Daily Program

A Pride Test

Series: Seeking Him--Humility: Coming to God on His Terms

Monday, September 17 2007

Leslie Basham: Here’s Nancy Leigh DeMoss with a pop quiz.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: When is the last time you said these words to a family member, to a friend, to a co-worker? "I was wrong. Will you please forgive me?" Let me tell you, if it’s been more than a month, mark it down. Haven’t you sinned in a month?

When was the last time you said that to your husband? "I was wrong. Will you please forgive me?" Why is it so hard for us to say those words? Why? Because we’re proud.

Leslie: It’s Monday, September 17, and this is Revive Our Hearts with Nancy Leigh DeMoss. We all need revival. Nancy explained why last week when she began a series called Seeking Him. It’s a 12-week study on personal revival. A lot of women are listening each day while studying related material in the Seeking Him workbook. Today Nancy will tell us about a prerequisite to revival.

Nancy: Well, we’re continuing now into our second week of this series on Seeking Him—seeking the Lord—with the goal that the Lord will come and, as Hosea says, rain righteousness upon us. This week we want to talk about what I think biblically is one of the most foundational elements of seeking the Lord.

It’s the foundation for experiencing and enjoying the presence of the Lord in personal revival and in corporate revival. It’s the starting place. If you miss this step, you will never experience revival. You’ll never experience the nearness of God in your life, in your marriage, in your home if you miss this very foundational principle.

What is it? Well, if we go to 2 Chronicles chapter 7, verse 14, that verse is familiar to us. The Scripture says, “If my people, who are called by my name, will . . .” What’s the first thing? “humble themselves . . .” (NIV). Humility.

Humility—the thing everybody says they want, but most of us don’t realize how much of it we lack and need. We see the absence of it in other people more than we can see its absence in our own lives.

So this week we want to talk about humility and its converse, pride. So by looking at pride, we’ll see what it is that God needs to change and what we need to repent of to have humble hearts.

Isaiah 57, verse 15, tells us how important God views humility. “Thus says the High and Lofty One who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: ‘I dwell in the high and holy place’” (NKJV).

Notice all those references to God being high. He is lofty. He is exalted. He is elevated. He is high up above us. God says, “My address, the place where I live is this high and holy place." He is transcendent. He is further beyond and above us than we could ever imagine.

But God says I have another address. There’s another place where I live besides the high and the holy, exalted place. I also dwell “with him who is contrite and lowly in spirit” (NIV) or a humble spirit as some of your translations say.

So God says I dwell in this high transcendent place far beyond what you could ever imagine, what you could ever attain to, but I also dwell with those, close to those, at home with those, who have a humble and a contrite spirit. “To revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones” (Isaiah 57:15, NKJV).

You want to experience revival in your life? The starting place is a contrite and a humble spirit. You want to experience revival in your home, your marriage, with your children? The starting place is humility, a humble, a contrite, a lowly, a broken heart. So God who is high and lifted up says, "I stoop down in effect to meet with those who have a lowly, a humble spirit."

Now as we mentioned, pride is the opposite of a humble spirit, so I want us to talk about what is pride. What does it look like? How does God feel about it? How can we identify its evidences in our lives?

Pride: self-exaltation. God said, “I am the high One. I am the lofty One.” Pride is when we say, “I’m the high one. I’m the lofty one.” That was Satan’s first sin. That’s what got him in all that trouble. "I will be like God." Self-exaltation.

Lifting ourselves up, because when we lift ourselves, by default, we bring God down. Isn’t that what our whole world system does? It deifies man and humanizes God, bringing Him down to our level and trying to bring us up to His level.

Pride is a sense of self-importance. It’s my world revolving around me. Self-centeredness. Self-absorption. It’s all those self-ish words. Pride.

Jonathan Edwards said:

[Pride] is . . . the first sin that ever entered into the universe and the last that is rooted out.  It is God’s most stubborn enemy!

Pride is much more difficult to be discerned than any other corruption because of its very nature. That is, pride is a person having too high an opinion of himself.  Is it any surprise, then, that a person who has too high an opinion of himself is unaware of it? 

Again, we can see it in others; but when we have too high an opinion of ourselves, we’re unaware that we do. Pride makes us blind to our failures, to our weaknesses, to our need. It makes us think we’re okay.

