“He humbled himself in obedience to God and died a criminal’s death on a cross.” — Philippians 2:8 (NLT)
Devotion
Crucifixion was the most shameful death in the Roman world. It was reserved for the lowest criminals and slaves. Roman citizens were legally exempt from it, but Jesus, the eternal Son of God, equal with the Father, chose it. Not reluctantly, not passively. He chose silence in the trial when He had the power to speak. He stayed on the cross when He had the power to come down. Every single moment of that day was an active, sustained, costly decision to remain in surrender.
This is what courage actually looks like. Not holding on but letting go. Letting go of recognition when you could have demanded it. Letting go of power when you had every right to use it. Staying in the posture of obedience when everything in you wanted a way out.
The temptations that pulled at Jesus — to be relevant, to be spectacular, to be powerful — are the same ones that pull at us every day. We want platforms, applause, credit. We want to be seen, to be needed, to be valued. These are valid desires. The question is whether they are driving us, or whether we are free enough to lay them down for God’s will in our life?
Reflection
What are you holding onto right now that might require the courage to release?
Where have you been telling yourself that letting go is weakness, when it might actually be the braver thing?
Is there someone in your life whose interests you’ve been consistently putting behind your own? What would one deliberate act of costly humility look like this week?
Prayer
God, it’s easier to hold on than to let go. Show me what I’ve been gripping onto and give me the courage to release it. Help me release it because I know who I am in You. Humility is strength with a direction. Point me in Yours. Amen.