The overarching message of this...
Illustration
The overarching message of this passage seems to be expressed in verse 12 -- a warning against overconfidence. Two illustrations come to mind and are similar in their admonitions.
The first is the story of King Canute (A.D. 995-1035) ordering back the sea. Several versions are told and perhaps none are true. The earliest recension of the tale testifies to the king's great humility. It is recounted in Henry of Huntingdon's Historia Anglorum that Canute was embarrassed and angered by the praise lavished upon him by his courtiers. To quiet their flattery, he arranged the seaside incident. After Canute ordered the sea back and his feet were soaked, he reportedly said: "Let all men know how empty and worthless is the power of kings, for there is none worthy of the name, but He whom heaven, earth and sea obey by eternal laws." After this, he supposedly refused to wear the crown but instead displayed it in Winchester Cathedral.
The second illustration is a poem by Robert Frost entitled "On Being Idolized."
The wave sucks back and with the last of water
It wraps a wisp of seaweed round my legs,
And with the swift rush of its sandy dregs
So undermines my barefoot stand I totter.
And did I not take steps would be tipped over
Like the ideal of some mistaken lover.
The first is the story of King Canute (A.D. 995-1035) ordering back the sea. Several versions are told and perhaps none are true. The earliest recension of the tale testifies to the king's great humility. It is recounted in Henry of Huntingdon's Historia Anglorum that Canute was embarrassed and angered by the praise lavished upon him by his courtiers. To quiet their flattery, he arranged the seaside incident. After Canute ordered the sea back and his feet were soaked, he reportedly said: "Let all men know how empty and worthless is the power of kings, for there is none worthy of the name, but He whom heaven, earth and sea obey by eternal laws." After this, he supposedly refused to wear the crown but instead displayed it in Winchester Cathedral.
The second illustration is a poem by Robert Frost entitled "On Being Idolized."
The wave sucks back and with the last of water
It wraps a wisp of seaweed round my legs,
And with the swift rush of its sandy dregs
So undermines my barefoot stand I totter.
And did I not take steps would be tipped over
Like the ideal of some mistaken lover.
