A study on the modern "virtue" pride and it's ancient antidote - humility.
Tuesday, May 10, 2022
Saturday, May 7, 2022
The rags of our Savior
The rags of our Savior are more precious than royal purple, and his poor manger is more glorious than the gilded thrones of kings. The poverty of Christ is greater riches than all this world’s wealth. For what is richer or more precious than the humility by which heaven is bought and divine grace is obtained? —St. Bernard of Clairvaux, On the Miraculous Nature of the Nativity
Thigpen, Paul. A Year with Mary: Daily Meditations on the Mother of God (p. 432). Saint Benedict Press. Kindle Edition.
Friday, April 29, 2022
The Visitation shows Mary’s humility and charity
St. Frances de Sales shows how the visitation of Mary to Elizabeth illustrates the truth that humility and charity go together.
Our Lady was not satisfied with having humbled herself before the divine Majesty, for she well knew that humility and charity are not in their perfection until they are transmitted to their neighbor. From the love of God proceeds love of neighbor, and the great apostle says that the greatness of your love for your brothers will be directly proportioned to the greatness of your love for God (see Rom 13:8; Gal 5:14; Eph 5:1–2). St. John teaches us this when he writes: “How can it be that you love God, whom you do not see, if you do not love your neighbor, whom you do see” (1 Jn 4:20)?
If we then wish to prove that we do indeed love God, and if we wish others to believe us when we assure them of this, we must love our brothers well, serve them, and assist them in their necessities. Now the holy Virgin, knowing this truth, set out promptly, says the evangelist, proceeding in haste into the hill country of Judah (see Lk 1:30), into the town of Hebron or, as others say, Jerusalem (it matters little), to serve her cousin Elizabeth in her advanced age and pregnancy.
In this she manifested great humility and charity; for as soon as she saw herself Mother of God, she humbled herself to the point of immediately setting out on the road to go help and assist that good woman. —St. Francis de Sales, Sermon for the Feast of the Visitation
Thigpen, Paul. A Year with Mary: Daily Meditations on the Mother of God (p. 425). Saint Benedict Press. Kindle Edition.
When pride takes hold
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April 29, 2022 |
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You... proud? About what? (The Way, 600) |
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When pride takes hold of a soul, it is no surprise to find it
bringing along with it a whole string of other vices: greed, self-indulgence,
envy, injustice. The proud man is always vainly striving to dethrone God, who
is merciful to all his creatures, so as to make room for himself and his ever
cruel ways. We should beg God not to let us fall into this temptation.
Pride is the worst sin of all, and the most ridiculous. If, with its multiple
delusions, it manages to get a hold, the unfortunate victim begins to build
up a facade, to fill himself with emptiness, and becomes conceited like the
toad in the fable which, in order to show off, puffed itself up until it
burst. Pride is unpleasant, even from a human point of view. The person who
rates himself better than everyone and everything is constantly studying
himself and looking down on other people, who in turn react by ridiculing his
foolish vanity. (Friends of God, 100) |
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Felix culpa! ‑‑ O happy fault!
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April 28, 2022 |
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Humility is born of knowing God and knowing oneself. (The
Forge, 184) |
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Those periods of depression, because you see your defects or
because others discover them, have no foundation ... Ask for true humility.
(Furrow, 262) Let us flee from the false humility which is called
comfort-seeking. (Furrow, 265) Lord, I ask for a gift from you: Love, a Love that will
cleanse me. And another gift as well: self‑knowledge so that I may be filled
with humility. (The Forge, 185) The saints are those who struggle right to the end of their
lives, who always get up each time they stumble, each time they fall, and
courageously embark on their way once more with humility, love and hope. (The
Forge, 186) If your mistakes make you more humble, if they make you reach
out more urgently for God's helping hand ‑‑ then they are a road to sanctity.
Felix culpa! ‑‑
O happy fault!, the Church sings. (The Forge, 187) Humility teaches each soul not to lose heart in the face of of
its own blunders. True humility leads us to ask for forgiveness. (The Forge,
189) |
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
“Where there is humility, there is wisdom”
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April 27, 2022 |
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Quia respexit humilitatem ancillae suae -- because he has
looked graciously upon the lowliness of his handmaid ... I am more convinced
every day that authentic humility is the supernatural basis for all virtues!
Talk to Our Lady, so that she may train us to walk along that path. (Furrow,
289) |
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If we turn to Sacred Scripture we will see that humility is
absolutely necessary when we are making ready to listen to God. ‘Where there
is humility, there is wisdom’, says the book of Proverbs. Humility means
looking at ourselves as we really are, honestly and without excuses. And when
we realise that we are worth hardly anything, we can then open ourselves to
God’s greatness: it is there our greatness lies. How well Our Lady, Jesus’ Holy Mother, understood this! She,
the most exalted of all God’s creatures that have existed or ever will exist
upon this earth! Mary glorifies the power of Our Lord, who ‘has put down the
mighty from their thrones and has exalted the lowly’. And she sings of how
his divine providence has once again been fulfilled in her: ‘because he has
regarded the lowliness of his handmaid, behold henceforth all generations
shall call me blessed’. Mary becomes transformed in holiness in the depths of her most
pure heart on seeing the humility of God: ‘the Holy Spirit shall come upon
you, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow you; and therefore the
Holy One to be born of you shall be called the Son of God’. The Blessed
Virgin’s humility is a consequence of that unfathomable depth of grace which
comes into operation with the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed
Trinity in the womb of his ever Immaculate Mother. (Friends of God, 95-96) https://opusdei.org/en/dailytext/where-there-is-humility-there-is-wisdom/ |
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
How things are...
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April 26, 2022 |
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“It is a great thing to know oneself to be nothing
before God” |
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It is a great thing to know oneself to be nothing before God,
because that is how things are. (Furrow, 260) |
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Allow me to remind you that among other evident signs of a
lack of humility are: --Thinking that what you do or say is better than what others
do or say; --Always wanting to get your own way; --Arguing when you are not right or -- when you are --
insisting stubbornly or with bad manners; --Giving your opinion without being asked for it, when charity
does not demand you to do so; --Despising the point of view of others; --Not being aware that all the gifts and qualities you have
are on loan; --Not acknowledging that you are unworthy of all honour or
esteem, even the ground you are treading on or the things you own; --Mentioning yourself as an example in conversation; --Speaking badly about yourself, so that they may form a good
opinion of you, or contradict you; --Making excuses when rebuked; --Hiding some humiliating faults from your director, so that
he may not lose the good opinion he has of you; --Hearing praise with satisfaction, or being glad that others
have spoken well of you; --Being hurt that others are held in greater esteem than you; --Refusing to carry out menial tasks; --Seeking or wanting to be singled out; --Letting drop words of self-praise in conversation, or words
that might show your honesty, your wit or skill, your professional prestige
... ; --Being ashamed of not having certain possessions ... (Furrow,
263) https://opusdei.org/en/dailytext/know-yourself-to-be-nothing-before-god/ |