As Long As the Rivers Run


Chapter 19

Walk Humbly with Your God

Home

Forward

Chapter 1: A time to be born

Chapter 2: O, Lord, Thou Hast Known Me

Chapter 3: The Early Years

Chapter 4: Thou Shalt Hear a Voice

Chapter 5: Study to Show Yourself Approved

Chapter 6: Let Him that Stole, Steal No More

Chapter 7: The Rod of Correction

Chapter 8: Fearfully and Wonderfully Made

Chapter 9: When I Became a Man

Chapter 10: They That Live After the Flesh

Chapter 11: Whosoever Will May Come

Chapter 12: I Am the Way

Chapter 13: Present Your Bodies

Chapter 14: Tell What God has Done

Chapter 15: I Make all Things New

Chapter 16: "Yes, Lord."

Chapter 17: You are My Witness

Chapter 18: And it Came to Pass

Chapter 19: Walk Humbly with Your God

Chapter 20: Touch Not, Taste Not, Handle Not

Chapter 21: All Things Work Together for Good

Chapter 22: Two are Better than One

Chapter 23: Fields Ready for Harvest

Chapter 24: Come and Help Us

Chapter 25: Laborers Together with Him

Chapter 26: My Presence Shall be With You

Chapter 27: Sowing Beside all Waters

Chapter 28: A Camp Different from Most

Chapter 29: Preach the Word, In Season, Out of Season

Chapter 30: A Reason for the Hope

Chapter 31: The Same Lord Over All

Chapter 32: Let Him Speak Now

Chapter 33: Now is the Accepted Time

Chapter 34: Other Sheep I Have

Chapter 35: Lubicon Lake

Chapter 36: And Thy House

Chapter 37: I Will Increase Your Borders

Chapter 38: You See Me, God

Chapter 39: The Gift of God is Eternal Life

Chapter 40: Call Unto Me and I Will Answer

Chapter 41: What is in Your Hand?

Chapter 42: By all Means

Chapter 43: Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem

Chapter 44: Workers Together with Him

Pastor Mervin Cheechoo, Cree Gospel Chapel

EPILOGUE

Favorite Family Photos

Here and There

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 At Bible School, Bill was learning more than the Bible. Being a child of his own culture cast into a strange new setting, the young Cree from Whitefish Lake Reserve ran into misunderstandings. His own thoughts, based on his life experience, were part of the mix. Responses of others around him didn’t always help. Canadian society of that day didn’t have official government policies of tolerance, human rights, and campaigns against racial discrimination as it does today. In that day, Indians were generally regarded as second class citizens. They weren’t full citizens. For example, they were not allowed to vote. It was illegal for them to go into a place where liquor was sold. These laws, and other laws like them daily reminded Indian people of their dissimilar place in society. 

        People, even some Christian people, who were prejudiced against Indians quite often seemed unaware of their attitude. But those who suffered from these attitudes, namely members of the Native population, were very aware of them. If, sometimes, Native people appeared overly sensitive to the treatment they received from individuals, it was no wonder. They suffered a lot. 

        During Bill’s first two years in Bible School, the mere fact of his living with a population of white people went a long way in changing attitudes on both sides. Nevertheless, it was this whole matter of prejudice and discrimination which God used to rub some rough edges off the young Christian. Proud of his heritage, he also was typically quiet and unresponsive socially. When something happened to Bill, he usually brooded over it. This sometimes resulted in a matter being carried inside him instead of being resolved. Under such circumstances, bitterness and resentment can easily obtain a stronghold in a person’s mind. 

        “I don’t remember ever apologizing to anybody before I went to Bible School,” Bill later affirmed. “At Bible School, God humbled me to apologize to a staff member. In my heart, I thought she was really the one who should have done the apologizing.” 

        The incident was simple enough. Students who were assigned to kitchen duties always left the dining room tables as soon as they finished their meal. This gave them a head start on cleaning up while the other students waited to be dismissed together by the presiding staff member. 

        One day, when Bill was assigned to kitchen clean up, he left the table as he had seen others do. The staff member followed him into the kitchen and, rather unceremoniously ordered him back to the table. 

