Last week I spoke of the sin of pride and the disunity
of people. Today I want to talk about the virtue of
humility and how it unites people and brings them
together. But what exactly is humility (in Ukrainian,
"smirenist," in Spanish, "humilidad"). The Catechism
says it is "the virtue by which a Christian acknowledges
that God is the author of all good." I am sure that is
true but somehow it just doesn't seem very satisfying.
Then I looked in the old Catholic Encyclopedia, which
says that "the virtue of humility may be defined as, 'a
quality by which a person, considering his own defects,
has a lowly opinion of himself and willingly submits
himself to God and to others, for God's sake.'" That's
more clear. I like the part about submitting ourselves
to God, and to others for God's sake, but is there a
better definition?
St. Bernard says humility is, "a virtue by which a man,
knowing himself as he truly is, abases himself," or
humbles himself, lowers himself. Here I like the idea of
a person who truly knows himself. St. Thomas Aquinas
wrote that, "The virtue of humility consists of keeping
oneself within one's own bounds, not reaching out to
things above one, but submitting to one's superior." I
very much like his description of keeping yourself
within your own bounds, so if I may I'd like to
translate that into another way of defining this virtue:
Humility is knowing your place and living it.
The expression, "knowing your place," has a bad
connotation, a bad association in most people's minds,
because it is often used in a bad way. When we say that
somebody doesn't know their place, we always mean that
in a negative way. When we talk about, "putting somebody
in their place," it always means putting that person
down and often doing it in a harsh and unkind manner.
But leaving that aside, I think that this is a good and
helpful definition: Humility is knowing your place
before God and before other people.
Too often, it seems to me, people think of humility as a
kind of self-criticism, a way of putting ourselves down
and seeing ourselves in a bad light, as unworthy,
insignificant, and bad. It means bowing and scraping and
declaring how unworthy we are before God and probably
most of humanity and it seems to me that while that may
not be a lie, it is also not the whole truth. I
am totally unworthy to stand
before God as a mere mortal man, as a sinner. And yet at
the same time, I am also God's son by adoption in the
waters of baptism, and I share in His divine life, and I
am loved by God above all of His creation. Humility
should not be just and
only about my lowliness before
God. It should also be about my glorious status as a
child of God, in Christ, which is not of my own doing
but a gracious gift of God to me. I should not take the
attitude that I am nothing in the eyes of God because
although that lowliness is true on the one hand, it is
also true that God has raised me to the highest of
heights by sharing with me His own divine life. So when
St. Thomas talks about keeping ourselves within our own
bounds this is what he is talking about. We need to know
our place, in an honest and genuine way.
Pride pushes us to go beyond or outside of the
boundaries of our own place, as we saw last Sunday in
the construction of the Tower of Babel, where the people
did not care to give God
His proper place. Instead they
would grab their own glory by reaching up to heaven on
their own. Pride is a distortion of reality which does
not listen to the truth of God, but relies on our own
understanding in place of God's. Pride is the attempt to
make myself what I can never be, and deluding myself to
believe I am more than I am. This is the push of sin and
temptation: to substitute my version of reality for the
one that God has placed in this world. So it is no
wonder that pride leads people to disaster in their
relationship to God and to other people.
Humility is to know my place. And that is to say indeed
I am nothing before God, and yet because of His
loving-kindness, I am everything to Him. Humility is
also to know my place among everyone else. I am, as a
human being as a creature created by God, no better than
any other human being for we are all created equal in
His sight. At the same time, we have all been given
different abilities and natural gifts which we ought to
use to give glory to God, and to serve one another. As
Christians, we have additionally been given supernatural
gifts which we also are bound to use, to give glory to
God and to serve one another. So when it comes to other
people, I don't think it is necessarily a good idea to
believe that humility is thinking that I am less than
other people, or that other people are better than me,
because we are in no position to judge such things.
Instead it seems to me that a better way of seeing
humility is to know my place, to be willing to serve
others according to that place, my place, whether or not
they even seem deserving or worthy of my help, because I
am not deserving of God's mercy.
If I want to be humble, I need to know my place. So what
is my place before God? I suggest that the saints are
people who really understand that, recognize it and live
according to it. The saints sometimes seem so strange
and even maybe a little crazy to us
not because they actually saw
life in a strange way, but because they saw life more
clearly than we do, they knew their place better than we
do. (And I admit that some of them may also have been a
little crazy, but that should only make us feel better
for ourselves.) Dance Performance—knowing your
place. Increasingly, there are a whole lot of people out
there today who do not know their place, but have
created their own place instead, and they refuse to move
from it. The disorder this creates in families and
between people not only causes great damage to us as a
society, but it obscures the truth of who we are, why
we're here and what life is all about.
The Lord doesn't want to put us in our place. He wants
us to go there on our own so that we can find Him most
clearly there and see one another here with the same
clarity, knowing where we stand. Humility is never a
put-down or a degradation unless pride has led us
astray. Humility is the place we should always consider
to be "home."