The Biblical Illustrator
2 Chronicles 32:26
Notwithstanding, Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of his heart.
Hezekiah’s sin and humiliation
I. Show the nature and grounds of hezekiah’s humiliation. His sin does not seem great in human estimation; but it was exceeding sinful in God’s sight.
1. He sought his own glory. He wished to show what a great man he was, in order that his alliance might be courted and his power feared.
2. He sought his own glory in preference to God’s honour. He had now a happy opportunity of magnifying the God of Israel. He might have
(1) recounted God’s past dealings with His people;
(2) commended Jehovah as an answerer of prayer.
3. He sought his own glory before the good of his friends. He should have recompensed the great kindness of the ambassadors by instructing them in the knowledge of the God of Israel.
II. Enquire whether we also have not similar grounds for humiliation.
1. Pride is deeply rooted in the heart of fallen man. We are vain
(1) of any natural endowments of body or mind.
(2) Of any acquired distinctions.
(3) Even the gifts of grace become occasions of pride.
2. We indulge this disposition to the neglect of God’s honour and of the eternal welfare of those around us.
(1) We have many opportunities of speaking for God.
(2) But how rarely is our intercourse with each other made subservient to His glory.
III. Inferences.
1. What dreadful evils arise from small beginnings. Hezekiah at first probably intended only to show civility to his friends.
2. How great is the efficacy of fervent prayer and intercession. God deferred the evil threatened till the next generation. (Skeletons of Sermon.)