A
certain virtue that I’m endeared to is Humility.
There
is a thin line between being confident about oneself vs and being the only
person in your world.
There are some messages you read that make you think
carefully about your actions. It is easy to call yourself white until you stand
next to a white wall and then the difference is clear.
The
message below is speaking in volumes to me and it is on read-repeat because it broke down in details the meaning of humility and backed it up with scriptures. Humility is not an on and off switch but a lifestyle graced by God. From the below I also learnt that if at any point in time, I am despising myself thinking it is humility, it is not.
Let us
go on a transforming journey as we read the below:
Clothed in Robes of
Humbleness
by Mark Roper
Colossians 3:12
When
asked what the three most important Christian virtues were, Augustine replied,
“Humility, humility, and humility.” Yet, this great virtue is in rather short
supply in our culture.
There
is no way to become a mature Christian unless we learn to be humble.
Colossians
3:12, “…as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with
compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.
The
importance of Humility – God uses broken things.
It
takes broken soil to produce a crop,
Broken
clouds to produce rain,
Broken
grain to give bread and
Broken
bread to give strength.
It
is the broken alabaster box that gives forth perfume.
It
is the broken Peter, weeping bitterly, who returns to greater power than ever.
Biblical
humility is grounded in the character of God.
The
Father stoops down to help the poor and needy; the Son displayed humility from
the manger to the cross.
Before
the birth of Christ, no royalty would ever show their humility. That would be
too human, too common. Kings have parades & entourages to draw the focus
toward them. When Queen Elizabeth last visited America, she brought with her
the following items • 4000 pounds of luggage – 4 outfits for everyday she was
in America • 40 pints of plasma • Her own hairdresser • Two valets • An
official photographer • Two personal secretaries • THE COST OF HER TRIP TO AMERICA
WAS 20 MILLION DOLLARS
In
meek contrast, God’s visit to earth took place in an animal stable, no
attendants were present, there was no place for the baby to lay down except in
a feeding trough known as a manger.
In
fact, the event, which divided history and our calendars, went by unnoticed
except for a few shepherds who came by for a visit.
Humility is the
defining characteristic of an unpretentious and modest person, someone who does
not think that he or she is better or more important than others.
Shane
Claiborne, who spent a summer in the slums of Calcutta with Mother Teresa,
wrote about her experience there. She said, “People often ask me what Mother
Teresa was like. Sometimes it’s like they wonder if she glowed in the dark or
had a halo. She was short, wrinkled, and precious, maybe even a little ornery —
like a beautiful, wise old granny. But there is one thing I will never forget —
her feet. Her feet were deformed. Each morning in Mass, I would stare at them.
I wondered if she had contracted leprosy. But I wasn't going to ask, of course.
‘Hey Mother, what’s wrong with your feet?’ One day a sister said to us, ‘Have
you noticed her feet?’ We nodded, curious. She said: ‘Her feet are deformed
because we get just enough donated shoes for everyone, and Mother does not want
anyone to get stuck with the worst pair, so she digs through and finds them.
And years of doing that have deformed her feet.’ Years of loving her neighbor
as herself deformed her feet.”
Humility
means that our focus is away from ourselves and not on ourselves.
The
Scripture says, “Do
nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider
others better than yourselves. Each of you should look not only to your own
interests, but also to the interests of others” (Philippians 2:3-4).
“True humility is not an abject, groveling,
self-despising spirit; it is but a right estimate of ourselves as God sees us.”
*PLACCARD WORTHY*
Humility “not
thinking less of yourself but thinking of yourself less.”
Humility is quite
simply, truthfulness–self-honesty. (Self honesty…I think this is where it gets tricky
because for some self-honesty might be ‘I am who I am in Christ Jesus vs I am
untouchable because I am a god on this earth.. They are both accurate, but when
self is involved, it because a subjective kind of ball game)
A
well-known Christian businessman who was visiting a church was asked to give
his testimony. He said, “I have a fine family, a large house, a successful
business, and a good reputation. I have plenty of money so I can support some
Christian ministries very generously. Many organizations want me on their board
of directors. I have good health and almost unlimited opportunities. What more
could I ask from God?” As he paused for effect, a voice shouted from the back
of the auditorium, “How about asking Him for a good dose of humility?”
