I want to respond to Jesuss leadings
like that darling three-year-old in my mind with
a cheerful Okay! instead of a reluctant,
Oh, all right.
I still drag my feet at times, but Im
learning to be thankful and cheerful for His voice
encouraging me to obey Him willingly. Jeanette Levellie
Faith Step: Next time Jesus whispers in
your heart, try saying Okay! and feel the
joy. [Mornings With Jesus 2023 Devotional by
Guideposts and Zondervan]
CLOSING THOUGHT
Continuous conversion
These words of Our Lord are true of our
initial conversion, but we have to be continuously
converted all the days of our lives, continually to
turn to God as children. If we trust to our wits
instead of to God, we produce consequences for which
God will hold us responsible. Immediately our
bodies are brought into new conditions by the
providence of God, we have to see our natural life
obeys the dictates of the Spirit of God. Because
we have done it once is no proof that we shall
do it again. The relation of the natural to the
spiritual is one of continuous conversion, and it is
the one thing we object to. In every setting in
which we are put, the Spirit of God remains
unchanged and His salvation unaltered but we have to
put on the new man. God holds us responsible
every time we refuse to convert ourselves, our
reason for refusing is willful obstinacy. Our
natural life must not rule, God must rule in us.
The hindrance in our spiritual life is
that we will not be continually converted, there
are wadges of obstinacy where our pride
spits at the throne of God and says - I
wont. We deify independence and willfulness and
call them by the wrong name. What God looks on as
obstinate weakness, we call strength. There are whole
tracts of our lives which have not yet been brought
into subjection, and it can only be done by this
continuous conversion. Slowly but surely we can claim
the whole territory for the Spirit of God. [My
Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers]
LINKS FOR FURTHER STUDY
Matthew 18:3 ,4 - The Faith of a Child
(continued).
http://www.abible.com/devotions/2023/20230207-0857.html
Matthew 18:3 ,4 - The Faith of a Child.
http://www.abible.com/devotions/2023/20230201-0847.html
LINKS WORTH CHECKING OUT
https://abible.com/links/