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Eating Humble Pie (Psalm 30–32)

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Manage episode 517800641 series 3694978
Content provided by Stephen Davey. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Stephen Davey or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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Pride sneaks in sounding like confidence and leaves us feeling empty. We unpack how David’s story in Psalms 30–32 exposes the subtle drift from “God-centered” to “self-secure,” and why that shift always costs more than it promises. When David boasts, “In my prosperity, I shall never be moved,” the result isn’t strength but distance—God’s face hidden, joy fading, and a heart weighed down. Then comes the turn: God’s rescue, favor that outlasts anger, and a path back through honest confession.
We walk through Psalm 31 to see humility as strong surrender, not weak self-loathing. David warns that pride will be repaid, yet a brighter picture emerges as Jesus quotes, “Into your hands I commit my spirit,” modeling radical trust at the cross. That moment reframes humility as open-handed faith—entrusting outcomes, reputation, and hidden motives to the Father. If pride clenches and controls, humility releases and receives.
Psalm 32 offers the cure in plain words: acknowledge, uncover, confess. David describes the blessedness of forgiveness with three angles—transgression, sin, iniquity—and shows how pride blocks the flow of blessing like plaque in an artery. The relief of confession isn’t theoretical; it’s felt in a clean conscience and restored fellowship. We share practical cues for spotting pride’s creep (listen to your pronouns, watch your envy), simple steps for prompt and specific confession, and daily practices that keep a soft heart before God. Humble pie may not be on any menu, but it’s the meal that turns weeping into morning joy.
If this helped you breathe a little easier, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage to confess, and leave a review to help others find their way back to joy.

The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Eating Humble Pie (Psalm 30–32) (00:00:00)

2. Pride’s Problem And The Psalms (00:00:33)

3. The Origin Of “Humble Pie” (00:01:10)

4. David’s Pride And Psalm 30 (00:03:18)

5. Warning Signs Of A Proud Heart (00:04:42)

6. Psalm 31 And True Humility (00:05:54)

7. Psalm 32: Confession And Relief (00:07:10)

8. Joy Restored And Final Blessing (00:09:14)

9. Resources And How To Connect (00:11:56)

330 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 517800641 series 3694978
Content provided by Stephen Davey. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Stephen Davey or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Share a comment

Pride sneaks in sounding like confidence and leaves us feeling empty. We unpack how David’s story in Psalms 30–32 exposes the subtle drift from “God-centered” to “self-secure,” and why that shift always costs more than it promises. When David boasts, “In my prosperity, I shall never be moved,” the result isn’t strength but distance—God’s face hidden, joy fading, and a heart weighed down. Then comes the turn: God’s rescue, favor that outlasts anger, and a path back through honest confession.
We walk through Psalm 31 to see humility as strong surrender, not weak self-loathing. David warns that pride will be repaid, yet a brighter picture emerges as Jesus quotes, “Into your hands I commit my spirit,” modeling radical trust at the cross. That moment reframes humility as open-handed faith—entrusting outcomes, reputation, and hidden motives to the Father. If pride clenches and controls, humility releases and receives.
Psalm 32 offers the cure in plain words: acknowledge, uncover, confess. David describes the blessedness of forgiveness with three angles—transgression, sin, iniquity—and shows how pride blocks the flow of blessing like plaque in an artery. The relief of confession isn’t theoretical; it’s felt in a clean conscience and restored fellowship. We share practical cues for spotting pride’s creep (listen to your pronouns, watch your envy), simple steps for prompt and specific confession, and daily practices that keep a soft heart before God. Humble pie may not be on any menu, but it’s the meal that turns weeping into morning joy.
If this helped you breathe a little easier, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage to confess, and leave a review to help others find their way back to joy.

The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Eating Humble Pie (Psalm 30–32) (00:00:00)

2. Pride’s Problem And The Psalms (00:00:33)

3. The Origin Of “Humble Pie” (00:01:10)

4. David’s Pride And Psalm 30 (00:03:18)

5. Warning Signs Of A Proud Heart (00:04:42)

6. Psalm 31 And True Humility (00:05:54)

7. Psalm 32: Confession And Relief (00:07:10)

8. Joy Restored And Final Blessing (00:09:14)

9. Resources And How To Connect (00:11:56)

330 episodes

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