Now, we hear a lot today about self-image and people saying, "I’ve got a poor self-image. I’ve got low self-esteem." According to the Scripture, the problem is just the reverse. It’s that we think so much of ourselves that we get easily wounded when others don’t think highly of us.

It’s that business as one writer said of “thinking much about ourselves and much of ourselves.” Oswald Sanders said egotism or pride “is the practice of thinking and speaking much of oneself, the habit of magnifying one’s attainments or importance. It leads one to consider everything in its relation to himself rather than in relation to God and the welfare of His people.”

So we say, "How does this affect me? The way my husband is behaving, the way my children are acting, the way my co-workers are treating me, the way the weather is, the way my health is, how does this affect me? How does this make me feel?" Rather than what does God think about this? How does this help the welfare, the well-being of God’s people?

C. S. Lewis put it this way, “The essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere flea-bites in comparison. It was through Pride that the devil became the devil. Pride leads to every other vice. It is the complete anti-God state of mind.”

So just how serious is pride? Let me ask you to turn in your Bible to the book of Proverbs, chapter 26. I want us to read there a series of verses that give us a contrast that helps us see how serious pride is. Verse 1. Now, you’ll notice a word in the first 12 verses that recurs over and over again, and it’s the word fool. This passage is talking first about a fool.

Verse 1, “Like snow in summer or rain in harvest, so honor is not fitting for a fool.” Honor doesn’t go with a fool in the same way that snow doesn’t go with summer.

Verse 3, “A whip for the horse, a bridle for the donkey, and a rod for the back of fools.” That’s how you have got to deal with a fool.

Look at verse 6: “Whoever sends a message by the hand of a fool cuts off his own feet and drinks violence.” He’s useless. You’re going to get yourself in trouble if you entrust your message to a fool.

Verse 7, “Like a lame man’s legs, which hang useless, is a proverb in the mouth of fools.” Fools don’t have any wisdom so what good does it do if they say wise things? It’s useless in their mouths.

Verse 8, “Like one who binds the stone in the sling is one who gives honor to a fool.” Now if you bind a stone in a sling, what’s going to happen when you . . . It won’t go anywhere. It won’t do anything. It won’t reach its object. He says that’s the same as if you give honor to a fool. It’s foolishness.

Verse 9, “Like a thorn that goes up into the hand of a drunkard is a proverb in the mouth of fools.” He’s just staggering around. He’s drunk. He can’t see what he’s doing, and he just accidentally pushes his hand onto a stake or thorn. I mean he didn’t feel it, didn’t know what he’s doing, just oblivious to what’s going on. That’s like a proverb in the mouth of fools.

Verse 10, “Like an archer who wounds everyone . . .” Somebody takes a bow and arrow and just randomly shoots at people walking down the street. “Like an archer who wounds everyone is one who hires a passing fool or drunkard.” They do a lot of damage. They’re deadly.

Verse 11, this is a kind of awful word picture here, “Like a dog that returns to his vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” He keeps going back to it.

After reading those first 11 verses, do you want to be a fool? Would you say it’s pretty awful to be a fool? It is. Now look at verse 12. “Do you see a man who is wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” What’s worse than being a fool? It’s being proud.

How does God view pride? He says in Proverbs 8 that He hates it (see verse 13). He hates pride and arrogance and the evil way. In Proverbs 16 He says it’s an abomination to Him (see verse 5). God detests pride. God is the only One who is high and lifted up.

We exalt ourselves when we center our world around ourselves. God says "that is an abomination to Me. I hate it." Actually, according to the Scripture, the most heinous sin of which any man or woman can ever be guilty is the sin of pride.

Now we don’t tend to think of sin that way. When we think of horrible, heinous sins, what comes to our mind may be some of the types of sexual perversion or just gross wickedness that’s in our culture around us, things that aren’t our sins, by and large.

Yet when God lists seven things in Proverbs chapter 6 that are an abomination to Him, He didn’t even mention those things. He does mention pride. Right there in that top list, the things that God particularly hates (see verses 16-17).

“Though the LORD is high,” Psalm 138, verse 6, “he regards the lowly [the humble], but the haughty he knows from afar.” God is high. He says, "I stoop down to lift up those who are humble, those who are lowly, those whose world is centered around God rather than around themselves." God says, "If you’re haughty, if you’re proud, if you’re self-centered, I’m going to keep you at a distance. I can’t draw near to you. I’m going to know you from afar."

