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Welcome to Part 2 of our Humility Series. In Part 1, we explored humility as a posture—a way of walking with God that is careful, teachable, and aligned with His character. Today, we turn to the first outward expression of that posture: “Do Justice.” Drawing from Micah 6:8, this teaching examines why justice is the very first instruction God gives when humility is expressed in daily life. Using the context of Micah’s message to Israel, we look at how a society that maintained religious activity still drifted into deep injustice, and why God confronted their behavior before He addressed their worship. In this episode, we explore: 1. Why God confronted Israel about justice and what their drift reveals about misplaced priorities 2. The parallels between Micah’s time and ours, and why justice remains an essential measure of spiritual alignment 3. How we often believe we are “doing justice” while our motives remain misaligned 4. The meaning of mishpat, the Hebrew term for justice that emphasizes fairness, protection, restoration, and consistent right treatment of people 5. Why justice must flow from humility and cannot be driven by emotion, bias, or self-interest 6. How justice shows up in everyday choices, including fairness, consistency, compassion, and the willingness to correct what is wrong Justice is humility made visible. It is the outward reflection of an inward posture that honors God. This session invites you to examine not only your actions, but the motives and attitudes behind them—because God evaluates justice at the level of the heart. As we continue this series, we will move next to “Love Mercy,” which examines the attitude of humility and how it shapes the inner movements of compassion and motive. Thank you for joining me on this journey toward a deeper, more aligned walk with God.