Humility is a
freedom from arrogance that grows out of the recognition that all we have and
are comes from God.
“The
axe cannot boast of the trees it has cut down. IT could do nothing but for the
woodsman. He made it, he sharpened it, he used it. The moment he throws it aside,
it becomes only old iron.”
Humility is The way
we approach God (..And God created man in His Own Image.. As Christians we have to realize
that we cannot get away with talking down to people and then talking up to God.
Imagine you created the most beautiful creatures and someone decides to insult
the esteem out of them or rubbish them like they are not worthy of air…and they
come back on Sunday morning to ask you for your unending blessings? I guess that is why it is often said ‘Thank God, God is not man!’ )
If
we go to visit in a friend’s house, we don’t go in our gardening clothes! We
know very well that it’s not the clothes that matter to our friend. It’s simply
a matter of respect that we should present ourselves as neatly as we can. The
fact that we prepare ourselves to go there is the way in which we outwardly
show our affection and our esteem for our friend. So it is with God’s house.
The parable has nothing to do with the actual clothes in which we go to church;
it has everything to do with the spirit in which we go to God’s house. Of
course we want to be reasonably clothed out of respect for our Lord but He’s
not expecting a fashion parade!
What He’s looking for is a garment of the mind and the heart. It’s to be clothed with
expectation, the garment of humility and penitence, and the robe of faith and
reverence. It’s all too easy to go to God’s house without preparation of
thought and prayer and self-examination.
Biblical
humility is recognizing we are inadequate, but we are created to be in God’s
image
“The
truth is this – pride must die in you, or nothing of heaven can live in you.”
Humility
creates within us a servant attitude.
In
the summer of 1986, two ships collided in the Black Sea off the coast of
Russia. Hundreds of passengers died as they were hurled into the icy waters
below. News of the disaster was further darkened when an investigation revealed
the cause of the accident. It wasn't a technology problem like radar
malfunction–or even thick fog. The cause was human stubbornness. Each captain
was aware of the other ship’s presence nearby. Both could have steered clear,
but according to news reports, neither captain wanted to give way to the other.
Each
was too proud to yield first. By the time they came to their senses, it was too
late.
Many
people do not like the idea of being a servant to others because they feel that
they are too good or they do not want to do the dirty work of the Kingdom, but
I will tell you that without the humble servant’s attitude that Christ showed. we run a great risk. Jesus is our perfect example of a humble servant.
God
gives grace to the humble but resists the proud (Prov 3:34)
In
Middle Eastern countries, it was the slaves who washed the feet of guests; here
Christ took the place of a slave. He makes this clear to His disciples: if
their Lord and Teacher has washed their feet, then they should wash one
another’s feet, that is, serve each other in humility.
Stoop
Down to Reach God’s Highest Gifts
F.
B. Meyer once said: “I used to think that God’s gifts were on shelves one above
the other, and that the taller we grew in Christian character the easier we
could reach them. I now find that God’s gifts are on shelves one beneath the
other. It is not a question of growing taller but of stooping lower; that we
have to go down, always down, to get His best gifts.”
The
Lord rewards the humble with wisdom (Prov
11:2 NIV) When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.
Humility
is the foremost test of a truly great person or leader (Luke 22:24-27)
Oswald
Chambers (1874-1917)
We
need to remember that we cannot train ourselves to be Christians; we cannot
discipline ourselves to be saints; we cannot bend ourselves to the will of God:
we have to be broken to the will of God.
There
is a great song that expresses the proper attitude of humbleness:
Have
Thine own way, Lord.
Have Thine own way.
Thou art the Potter,
I am the clay.
Have Thine own way.
Thou art the Potter,
I am the clay.
Mold
me and make me
After thy will.
While I am waiting,
Yielded and still.
After thy will.
While I am waiting,
Yielded and still.
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