You’ll never be able to draw close to God until you let His Holy Spirit come and plow up those roots, those clods of pride. That’s what keeps us far from God. That’s what keeps the presence and the power of God out of our churches. It’s pride.

So you say, “Okay, I want to be humble.” How do I know if I am humble? How do I get there, and what do I do about becoming humble?

Let me tell you what C. S. Lewis had to say. He said, “If anyone would like to acquire humility, I can, I think, tell him the first step.” Are you ready for this? Do you want to write it down? “The first step is to realize that one is proud.” He said, “If you think you’re not conceited, it means you are very conceited indeed.”

Now, I don’t think I like that quote, but I think there’s a lot of truth to that.

I’ve come up with 40 evidences of pride. Most of these I know best because they’re things I can see in different ways in my own heart. Don’t try and write all these down. We’ll make this available to you, but here’s what I do want you to do. If you have a paper and pencil, I want you to make a note, either mentally or on your piece of paper there.

As I read through these, which ones does the Spirit of God kind of point His finger in your heart and say, “I see that in you sometimes or generally or a lot of a time.” What are some of these characteristics, evidences of pride. This will help us to see areas that we need to identify as issues of pride in our lives.

1. Do you look down on those who are less educated, less affluent, less refined, or less successful than yourself?

2. Do you think of yourself as more spiritual than your mate or people in your church or people in your workplace, other believers. Do you think of yourself as more spiritual than other believers you know?

3. Here’s another one: Do you have a judgmental spirit toward those who don’t make the same lifestyle choices that you do? Dress standards, how you school your kids, entertainment standards. Think of other believers you know. Do you tend to have a judgmental spirit? Now maybe you don’t think you do. If you wonder on some of these, you may want to go ask somebody who knows you really well, "Do I come across that way, as having a judgmental spirit toward those who have different lifestyle choices than I do?"

4. Here’s another one: Are you quick to find fault with others and to verbalize those faults to others? Do you have a sharp, critical tongue? We would call it discerning, analytical.

5. Here’s another one: Do you frequently correct or criticize your mate or your pastor or other people in positions of leadership—your kids’ teachers, youth director. Think about the people who are involved in your life, people in leadership. Are you quick to correct or criticize them? To them or to others?

6. Are you proud of the schedule you keep? How disciplined you are? How much you’re able to accomplish? You’re a real producer, a real performer. Is that something that you’re proud of?

7. Are you driven to receive approval, praise, or acceptance from others? You always need to have a pat on the back, have someone telling you how well you’re doing or you get discouraged. Are you driven to receive approval from others?

8. Are you argumentative? You have to have the last word. Think about what it’s been like in your home for the last day or two. Proverbs tell us that only by pride comes contention. So where there’s contention . . . “Yes,” you say, “I know. My husband. He’s a proud man. That’s why we have so much contention in our home.” No, it takes more than a proud husband to have contention in a home. It’s a proud husband and, more often than not, a proud wife too. Are you argumentative?

9. Do you generally think that your way is the right way, the only way, or the best way? Think about how you go about cleaning up your kitchen and then your husband comes along and he does it differently. Is your way the right way? It has to be done your way.

10. Do you have a touchy, sensitive spirit, easily offended? Do you get your feelings hurt easily? This is another one of the evidences of spiritual pride that Jonathan Edwards talked about—people who take offense easily. He said:

Spiritual pride takes great notice of opposition and injuries that are received and is prone to be often speaking of them . . . humility on the other hand causes a person to be more like his blessed Lord when reviled: quiet, not opening his mouth, but committing himself in silence to Him who judges righteously.

11. How about this one? Are you guilty of pretense. Trying to leave a better impression of yourself than is honestly true. Here’s a way to go about seeing if you have that one. Would the people that know you at church be shocked if they were to come and discover what you’re like at home, behind the four walls of your own home?

12. Another one: Do you have a hard time admitting when you are wrong? Is it hard for you to say, “I was wrong.” Or do you wait for the other person to admit that they were wrong?

13. Do you have a hard time confessing your sin to God or others? Not just in generalities. We all say I need to be a better woman. I need to love the Lord more. I need to read my Bible more. But when it comes to the specific issues. "I’m in love with food. I’m in love with television. I love entertainment more than I love God." I mean the specifics. Do you have a hard time confessing those?

