Scripture reminds us that we are to think of others in a way that is very difficult to do. “Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves” (Phil. 2:3).
Now the sense of this is not that we are to pretend that others are better than we are in things that we can do and they can’t. If you can play the piano and they cannot, if you know how to do differential equations and they can’t, if you know how to dunk a basketball and they can’t, considering someone else better than yourself does not mean telling yourself lies about it. Nor does it mean telling them lies about it.
Rather, the position of the other is more important to you than your own. You are not competing with them. You are not striving. Remember the first part of the verse. Do nothing from strife or vainglory. If you have a relationship with someone, and in your mind you have a running tally of points, and it is important to you that your number is always higher than theirs, then you have a problem.
So you play the piano better. Fine. Their playing is more important to you than yours is. You run a business better. Fine. Their business matters more to you than your own does. Sometimes competition is unavoidable, just in the nature of the case. They set up shop after you did, and their establishment is right across the street. That is the way it does sometimes. But competition in the ego is never unavoidable. That is what must be laid down. That is what we must consider as cross fodder.
When we strive, we are trying to pick things up with our right hand, instead of receiving them with our left. Are you in any kind of adversarial set up with anyone else in the body, at any level? Then there is a sense in which you must let it go.
Luke 17
3 So watch yourselves.
“If your brother or sister[a] sins against you, rebuke them; and if they repent, forgive them. 4 Even if they sin against you seven times in a day and seven times come back to you saying ‘I repent,’ you must forgive them.”
For me the shock is in realizing that forgiveness isn’t something that happens only once, even regarding the same offense. You think you have forgiven and moved on, only to find yourself unexpectedly upset months or even years later.
This is awesome. If I could just lament for a moment, humility is not so easy in the world today, it probably never has been, but today more than ever it is sure to leave you feeling like a bit of road kill. So, within faith, within conservative Christianity and our entanglement with politics, we have created these ideas about the horrors of virtue singling, about people trying to be “extra spiritual,” as if that were a bad thing, about how we should never repent or bend in our opinions or beliefs. So the left side of the aisle hits… Read more »
Well said, ME.
I think humility is the only logical response to the grandeur, the majesty, and the sovereignty of God.
When I look up into the stars at night and know that He not only created them but they all sing to His glory and He knows each one by name, who am I that He would be mindful of me?
So good
Looks like you missed posting the communion exhortation.
NOBODY DOES THIS…. IT”S A NICE CONCEPT…..BUT NOBODY DOES THIS …GET REAL
I’m so sorry. Some people really do. Some will even lay down their very lives for others.
I saw a video today about a teenaged boy who jumped into freeway traffic to save a cat. I might do that but I would pray that none of my loved ones would do that.
ME, have you thought of warning your readers against 13 Reasons? It seems to be causing a lot of girls in particular to glamorize suicide. My daughter found it absolutely compelling but it really disturbed her.