Are you better than Thebes that sat along the Nile with
water surrounding her, whose rampart was the sea, the river her wall?
Nahum 3:8
Are you
better than…? It is a question of
comparison. In Nahum 3:8, God was asking the question and the city of Nineveh was
the target of the interrogation. The comparison between two great cities of the
ancient world is fascinating. Thebes had been a leading and celebrated city in
the Egyptian empire for centuries. In fact Thebes seemed to have infinite
resources until it was sacked by the Assyrians in the 7th Century
B.C. How does an invincible city fall? The presumed answer from Nineveh would
be that Thebes fell because “we” are greater. Based upon the characterization of Assyrian
arrogance and treachery, I can imagine a rather smug response. But, in the eyes
of God, comparison is dangerous. Certainly the point of God’s question was not to compare two earthly kingdoms. It was
to draw attention to the foolishness of comparing human power with the
sovereignty of God. Earlier in the book of Nahum, two questions establish a
proper perspective: “Who can stand before His
indignation? And who can endure the fierceness of His anger?”
So, we ask, “Am
I tempted to compare? No doubt. If I want to feel better about myself, I
compare. If I want to nourish my pride, I seek for an opportunity to compare.
If I want to elevate, I look for an opportunity to cast a downward glance. If I
want to rely on my own justification rather than celebrate the grace of God, I
manufacture a victory in an imaginary competition in my mind. Am I better than?
The question can lead down a prideful path. It’s a
path that leads in the wrong direction. Instead, I must choose the path that
leads back to the cross. My tendency to compare melts away in the presence of
the Savior. Paul wrote, “God
forbid that I should boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ”
(Galatians 6:14) I am who I am by the grace of God.