14. Are you excessively shy? You say, “Shy? That’s proud?” Excessive shyness. What is it? Self-centeredness. What do other people think about me? That can be an evidence, a subtle form of pride.

15. Do you have a hard time reaching out and being friendly to people that you don’t know at church? Do you stick to your own little group there, hard to reach out to new people? That can be pride.

16. Do you become defensive when you are criticized or corrected? That anger that wells up. What is that? That’s a fruit that grows on the root of pride. Why do we get angry when somebody criticizes us? We may not express it outwardly, but inwardly. Because our pride gets hurt.

17. Are you a perfectionist? Here’s another evidence of pride perhaps in your life. The way you keep your house, the way you do your job, the way you raise your kids. Are you a perfectionist? Everything has to be just perfect and you get impatient and irked with people who aren’t.

18. Do you tend to be controlling of you mate? If you’re not sure, by the way, ask your mate.

19. Do you frequently interrupt people when they’re speaking? The Lord really spoke to me about this as I was working on this list. I realized what I’m saying when I interrupt you when you’re speaking is, what I have to say is more important than what you have to say. It’s pride.

20. Do you often complain about the weather, your health, your circumstances, your job, church? Complaining. How’s that pride? You think you deserve better. It shouldn’t be happening to me.

21. Do you talk about yourself too much? Are you more concerned about your problems, your needs, your burdens than about other people’s concerns?

22. Do you worry about what others think of you? About your reputation or your family’s reputation. By the way, that’s one thing that motivates a lot of parenting, isn’t it? With mothers, "What are people going to think if my child is this way?" That can be pride.

23. Do you neglect to express gratitude for the little things to God, to your mate, to others. An ungrateful spirit, that’s pride.

24. Do you neglect prayer and intake of the Word? How’s that pride? Well, I’m saying I can live my life without God. I can manage without Him.

25. Do you get hurt if your accomplishments or your acts of service are not recognized or rewarded? In your home? At your job? In your church?

26. Do you react to rules? And who of us doesn’t? Do you have a hard time being told what to do? Do you have an issue with authority? That’s pride.

27. Do you avoid participating in certain events for fear of being embarrassed or looking foolish? Do you avoid being around certain people because you feel inferior compared to them? Feel like you just don’t measure up.

28. Are you uncomfortable inviting people to your home because you don’t think it’s nice enough or you can’t afford to do lavish entertaining?

29. Is it hard for you to let others know when you need help? Maybe practical help or spiritual help. You have an independent spirit. I can do this on my own. I won’t let anybody else help me.

30. Here’s a way to measure your pride quotient. When is the last time you said these words to a family member, to a friend, to a co-worker, “I was wrong. Will you please forgive me?”

Let me tell you if it’s been more than a month (let me just pick a figure) if it’s been more than a month, mark it down. Haven’t you sinned in a month? When’s the last time you said that to your husband, "I was wrong. Will you please forgive me?"

Why is it so hard for us to say those words? Why? Because we’re proud. We have to humble ourselves to say those words.

Let me just throw in this last question. Are you sitting here thinking how many of these questions apply to someone you know? You’re feeling pretty good that most of things don’t really apply to you. You want to get a tape of this session and hand it to about a dozen people you know. Could that be an evidence of pride?

God spoke through the prophet Obadiah to the people of Edam in that prophet’s day. Obadiah chapter 1, verse 3, and he said, “The pride of your heart has deceived you.” The pride of your heart has deceived you. It makes us blind.

Here’s what Spurgeon had to say about that verse. He said, “Pride is self-deceit. Those who are sure that they have no pride are probably the proudest of all. Those who are proud of their humility are proud indeed. The confidence that we are not deceived may only prove the completeness of the deception under which we labor.”

So we need to say, “Lord, would You show me where I’m self-deceived?” Has the pride of my heart deceived me from being able to see what God sees? Has the pride of your heart deceived you, made you blind, to the real condition of your heart?

As you seek the Lord, say, “Lord, show me what You see. Reveal my heart to me. Let me see it as You see it. Show me the pride of my heart. As you do, I will repent. I will humble myself. I will agree with You, and I will let You bring me to a place of humility.” That’s the starting place of revival.

Leslie: That’s Nancy Leigh DeMoss. Today’s message on humility reminds me of one of Nancy’s most powerful books, Brokenness: The Heart God Revives. Everybody needs this book. You’ll never think of pride and humility the same way after reading it. We’ll put it in your hands when you make a donation of any amount to Revive Our Hearts.

