First pride,
then the crash— the bigger the ego, the harder the fall
Proverbs
16:18 (Message)
If we are not careful pride can ruin
some of the purest of hearts and create a huge mess. It usually starts out small, but if
undetected, can grow to take over our hearts and attitudes. Pride effects how we view ourselves in light
of others. If we desire to influential
pastors and volunteers, then the last thing we need is a bunch of pride in our
hearts and thinking of ourselves more highly than we ought. There is nothing
more of a turnoff than being around someone who is so stuck on themselves, so
focused on what’s going on in their life, and carrying themselves like they are
better than everyone else they come in contact with! When this happens, we lose
our ability to influence others because we can’t even get past ourselves. This is very dangerous and must be avoided at
all costs.
Let me put it this way: Say for example
that you own a sweet sports car like a Bentley or Porsche. Some of you are like, “Alright! Now your talking!”
Well you and I both know that the sports car is meant to be taken care of if it
is to have its same WOW effect to others (everyone wants to ride around in a
nice sports car). On the other hand, it would be an absolute shame if you never
washed it, always threw your McDonald’s trash in the backseat, and parked it
outside the garage close to a pine tree that would scratch it every time you
pulled in or backed out. Even worse would be if you were driving it really fast
down a curvy country road and lost control and crashed into a tree and totaled
the car! (Some of you are crying big
salty tears right now, it’s ok, it didn’t really happen) So your once amazing sports car that had so
much influence and curb appeal is not so flashy now that it is shattered in a
million pieces. No one wants to be around it, no one wants to take a ride in
it, and no one is influenced by it like they once were.
Although a sad story, this same thing
can happen to our own influence if we don’t guard our hearts from pride. When we allow our egos, attitudes and actions
to get puffed up and more highly exalted than they ought, what we are doing, in
effect, is placing our influence in a nice sports car that is going to crash.
We put our influence on a “bad ride” because it is bound to crash because pride
always comes before the crash.
So if we want to be effective pastors,
leaders and volunteers and maintain our influence over the people God has
called us to reach, then we must remove any ounce of pride that is in our
lives. When we do this, we avoid the crash and keep our sports car nice and the
influence it has on others intact.
-Eric
-Eric
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