Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Foundational Christian Virtue: Underdogism



That is, humility.

"I have always been exceedingly delighted with the words of Chrysostom, 'The foundation of our philosophy is humility'; and still more with those of Augustine, 'As the orator, when asked, What is the first precept in eloquence? answered, Delivery: What is the second? Delivery: What the third? Delivery: so, if you ask me in regard to the precepts of the Christian Religion, I will answer, first, second, and third, Humility.' By humility he means not when a man, with a consciousness of some virtue, refrains from pride, but when he truly feels that he has no refuge but in humility. This is clear from another passage, 'Let no man,' says he, 'flatter himself: of himself he is a devil: his happiness he owes entirely to God. What have you of your own but sin? Take your sin which is your own; for righteousness is of God.' Again, 'Why presume so much on the capability of nature? It is wounded, maimed, vexed, lost. The thing wanted is genuine confession, not false defence.' 'When any one knows that he is nothing in himself, and has no help from himself, the weapons within himself are broken, and the war is ended.' All the weapons of impiety must be bruised, and broken, and burnt in the fire; you must remain unarmed, having no help in yourself. The more infirm you are, the more the Lord will sustain you. So, in expounding the seventieth Psalm, he forbids us to remember our own righteousness, in order that we may recognise the righteousness of God, and shows that God bestows his grace upon us, that we may know that we are nothing; that we stand only by the mercy of God, seeing that in ourselves eve are altogether wicked. Let us not contend with God for our right, as if anything attributed to him were lost to our salvation. As our insignificance is his exaltation, so the confession of our insignificance has its remedy provided in his mercy. I do not ask, however, that man should voluntarily yield without being convinced, or that, if he has any powers, he should shut his eyes to them, that he may thus be subdued to true humility; but that getting quit of the disease of self-love and ambition, 'filautia kai filoneikia', under the blinding influences of which he thinks of himself more highly than he ought to think, he may see himself as he really is, by looking into the faithful mirror of Scripture." (John Calvin, Institutes, 2.2.11)




3 comments:

  1. AMEN, Don't stop reminding people about this 5 star matter. Keep moving.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I needed this reminder for myself, brothers.

    I was getting careless and succumbing to pride. The Lord reminded me of my utter helplessness.

    Praise the Lord who does not leave us to ourselves! Soli Deo Gloria!

    ReplyDelete

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