We’ll also include a bookmark that contrasts the difference between proud people and broken people. This list is one of the most convicting, helpful sections of the brokenness book. You’ll have it handy on a bookmark for those horrible times when you realize how selfish and prideful you’re acting.

Ask for Brokenness and the “Proud People versus Humble People” bookmark when you call with your donation of any amount. Call toll-free, 1-800-569-5959. Also, visit ReviveOurHearts.com.

What happens if we say no thanks to humility? Nancy will tell us tomorrow as she continues in the series, Seeking Him. Please be back for Revive Our Hearts.

Revive Our Hearts with Nancy Leigh DeMoss is an outreach of Life Action Ministries.

All Scripture is taken from the English Standard Version unless otherwise noted.

Note: Special offers available only during the broadcast of the radio series.


View/Post Comments

Read and post comments about: A Pride Test

*The following comments do not necessarily reflect the views of Revive Our Hearts. We reserve the right to remove comments which might be unhelpful, unsuitable, or inappropriate.

 

"Yikes, I'm ALL those things at one time or another! I am constantly sick with the sin in my heart that seems to taint any good that I try to do. "If You, LORD, should mark iniquities, O LORD, who shall stand?" O, but thank God for the next verses: "But there is forgiveness with You, that You may be feared. I wait for the LORD, my soul does wait, and in His Word do I hope. My soul waits for the Lord more than they that watch for the morning: I say, more than they that watch for the morning."
(Psalm 130:3-6) Indeed, LORD, please revive our hearts and fill us, again, with Your desires. Humble us, LORD, and bring our ugly, pharisaical hearts into Your spotlight that we may see ourselves as You do. Let the pain of that bring us to our knees in fresh repentance and submission to Your Word and Your Ways. Help us, LORD. Only You CAN!! We forget (or ignore) how desperately wicked our hearts are. We NEED You, LORD! Cleanse us, LORD, and glorify Yourself through the process, that Your Light may shine brightly for ALL to see and be drawn to. Help us, LORD!! We count on You, "in our bondage, to extend Your mercy, to give us a reviving," for Your mercy endures forever!!"

Cindy (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 7:13 AM)

"Has anyone out there ever felt that someone hit you in the pit of your stomach after hearing a message like this? Lord knows....I am full of pride. I had 25 check marks on my paper and I thought to myself..."I am in trouble". Y'all please pray for me. I really need revival and I really need help in the humility department. It is my pride that keeps me from the Lord and from what I so desperately need in my life. God bless you all."

Jc (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 8:14 AM)

"What an awesome lesson. I would not consider myself, in an honest assessment, as a proud person at all. But I sure did identify with most of the test questions. God has been working on me so much these last few months, and has given me the grace to listen. I think that in some sense, we have become so "conformed to this world" that we can hardly recognize pride in ourselves. Isn't God good to give us this window into our soul!"

Julie (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 8:25 AM)

"Thank you"

James (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 9:30 AM)

"That was a very blesses message that I needed to hear. Thank you for always bringing us inspiring words."

Ruth (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 10:58 AM)

"God has already been showing me my pride. This was exactly what I needed to confirm some of the areas. As always, Nancy, thank you for speaking God's message."

Debbie (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 12:18 PM)

"Wow! That hurts! I didn't htink I was that prideful, but found I, too, was guilty of 99%! Thank you for the wake-up call. that brought me to my knees....again! Praise the Lord for your ministry, Nancy. Thank you!"

Jan (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 12:20 PM)

"I think I might just post these on the frige so I can make sure to follow them and take pride that I do....HaHa..ps I emailed this to everyone I love....I guess thats showing my pride too...yikes. Thank you for this lesson. Amy"

Amy (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 1:13 PM)

"I was certain that pride was not my issue, but as I listened to Nancy and then went to the website and read through the list myself counting the ones that related to me...I soon entered the double digits and realized...this is an issue for me. Thank you for pointing this out to me...I want Pride out of my life."

Pamela (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 2:21 PM)

"WOW! That pride test really hit me right between the eyes. It was right on tarket. I battle with pride daily, but I had no idea how much pride I have in my heart, isn't it amazing how blind we are to our own pride. Thank You."

Julia (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 3:14 PM)

"Thank you for this very timely message! Looks like I need to deal with the pride that is in my own heart! I look forward to all the upcoming messages in this series!"

