Have you ever thought about your
creation and entry into this world and how we had absolutely no control over
any of it? The fact that we didn't pick our parents, their temperament,
personality, their affluence/poverty, the point in history it would
happen, the country, our nationality, our sex, our health, our abilities, our
disabilities, our looks, our strength, our intelligence, etc., etc. Nope,
we had nothing to do with it.
It's sort of like going racing at
one of those go carts tracks you usually see at the beach. You know, the
carts that are all beat up and smell like ether from having been jump started
so many times. You eagerly wait in line and as soon as it's your group's
turn, everyone races through the gate and runs toward the cart that they think
is the fastest. This happened during vacation last year and inevitably,
the cart I chose was the slowest. I nearly pushed the gas pedal through
the floorboard but the engine would just sputter and jerk. I think I got
lapped twice during the 10 minute ride. Others, including my wife, had
carts that ran really well. When the race was over, we were all lined up
in our finishing order, winners in the front and losers in the back. Boy
did I have the best view of the field - dead last. What's interesting is
the winners were happy and excited about their performance and the losers felt
like, well losers!
As it turns out, our life is much
the same, except we don't get the chance to choose the cart - one gets supplied
for us. We come into this world with strengths and weaknesses already assigned. Yet, we look past this fact and claim for ourselves, from
our "own making", the great attributes of our personality, good
looks, intelligence and the like.
In the 31st chapter of Ezekiel, this
problem of our heart is displayed in grand view. God, using the prophet
Ezekiel, sent a prophetic word to Pharaoh in the story of a nation's mighty
rise to power and her thunderous fall through the metaphor of a great tree.
Similar to Jesus telling parables to make them more relatable to us (so
that we wouldn't get fixated on actual characters), perhaps a tree was chosen
for the same reason, that we might, more easily, see the same attributes within
our own heart. In verses 1 through 9, He describes the magnificent tree:
Ezekiel 31:5
“Therefore its height was exalted
above all the trees of the field; its boughs were multiplied...
Ezekiel 31:3
Indeed Assyria was a cedar in Lebanon,
With fine branches that shaded the
forest, And of high stature; and its top was among the
thick boughs.
Ezekiel 31:7
Thus it was beautiful in
greatness and in the length of its branches...
Ezekiel 31:8
The cedars in the garden of God
could not hide it;
The fir trees were not like its
boughs,
And the chestnut trees were not like
its branches;
No tree in the garden of God was
like it in beauty.
And because of all this:
Ezekiel 31:6
All the birds of the heavens made
their nests in its boughs;
Under its branches all the beasts of
the field brought forth their young;
And in its shadow all great nations
made their home.
What an amazing tree! It
certainly seems as though this tree was a blessing from God and that it in
turn, it was a blessing to the rest of creation. To leave no doubt, the
scripture makes it clear that God was the source of its stature and beauty as
described in verse 9, "I made it beautiful with a multitude of
branches". This magnificent tree was the beneficiary of
being located at the most abundant source of water in the garden as can be seen
in:
Ezekiel 31:4
The waters made it grow;
Underground waters gave it height,
With their rivers running around the
place where it was planted,
And sent out rivulets to all the
trees of the field.
Ezekiel 31:5
...And its branches became long
because of the abundance of water, as it sent them out.
Ezekiel 31:7
...Because its roots reached to
abundant waters.
All appears good right? God
created the tree, located it in the midst of the most abundant life giving
waters and as such it grew large in stature and high and mighty. It
ultimately becomes the center of humanity and creation alike! So where
have things gone wrong we might ask? In verse 10 we see the heart of the
problem:
Ezekiel 31:10
Therefore thus says the Lord God:
‘Because you have increased in height, and it set its top among the thick
boughs, and its heart was lifted up in its height...
PRIDE
The tree became prideful in its
beauty and tremendous stature. With its heart lifted up, it exalted
itself above all the rest of creation. This is the ultimate betrayal of
our creator, unbelief and pride. Unbelief - the turning away from God,
the very source of all that was good in the tree. Pride - believing in
its own righteousness, believing all that could be found good within the tree
was based on what the tree itself had done. We go on to read in the rest
of the chapter, that God cuts him down and casts him aside to be made an
example to the rest of the people's and nations
Though the story is about a tree and
is a metaphor for Assyria and Egypt, it too is a picture into the heart of man.
Are we all not guilty of the same? Probably much more than we know
or are willing to admit, we've taken credit for our own gifts, our own abilities.
We too have turned our backs on our creator and claimed for ourselves
these things, that we might exalt them over others for our own righteousness
sake.
Acknowledge that every good thing
comes from the Lord. Our part is to simply "abide" in him (John
15:4-5). Let His goodness flow forth in the very same way that a vine
produces the fruit that flows through the branch. In this, the fruit of
His spirit will be manifest in us - love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (Gal 5:2-23)
The next time you end up at a go-cart
track, remember, you have no control over its condition or speed. Win or lose, be thankful that you are in the
race. Let the joy of the moment and the
time spent with others be what consumes you, not your position on the track!
Love the part about the go carts. It made me think long and hard! 👍
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