Moses stood accused by Miriam and Aaron, his own siblings. They questioned his unique calling, saying “Has the Lord spoken only through Moses?” Yet Moses didn’t defend himself. He prayed for Miriam’s healing when God struck her with leprosy. His hands stayed open—no clenched fists, no counter-accusations. Humility made him quick to listen, slow to speak. [44:33]
Pride demands recognition; insecurity shrinks from truth. But Moses anchored his worth in God alone. When we stop comparing ourselves to others, we become free to love them. God defends the humble, not the self-made.
Where do you scramble to prove your worth? What relationship feels like a competition? Name one area where you’ll choose “God is enough” over self-defense today.
“Now Moses was very humble—more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth.”
(Numbers 12:3, NLT)
Prayer: Ask God to reveal where pride or insecurity distorts your relationships.
Challenge: Text one person you’ve compared yourself to, affirming their God-given role.
Miriam’s skin turned white as snow. Her criticism of Moses brought physical decay—a visible sign of inward poison. Yet Moses cried, “Please, God, heal her!” No “I told you so.” No withheld mercy. His prayer took three seconds, but carried three days’ weight. God heard. [57:25]
Unforgiveness eats us alive. Moses refused to hoard offense because he knew God’s justice outweighed his grievances. When we pray for those who hurt us, we surrender the right to punish.
Who comes to mind when you hear “they don’t deserve mercy”? What bitter root have you watered this week?
“So Moses cried out to the Lord, ‘O God, please heal her!’”
(Numbers 12:13, NLT)
Prayer: Confess one resentment you’ve carried. Ask for grace to intercede instead.
Challenge: Write “Heal her” on your palm. Pray it whenever you notice it today.
The Israelites craved Egyptian stew while wandering the desert. They preferred slavery’s predictability to faith’s uncertainty. Moses, overwhelmed by their complaints, told God: “I can’t carry these people alone!” God responded by sharing leadership with seventy others. [42:54]
We collapse under burdens we refuse to share. Moses’ raw honesty invited God’s solution. Humility isn’t silent suffering—it’s saying “I need help” before resentment boils over.
What responsibility are you pretending to handle alone? Who could you ask for support today?
“I cannot carry all these people by myself; the burden is too heavy for me.”
(Numbers 11:14, NIV)
Prayer: Name one burden you’ve hidden. Ask God for courage to share it.
Challenge: Tell a trusted friend one thing you’ve been “fine” about but aren’t.
When God’s Spirit fell on the seventy elders, two men prophesied outside the camp. Joshua demanded Moses stop them. But Moses replied, “I wish all God’s people were prophets!” He refused to gatekeep God’s presence. [44:07]
Insecurity hoards honor; humility multiplies it. Moses celebrated others’ anointing because his identity wasn’t tied to being “the only one.” God’s glory expands, never diminishes.
Where do you feel threatened by others’ gifts? What ministry, role, or recognition have you clutched too tightly?
“Are you jealous for my sake? I wish that all the Lord’s people were prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit on them!”
(Numbers 11:29, NIV)
Prayer: Thank God for three people whose gifts challenge you.
Challenge: Publicly affirm someone doing “your” type of ministry.
Moses didn’t see the Promised Land. He led rebels for forty years yet died on a mountain, gazing at a promise others would enter. His legacy wasn’t perfection—it’s the prayer “Teach us to number our days.” He let God finish what he’d started. [01:10:08]
We idolize closure. But Moses shows us: our work matters most when surrendered. Letting God write “The End” frees us to plant seeds we’ll never see bloom.
What unfinished task haunts you? Can you trust God with the harvest?
“Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”
(Psalm 90:12, NIV)
Prayer: Release one unmet goal to God. Ask for peace in the “not yet.”
Challenge: Write a letter to someone who’ll continue your work, blessing their future efforts.