Sonya (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 4:04 PM)

"Dearest Nancy and staff,
Thank you so much for today's teaching. I know pride has been a stronghold in my life (and background). I have realized it for years, but have not seen it rooted out of my life. I know God hates pride and resists the proud. And that I cannot truly be Christlike toward others as long as I am proud. It is His mercy that He has been so good to me, saved by His grace! I am thankful for today's teaching because it helps me better to understand the areas of pride in my life so I can be convicted that those are truly sinful ways, and repent, and change. You have uncovered and delineated many of those things for me. Praise God for His Word that cleanses us (Psalm 19, esp. v.12; Psalm 51:2). I love you in the Lord, Nancy!

With thanks,"

Leslie (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 4:26 PM)

"That was a great list of questions to show where pride is hiding. I'm going to look over it again online....I know that pride will always be a struggle but I need to actually repent of it rather than think it's just part of my sinful makeup. Anyway ,I laughed out loud at the last question..."Are you sitting here thinking how many of these questions apply to someone you know?" Because of course the whole time I was thinking of my husband and how he should consider these! Thanks for the truth again."

Beth (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 5:10 PM)

"Alleluia OUCH!
This was so good. I had to print it out for myself and my loved ones. Not to point out the splinter in their eye cuz I definitely have a beam in mine!"

Amaris (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 6:03 PM)

"All I could say after reading this was "OUCH!" That hurt my pride!! hehe

Seriously, I think of myself as such a nice person but when I scored so badly on the test, I now realize that I need to reevaluate my standing with God and how my pride seperates me from Him."

Ericka (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 6:14 PM)

"It is so easy to point to someone else when this is happening, however, we need to look at ourselves."

Victoria (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 6:20 PM)

"A great program.....and I am so glad you offered the list of many ways that pride reveals itself. I remember an older lady in our class sharing a prayer..." Lord show me the hidden sins of my heart".....this is not sins that we know but sins that we have never seen as sin....it is a prayer that I have continued to pray for myself ever since. God is a just and faithful God, may we reflect his goodness as we live out our lives before others. Knowing Him is Everything, Carol"

Carol (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 7:43 PM)

"I stumbled across your program while flipping radio stations on my way to an appointment. I didn't think I had a problem with pride until you started your questions. On the way back from my appointment I was flipping through stations again and on a different station you were going through the same list. I get the message!"

Cheri (on Monday, September 17, 2007 at 11:02 PM)

"Thanks for the great article. I agree with almost everything you pointed out. I have never considered some of the questions. I do disagree, however, that you should not be proud of your true accomplishments; you should thank God for your ability and be content with what you have been able to do. I have always been taught to have a sense of pride in all of the hard work I do; I don't know if that is necessarily right, but my family has always said that. Thanks again for the article. I need to work a little on my pride."

Ashley (on Tuesday, September 18, 2007 at 6:53 AM)

"I found my parents and my siblings in almost every one of the descriptions on pride......and quickly realized that I was in just as many myself! thank you for helping God to open the eyes of my heart a bit more each day!"

Annette (on Tuesday, September 18, 2007 at 3:44 PM)

"Have you been listening at my door?"

Cheryl (on Tuesday, September 18, 2007 at 3:47 PM)

"Eek, this seems so judgmental!"

New (on Wednesday, September 19, 2007 at 5:30 PM)

"That was tough to hear, but very necessary. I was shocked at how many on your list applied to me - nearly 90%!. I knew I had a tendency to battle with pride, but I didn't realized how strongly it reigned in my life. It's really disgusting! I have seen all the negative traits that I resented in my mother for years become a stronger part of who I am; having acritical spirit, being judgemental, offering 'my opinion' even when it isn't requested. I get in trouble often because of my tongue and my hurtful and direct words. I am frequently having to ask someone for forgiveness. I go back to the drawing board and try to "be better", only to mess up again.
I seek you advice on ridding this critical nature I battle with. Is it as easy as just asking God to remove it? I have been a Christian for nearly 28 years now, and it has been my constant battle. Any advice you could give would be appreciated.
Thanks for a powerful and convicting message!"

Sue (on Wednesday, September 19, 2007 at 8:48 PM)

First Name (Your name will be displayed.)

Email (We value your privacy and will not publish your email address.)

Enter Your Comment