Overcoming Pride
The first church I ever served was located in an extremely small
town in Eastern Kentucky. There wasn't even a stop-light at the
time. The church was full of wonderful farmers, which was
ironic, because the only time I had ever been to a farm up until
that time was on school field trips. On one occasion I was
visiting a family in the church and watched their young son
throw "feed" on the ground for the chickens. Very quickly there
was a swarm towards the food and chickens starting hitting other
chickens on the head with their beaks. What I learned is that
you could take a group of chickens, any chickens, throw in some
food and pretty soon a "pecking order" will be established. If
there are five chickens in the pen, there will be one chicken
that will dominate and peck the other four, another that will
peck the other three, until you get down to the last chicken who
has no-one to peck and gets pecked by everyone.
The Trappings of Pride
If there was someone who didn't relish being the fifth chicken
it was Naaman. 2 Kings 5:1 tells us, "Now Naaman was commander
of the army of the king of Aram. He was a great man in the sight
of his master and highly regarded..." Second only to the king of
the land, Naaman was a man who was used to getting his way. If
he told someone to do something they better do it or else. The
only problem with Naaman was that he had leprosy. But through a
series of events Naaman learned that the prophet Elisha had the
power to heal him. So Naaman went to Elisha and asked him to
work a miracle. Elisha responded by telling him in verse 5:10,
"Go, wash yourself seven times in the Jordan, and your flesh
will be restored." Feeling like a number five chicken, Naaman
stormed off. But eventually he humbled himself and returned to
wash in the Jordan and was healed.
People God Can Use
Jesus made it clear that life in the kingdom means willingly
becoming the fifth chicken. A few years ago a ministry friend
and I went to a conference in the south. It was hosted by a
mega-church that had grown from just a handful to thousands in
just a few short years. We were both looking forward to learning
a few secrets to help our churches grow. We were both taken back
by what we saw. The Pastor's face was everywhere. His face was
on all the tapes and books and CD's and Bible studies and flyers
and walls and PowerPoint and just about anywhere else it could
be squeezed. In the coffee shop he even had a cookie named after
himself. The staff at our church now jokes that "When we make it
big, we'll all get our own cookies." Not if God has anything to
do with it.