August 20, 2012

PRIDE, THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL


Out of the seven capital sins: pride, avarice, lust, anger, gluttony, envy and sloth, pride is one of the most profound of human weaknesses which takes the focus off of God and puts it on self. It is an attitude of self-worship and a self-important superiority of our mind that tells us we are better than, greater than, smarter than, wiser than, more knowledgeable than, more qualified than, more important than, more deserving than anyone else.

Pride hardens the mind and refuses to hear the wisdom of anyone. It is an acid that turns the finest fruit bitter. It is a superficial weed that grows in all soils, without need of water or care. It consumes and destroys every living thing that it overshadows. It is a swelling of the heart filled with ego and self-importance and raises us above others until we look down upon them. It is a cancer that rots the soul and blackens the soul, making it an ugly thing to behold even to the owner of that soul. A man infected with pride needs nothing, not even God. It throws up a wall between God and us, and rejects His help and guidance. It is the total inability to see beyond ourselves. It is a very ungodly and unholy attribute for a Christian to have and especially for a religious. 

Another major portion of this very prevalent sin of pride is enmity toward our fellowmen. It constantly brings contention, division and strife. The mind of a proud man seeks to construct everything in his internal world to offer up continual adoration and praise to the self, to the ego. He makes every man his enemy by opposing their intellects, opinions, works, wealth, talents and elevating himself above others and diminishing them. If others seem to excel more, he can find a way to depreciate that person or find fault. 

He is easily offended and holds grudges. He withholds forgiveness to keep another in his debt and to justify his injured feelings. He is not easily taught and he won’t change his mind to accept truths, because to do so imply he has been wrong. He does not receive advice or correction easily and always says, “My way is right, no other way is right.”

God hates pride because it separates us from Him. It quenches His Spirit in us and prevents His Life in our hearts from flowing out into our lives. It builds walls between God and us, and that is the reason Satan revels in the proud. He will do anything he can to get us to trade in our humility and intimate relationship with Christ for pride and intellectual knowledge of Him.

We know from the history that pride is the downfall of angels, kings, priests, generals, soldiers, lovers, and men in high places falling headlong into the abyss of sin. The scriptures abound with evidences of the severe consequences of the sin of pride to individuals, groups, cities, and nations.

The angel Lucifer (Satan's original name) was cast from heaven because of his pride. He was transformed from an angel of light to an angel of darkness due to his pride. Pride was the sin of Adam and Eve who disobeyed God and wanted to become like him. It destroyed the Nephite nation and the city of Sodom. Pride brought on the confusion of tongues at the Tower of Babel; pride brought defeat to Pharaoh and to Goliath; pride reduced Nebuchadnezzar to the condition of an animal; Saul became an enemy to David through pride.  King Noah was about to free the prophet Abinadi, but an appeal to his pride by his wicked priests sent Abinadi to the flames. Herod sorrowed at the request of his wife to behead John the Baptist.  His death resulted because he gave not God the glory. He prided himself equal to God and the Lord smote him. Pride drew Christ's divine criticism upon the Pharisees and the Scribes.

Only insecure people love human applause. They have to make sure that everybody knows what they have accomplished and from where they have come. They get their identity in being promoted, but they forget that promotion comes from God. They take great pride in driving the right kind of car, keeping an expensive mobile, living in the right kind of house and office. They wear designer clothes and show themselves that they have been born with a silver spoon in their month and they are from rich and respected families. They feel proud of their accomplishments and their identity.

Consider the emptiness of created things. How empty is fame, how empty is praise, how empty the little satisfactions we get from boast­ing and criticizing. Remember that we came from nothing, we are nothing, and we can do nothing, except in so far as God helps us.                          

If anyone has a right to be proud, it must be God. After all, He created the world without any help from us. He Himself is uncreated, eternal, and utterly faultless. If we think there is a problem with God, we are just showing our ignorance. He Himself dwells in unapproachable light, He is mighty, glorious and perfect in beauty and splendour, all-knowing - no one and nothing can compare to Him. He is the only One qualified to be proud. And yet, He is humble.

We all must have seen the movie, "King of Kings." Produced years ago by Cecil De Mille. One of the most interesting parts of the play is that which pictures Mary Magdalene meeting our Lord for the first time. She came to Christ - a sinner; she left - a saint. She came - proud, sensual, and vain; she left­ - humble and mortified. She came - guilty; she left - forgiven. It was intensely interesting to see how this change took place.


Christ merely looks at Mary, looks into her very soul. And that look of our Lord softens her proud heart. She draws back some distance. She cannot bear that sad, loving look. The struggle in her soul is clearly shown in the picture. Each in its turn, the seven deadly sins come in the guise of devils and whisper into the ear of Magdalene. Each in turn is repulsed by her, as she drinks in grace from the gaze of Christ. The devil of pride and the devil of avarice, together with the devils of lust, anger, gluttony, envy and sloth, are firmly brushed aside. Finally Mary is free of her old tempters. In shame she drops her head. In modesty she covers her half­-nude body. She rushes to Christ and falls at His feet. There she secures the forgiveness for which her entire being is crying out.

Like Mary Magdalene, we also are affected and enslaved by at least some if not all of these same death-dealing devils, the seven capital sins. It is not our privilege to look into the physical face of Jesus, as she did. Never­theless, we can go before Christ present in the tabernacle and by faith look into His face as He looks into our hearts and ask him to give us power to fight against the sin of pride which is our greatest enemy - the root of all that is evil, and the failure of all that is good.

May Christ's humility drive out our pride, as His love and grace drove pride from the heart of Mary Magdalene.

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