It was a simple plan pitted against a great enemy but the Munich students were willing to do whatever they could. Too often we refuse to take action because the results don't seem large enough to warrant the expense of our time, or our money, or our effort. Today many Christians are only motivated to act when they feel sure that it will be worth their while.
"Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin, to see the plumb line in Zerubbabel’s hand." (Zechariah iv. 10)
It is humility that makes someone willing to do the task that seems like it will be insignificant, unprofitable, or badly received. To do the thing that the world would say is foolish. Hans' chocolate bar could do little to combat the ongoing starvation that the girl faced, yet God had given it as the provision for that situation. Many people mistakenly think that humility is seeing themselves as small. Had this been Hans Scholl's perspective he would have remained on the train overwhelmed by his inability to solve such a big problem. He would have missed the little opportunity - a chance to show God's love - if he had chosen to feel defeated because he couldn't solve the bigger problem - rescuing all the woman from the persecution they faced. Those who are truly humble acknowledge that they are insufficient but they are ready to do what they can, however little. True humility is seeing others as more important than ourselves; this was what Hans had. God does not require us to solve every problem or right every wrong, that is His job, but He does ask us to give our best. We are responsible to do all we can and to do it as well as we can. This is the lesson of the widow`s mite.
"And He (Jesus) looked up and saw the rich putting their gifts into the treasury, and He saw also a certain poor widow putting in two mites. So He said, “Truly I say to you that this poor widow has put in more than all; for all these out of their abundance have put in offerings for God, but she out of her poverty put in all the livelihood that she had.” (Luke xxi. 1-4)
We should not be trying to determine what work is a worthy expenditure of our time; that is pride. Humility is asking God what He considers important enough to invest in.
"I'm living my life for an audience of one. I live my life to please God." - Anne Graham Lotz
In trying to please any audience one must learn what moves them. The same is true of God. If we really are desiring to please Him we should be trying to discover what is stirring His heart and what He would do about it. God is humble and, as He showed us when He sent His Son to be born of a virgin and laid in a manger, He uses humble means. It may be that the thing you would have overlooked is what He is looking at, or that the plan that is "too simple" is actually how God intends to accomplish His purpose.
"I'm living my life for an audience of one. I live my life to please God." - Anne Graham Lotz
In trying to please any audience one must learn what moves them. The same is true of God. If we really are desiring to please Him we should be trying to discover what is stirring His heart and what He would do about it. God is humble and, as He showed us when He sent His Son to be born of a virgin and laid in a manger, He uses humble means. It may be that the thing you would have overlooked is what He is looking at, or that the plan that is "too simple" is actually how God intends to accomplish His purpose.
The White Rose Society, as Hans entitled their resistance organization, distributed several thousand pamphlets throughout the major cities of Germany over the course of a few months. Their words stirred a few dozen people into action. That may seem a remarkable feat for students working with a singular typewriter and one duplication machine in a studio basement, usually in the middle of the night. Yet when matched against Hitler`s power, an apathetic nation, and unfathomable acts of cruelty it must have seemed like an insignificant and hopeless task. Still they persevered in it with humility.
In February of 1943, Hans and Sophie Scholl were apprehended by the German authorities and sentenced to death for their crimes against the Reich. Their work cost them much and seemed to have accomplished little, yet they did not regret their actions for a moment. They had done what they could, what they knew was right and they didn't look to the results for justification. Later it was revealed that members of the highest levels of the Nazi party considered the efforts of these students to be one of the greatest threats against the Third Reich! Neither Hans nor Sophie ever knew that, yet their actions showed that they knew the humble things were important.
"How can we expect righteousness to prevail when there is hardly anyone willing to give himself up individually to a righteous cause? Such a fine, sunny day and I have to go but what does my death matter, if through us thousands of people are awakened and stirred to action?” - Sophie Scholl
In Christ
quiana
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