        “I had noticed this staff member before,” Bill claimed. “She seemed to me to be prejudiced. I knew that this was the last straw. All my feelings of being treated differently, picked on by this woman, rose to the surface. I was really angry at her.” 

        Before the Lord in prayer, Bill was confronted with his own anger. Though the circumstances were different, the same question with which God faced Jonah now filled Bill’s mind. “Doest thou well to be angry?” 

        “No, Lord!” Confessing his need to let all anger be put away from him, Bill surrendered it to the Lord. That was not an easy step. But the next step was even more difficult. 

        “I was angry with you. I ask for your forgiveness.” Facing the staff member, Bill shuffled from one foot to the other. He knew God wanted him to apologize. It didn’t mean that Bill was enjoying the moment.

        “Oh! I noticed you were acting funny.” That was the staff member’s response. Perhaps she was taken aback by this unexpected humility. Perhaps she was uncomfortable about her own part in the matter. Perhaps, Christian leader that she was, she had yet to deal with a willingness to humble herself and admit wrongdoing. Whatever was going on inside of her, Bill knew that inside of him something bad been settled, something Peter had in mind when he wrote, Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time, (1 Peter 5:6). 

        “Since then, I’ve had to apologize to people a number of times. I’ve had to apologize to family members, to missionaries and to other people at different times for different things.” Bill admits, “I never find it easy to apologize. God has taught me that It’s better to admit wrong and apologize than to carry a wrong spirit inside.” 

        Learning humility is not a course from which one graduates on a given date. Humility doesn’t come by merely completing three years of study at Bible School. There are levels of humility which it takes a whole lifetime to learn. Maybe the learning process never ends in this life. But it certainly has a beginning. And, for Bill, learning humility began with that incident when he first humbled himself to apologize.

  

Home Forward Chapter 1: A time to be born Chapter 2: O, Lord, Thou Hast Known Me Chapter 3: The Early Years Chapter 4: Thou Shalt Hear a Voice Chapter 5: Study to Show Yourself Approved Chapter 6: Let Him that Stole, Steal No More Chapter 7: The Rod of Correction Chapter 8: Fearfully and Wonderfully Made Chapter 9: When I Became a Man Chapter 10: They That Live After the Flesh Chapter 11: Whosoever Will May Come Chapter 12: I Am the Way Chapter 13: Present Your Bodies Chapter 14: Tell What God has Done Chapter 15: I Make all Things New Chapter 16: "Yes, Lord." Chapter 17: You are My Witness Chapter 18: And it Came to Pass Chapter 19: Walk Humbly with Your God Chapter 20: Touch Not, Taste Not, Handle Not Chapter 21: All Things Work Together for Good Chapter 22: Two are Better than One Chapter 23: Fields Ready for Harvest Chapter 24: Come and Help Us Chapter 25: Laborers Together with Him Chapter 26: My Presence Shall be With You Chapter 27: Sowing Beside all Waters Chapter 28: A Camp Different from Most Chapter 29: Preach the Word, In Season, Out of Season Chapter 30: A Reason for the Hope Chapter 31: The Same Lord Over All Chapter 32: Let Him Speak Now Chapter 33: Now is the Accepted Time Chapter 34: Other Sheep I Have Chapter 35: Lubicon Lake Chapter 36: And Thy House Chapter 37: I Will Increase Your Borders Chapter 38: You See Me, God Chapter 39: The Gift of God is Eternal Life Chapter 40: Call Unto Me and I Will Answer Chapter 41: What is in Your Hand? Chapter 42: By all Means Chapter 43: Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem Chapter 44: Workers Together with Him Pastor Mervin Cheechoo, Cree Gospel Chapel EPILOGUE Favorite Family Photos Here and There Print this page

Copyright © 1999 by Bill and Shirley Jackson 

Published 1999 by
Northern Canada Mission Distributors

P0 Box
3030
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
S6V
7V4 

All Scripture quotations were taken from the HOLY BIBLE, New King James Version. Copyright © 1994 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 

Printed in Canada

ISBN:  1-896968-17-1 

99 00 01 02 03 / 5 4 3 2 1

 
As Long As the Rivers Run
ALATRR-0.1-ENG-0002

5/31/2003 5:41:36 PM

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