“If I testify about myself, my testimony is not true” (John 5:31)
These words of Jesus surprised me a few days ago, my son. They caught my attention for at least two reasons: my Lord’s humility and its stark contrast with the world.
As for the latter, the people of the world live by promoting themselves. Particularly in academia and in the United States, this is overblown (although Mom, who knows the Colombian corporate world very well, tells me that it is not different there). There are too many people around me of meager talent whose only virtue to reach success has been their ability to sell their name. If it is annoying to see a capable person promoting himself, you will soon realize how unpleasant it is to see an incapable person climbing the ladder just because he sells himself well.
This is where my Lord’s humility comes as such a contrast. It is the Incarnated God Himself who is speaking here! The Second Person of the Trinity! The Son of God! The Son of Man! And yet He says that if he were to testify about Himself, His testimony would not be valid. Jesus changed the world and split human history into two without testifying of Himself. Instead, He bore witness to God the Father and, in His own words, He left it to the Father to bear witness for Him: “The Father who sent me has himself borne witness about Me.” Indeed, the four Gospels tell us that when Jesus was baptized, the voice of God the Father was heard saying from heaven, “This is my beloved Son, with Whom I am well pleased” (see, e.g., Matthew 3:17).
Who are we going to follow? I admit that I promoted myself many times. But for us who have decided to follow Christ, believe in Him, and imitate Him, the only option is not to give glory to ourselves but to our God. Therefore, this is the criterion to use from this point on: if what I am going to say is to praise myself, it is wrong; if what I am going to say bears witness to our good God, it is worth it.
To round out the matter, I was also reading Deuteronomy 4: 5–6:
See, I have taught you statutes and rules, as the Lord my God commanded me, that you should do them in the land that you are entering to take possession of it. Keep them and do them, for that will be your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the peoples, who, when they hear all these statutes, will say, ‘Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people.’
Let me be absolutely clear about this: the Mosaic law is not for believers to fulfill. However, the written word in the old covenant is a type of the Word made flesh in the new one (Hebrews says that the law is a shadow of the good things to come, not the very presence of these realities), namely of Jesus, the Logos. What this means is that, although we are not called to fulfill the law of Moses, the attitude that the old covenant asks of the people of Israel with respect to the law is the attitude that we are to have with respect to the words of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Thus, the equation is clear: if I obey and practice the words of my Lord, He—not I, but He—will show my wisdom and understanding to others. Well, I am not looking for recognition anymore (it just took me 40+ years to figure this out!), but I feel great peace by knowing that my life is in God’s hands. What is important to me is that the words of Jesus have an unequivocal message: it does not matter that I live in an academic environment where appearing smart is seen as an asset because it’s not about selling myself; it’s about giving glory to Him.
I have been looking for a new job for three years and have deeply longed to change the one I now have, but the end does not justify the means. If change is going to happen, let it be in God’s way so that it will be worth it for eternity. If not, I am not interested.
