19 Points About Humility

This is a subtitle for your new post
NINETEEN WAYS TO BE HUMBLE
Jeremy Taylor’s years are 1613 to 1667. He was English and lived in the time when England was going back and forth between the Catholics and the Protestants. He spent some time in prison but wound up being a bishop. He’s best known for two books. One is called Holy Living and the other is called Holy Dying. In Holy Living he gives nineteen rules for living humbly.
Number one: "Do not think better of yourself because of any outward circumstance that happens to you."
Number two: "Humility does not consist in criticizing yourself for wearing ragged clothes." "Or in walking around submissively wherever you go. Humility consists in a realistic opinion of yourself, namely that you are an unworthy person."
Number three: "When you hold this opinion of yourself that you are an unworthy person, be content that others think the same of you."
Fourth: "Nurture the love to do good things in secret concealed from the eyes of others and therefore not highly esteemed because of them."
Number five: "Never be ashamed of your birth, of your parents, your occupation or your present employment or the lowly status of any of them."
Number six: "Never say anything directly or indirectly that will provoke praise or elicit compliments from others."
Number seven: "When you do receive praise for something you have done, take it indifferently and return it back to God, the giver of the gift, the blesser of the action, the aid of the project. Always give God thanks for making you an instrument of his glory for the benefit of others."
Number eight: "Make a good name for yourself by being a person of virtue and humility."
Number nine: "Do not take pride in any praise given to you. Rejoice in God who gives gifts others can see in you but let it be mixed with a holy respect so that this good does not turn into evil."
Number ten: "Do not ask others your faults with the intent or purpose being to have others tell you of your good qualities."
Number eleven: "When you are slighted by someone or feel undervalued, do not harbor any secret anger, supposing that you actually deserved praise and that they overlooked your value or that they neglected to praise you because of their own envy. Do not try to seek out a group of flatterers who will take your side and whose vain noises and empty praises you may try to keep up your high opinion of yourself."
Number twelve: “Do not entertain any of the devil's whispers of pride such as that of Nebuchadnezzar, ‘Is this not great Babylon which I have built for the honor of my name and the might of my majesty and the power of my kingdom?’”
Number thirteen: "Take an active part in the praising of others, entertaining their good with delight. In no way should you give in to the desire to disparage them or lessen their praise or make any objection. You should never think that hearing the good report of another in any way lessens your worth."
Number fourteen: "Be content when you see or hear that others are doing well in their jobs and with their income even when you are not. In the same manner be content when someone else's work is approved and yours is rejected."
Number fifteen: "Never compare yourself with others unless it be to advance your impression of them and lower your impression of yourself."
Number sixteen: "Do not constantly try to excuse all of your mistakes. If you have made a mistake or an oversight or an indiscretion, confess it plainly, for virtue scorns a lie for its cover."
Number seventeen: "Give God thanks for every weakness, fault, and imperfection you have. Accept it as a favor of God, an instrument to resist pride and nurse humility. Remember if God has chosen to shrink your swelling pride, he has made it that much easier for you to enter in through the narrow way."
Number eighteen: "Do not expose other's weaknesses in order to make them feel less able than you."
Number nineteen: "Remember that what is most important to God is that we submit ourselves and all that we have to him. This requires that we be willing to endure whatever his will brings us, to be content in whatever state we are in, and to be ready for every change.”
Source: “Soul Work”, Randy Harris
Bob's Blog