La humildad declara Dios es suficiente y por eso sana los conflictos. El orgullo y la inseguridad dicen lo contrario, y por eso infectan. La cultura de unidad y celebración es un regalo, pero su sombra es evitar las conversaciones difíciles. La imagen de Encanto desenmascara esa tentación de actuar como si todo estuviera bien, mientras la casa cruje por dentro; la salud no llega maquillando grietas, sino enfrentando lo roto con verdad y gracia.
Números 11 y 12 dibujan el camino. Moisés se quiebra delante de Dios y Dios le responde con ayuda, levantando setenta líderes. El deseo de Moisés no es control, es derramar: “quisiera que todos… fueran profetas.” Allí mismo, el orgullo y la inseguridad de Miriam y Aarón explotan en comparación y crítica. El texto afirma que Moisés era muy humilde. La humildad no se defiende ni compite. Moisés ora breve y claro por la que le hirió: “Oh Dios, te suplico que la sanes.” La humildad mira arriba, no alrededor.
Jesús marca la ruta del reino. Él no evita conflicto para traer paz, trae paz a través del conflicto. Enfrenta al diablo, al pecado y a líderes corruptos y gana para otros, no para sí. Si el Hijo no rehuyó el choque con el mal, sus discípulos tampoco deben confundir paz con silencio. Conflicto es conexión cuando se lo camina con el Espíritu, porque conecta con la verdad, con el otro y con el Dios que repara.
La práctica empieza con cinco movimientos. Enfrentar, no evitar, buscando paz por medio de la verdad. Ser vulnerable, porque Dios protege; compartir heridas sin arma ni armadura. Escuchar primero y hablar después, abriendo espacio para que el otro explique antes de acusar. Pedir perdón sin orgullo ni auto-desprecio; decir “lo siento” desde una identidad segura en Cristo. Perdonar y dejar a Dios ser juez; negarse a beber el veneno de la amargura, incluso cuando el otro ni se entera. La humildad no necesita que el otro pierda. Solo “ganamos juntos.” Dios es la victoria, así que el ego no tiene que serlo.
The enemy are not is not people. El enemigo no es conflicto. The enemy is not conflict. El enemigo es amargura. Esos son los enemigos. Thous are the enemies. Pero conflictos solo se ganan juntos. But conflicts are only one together. Humildad dice, dios es suficiente. God is en off. Él es mi victoria. Here is my victory. ¿Quién tiene dios como su victoria? Who has god as their victory. No necesito que tú pierdes. I don't need to the loose. Yo no necesito ganar solo. Don't need to one Yo quiero ganar contigo.
[00:56:01]
(44 seconds)
Ser vulnerable es demasiado peligroso para ellos. Be vulnerable is something very Humility can share woons. Porque dios es suficiente. Because god is suficiant. Dios me protege. God protexed me. No tengo miedo. I'm not aferred. Mi identidad está en Cristo. My identities in Christ. Y yo puedo compartir cómo me has herido. Mozes con dios with gone como leímos we read Saca su corazón y lo pone sobre la mesa.
[00:52:16]
(72 seconds)
Sed vulnerable, porque dios me protege. Be vulnerable because good protexed me. Ahora, una advertencia. no está bien. Comparte con un pastor que confías Nadie debe ser abusado Y conflictos sanos no ocurren en el medio de abuso. ¿Me Todos queremos ganar, ¿verdad? ¿Quién quiere perder un conflicto? Ganando. Di a tu vecino, solo nos ganamos juntos. We can only wind together.
[00:54:50]
(72 seconds)
Rereading chapter twelve. Próximo capítulo, sus hermanos vienen y dicen esto. that is. Mientras estaban en Hazarot, un un lugar del desierto, Miriam, su hermana, y Aarón, su hermano, criticaron a Moisés. Dijeron, ¿ha hablado el señor solamente por medio de Moisés? ¿Acaso no ha hablado también a través de nosotros? Y el señor los oyó. Ahora bien, Moisés era muy humilde, más que cualquier otra persona en la tierra.
[00:44:17]
(53 seconds)
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