The Faith That Shaped Moses’ Humility
Hebrews 11:24–26 gives a powerful window into why Moses made one of the most radical decisions in Scripture—turning away from privilege, power, and comfort in order to follow God. The passage explains that Moses’ choice was not impulsive or emotional, but deeply rooted in faith, identity, and eternal perspective.
First, Moses refused to be identified as “the son of Pharaoh’s daughter.” This was more than rejecting a title—it was a rejection of an entire identity built on status, wealth, and influence. As a member of Egypt’s royal household, Moses had access to everything the world could offer: education, authority, security, and likely a future throne. Yet Hebrews tells us he refused this identity. Why? Because by faith, he recognized that his true identity was not in Egypt, but with God’s people. This kind of humility is striking—he willingly stepped down from greatness in the eyes of the world in order to align himself with what God valued.
Second, Moses chose suffering over comfort. The text says he chose “to suffer affliction with the people of God rather than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin.” Notice the language—this was a deliberate decision. Moses understood that sin offers pleasure, but only temporarily. Egypt represented immediate gratification, ease, and worldly success. But Moses saw through that illusion. He recognized that a life disconnected from God, no matter how luxurious, is ultimately empty and fleeting. His humility is seen in his willingness to embrace hardship rather than cling to comfort when that comfort came at the cost of faithfulness.
Third, Moses redefined what true wealth is. Verse 26 says he considered “the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt.” That statement flips worldly logic upside down. Egypt’s خز treasures were immense—gold, power, influence—but Moses saw something more valuable: identifying with God, even if it meant shame or suffering. “The reproach of Christ” points to the kind of rejection and sacrifice that comes with living for God. Moses valued that more than anything Egypt could give because he had a forward-looking faith. The passage concludes by saying “he looked to the reward.” In other words, Moses lived with eternity in view. He understood that what God promises far outweighs anything this world can offer.
Ultimately, Hebrews 11:24–26 shows that Moses humbled himself because he saw clearly. By faith, he saw who he really was, what truly matters, and what lasts forever. His decision wasn’t about losing something—it was about gaining something far greater. He gave up a temporary kingdom for an eternal one. That’s the heart of biblical humility: not thinking less clearly, but thinking more clearly about God, ourselves, and eternity.
If you take this seriously, it challenges a hard question: are you making decisions based on what feels good now, or on what actually lasts? Moses forces you to confront that.




