22-Aug-2016
Dear Friend,
Often, we find ourselves comparing ourselves with others and usually we believe 
we are better than others. Consequently, we expect better treatment, more 
privileges and special places of honour for ourselves! We are following worldly 
protocol and criteria but God has other standards and challenges us to be 
honest and humble in our every day dealings. To be humble is to have a true 
assessment of ourselves before God and others. Let’s be grateful to God for his 
unmerited gifts and numerous blessings! -Fr. Jude
Sun Ref. XXII Sun: “Whoever humbles himself will be exalted by God” 
28-Aug-2016Sirach 3: 17-20, 28-20;                    Heb. 12: 18-19, 22-24;    
                Luke 14: 1, 7-14;

The first reading from the book of Sirach is a lesson on humility. While pride 
is the deadliest of the seven deadly sins, because it is founded on falsehood 
which destroys ourselves and those around us, humility is perhaps the most 
characteristic of Christian virtues. The humble person finds favour with God 
not because that favour is a reward for humility, but because humility, like 
faith, means abandoning self-assertion, all trust in oneself, and allowing God 
to act where we can do nothing.
Humility is TruthWilliam Carey, the great missionary of India, was a very 
humble man despite his great linguistic skills and botanical achievements. He 
had translated the Bible into several Indian languages. The intellectuals and 
men of high positions in Calcutta recognized him. On one occasion the Governor 
General of India invited him to a party. As they sat around the table, one of 
the invitees asked another whether this was the Carey who was once a shoemaker. 
Carey overheard this comment and turned to the person and said, in all 
humility, “No, Sir, I was only a cobbler.”John Rose in ’John’s Sunday Homilies’
In today’s Gospel Jesus is at a meal in the house of one of the leading 
Pharisees. He notices the undignified scramble for the places of honour and is 
moved to comment on what he sees through a parable. The parable looks like a 
bit of prudential advice on how to behave at a dinner party so as to avoid 
embarrassment.  But since it is a parable one need not take it at face value, 
as a piece of worldly wisdom or even as a lesson in humility. It deals rather 
with an aspect of one’s relationship with God. God in the person of Jesus 
Christ is inviting all peoples to the messianic feast. The only way to respond 
to the invitation is to renounce any claim or merit of one’s own. The Pharisees 
expected the best seats in the banquet for keeping the Torah, but like the 
outcaste, they have to learn that salvation is an unmerited gift –freely given 
and humbly to be accepted. Our acceptance at the heavenly banquet will depend 
not on our merit or good deeds but on our acceptance of others now. Humility in 
a Christian sense is not a purely passive virtue; like faith, to which it is 
closely akin, it is highly active.
Humility Speaks in Silence!For a lady traveller it was a pleasant journey by 
train from New York to Philadelphia as there was only one more passenger 
besides her. Her co-passenger was rather a heavy-set man. But her joy of 
comfort was disturbed when the man lit a cigar and started smoking. The lady 
deliberately coughed and showed an unpleasant face. Nothing worked. He 
continued to smoke. Then she blurted out, “You might be a foreigner. But don’t 
you know that there is a smoking car ahead. Smoking is prohibited here. The man 
quietly threw his cigar out of the window and maintained his equanimity. When 
the conductor came to examine the tickets the lady passenger realized with 
horror that her co-passenger was the famous General Ulysses Grant. She had 
boarded his private car by mistake. As the lady made a hasty exit the General 
did not even look at her so as not to embarrass her. He turned his head and 
smiled only after the lady was out of sight. –Great humility is displayed by 
stronger men. Humility comes from strength.G. Francis Xavier in “Inspiring 
Stories”
Learning from the GreatDr. Richard Evans was a psychologist at the University 
of Houston who had developed an interesting series of films. They consisted of 
interviews Evans did with some great leaders in the fields of psychology and 
psychiatry –people like Carl Jung, Eric Fromm Erik Erikson, Carl Rogers, B.F. 
Skinner and Jean Piaget. Surprisingly, the major thing Evans learned from these 
great figures was the need for humility: What these great thinkers profess to 
know and their assessment of it is rather humble. Some people tend to oversell 
what psychology and psychiatry can do to help people solve their problems. Not 
so with the really great personages in these fields. The really important 
people have a modest view of what they have contributed, much less what the 
field had contributed in general. –Humility is the mark of all truly great men. 
A healthy sense of humour is closer to humility than self-depreciation.  Pope 
John XXIII once remarked: “Anybody can become pope; the proof of this is that I 
have become pope.”Albert Cylwicki in ‘His Word Resounds’
Inflated EgoSome time ago in Florida, the St Petersburg Times carried an 
interesting story about Don Shula, the coach of the Miami Dolphins, vacationing 
with his family in a small town in northern Maine. One afternoon it was raining 
and so Shula, his wife and his five children decided to attend a matinee movie 
in the town’s only theatre. When they arrived the house lights were still on in 
the theatre, where there were only six other people present. When Shula and his 
family walked in, all six people stood up and applauded. He waved and smiled. 
As Shula sat down he turned to his wife and said, “We’re thousands of miles 
from Miami and they are giving me a standing ovation. They must get us on 
television all the way up here. Then a man came to shake Don Shula’s hand. 
Shula beamed and said, “How did you recognize me?” The man replied, “Mister, I 
don’t know who you are. All I know is just before you walked in the theatre 
manager told us that unless four more people turned up we wouldn’t have a movie 
today.”Mark Link in ‘Sunday Homilies’
Self-Effacing HumilityOne type of humility is self-effacement – the habit of 
doing good deeds, or indeed just daily work, secretly and anonymously, without 
expecting thanks. A good example of that is a teacher, who in preparation for 
Thanksgiving Day asked her class of first graders to draw a picture of 
something they were thankful for. She thought of how little these children from 
their poor neighbourhood had. She imagined that most of them would draw 
pictures of turkeys or tables of food. But the teacher was taken aback with the 
picture little Douglas handed in -a childishly drawn hand. The teacher showed 
it to the class to decide whose hand it was. “I think it must be the hand of 
God that brings us food,” said one child. “A farmer,” said another, “because he 
grows the turkeys.” When the others were at work, the teacher bent over 
Douglas’ desk and asked whose hand it was. “It is your hand, teacher,” he 
mumbled. It was only then that she recalled that frequently at recess she had 
taken Douglas, a scrubby forlorn child by the hand. She often did that with the 
children; it had obviously meant a lot to Douglas. For herself, she was 
grateful for the chance, in whatever small way, to give self-effacingly to 
others.Harold Buetow in ‘God Still Speaks: Listen!’
Truly HumbleAn arrogant American musician once visited the house of the great 
composer Beethoven, sat down at the piano and proudly began to play Beethoven’s 
Moonlight Sonata. When he had finished, he asked the concierge, “I suppose many 
celebrities come here?” “Yes,” replied the man, “Pederewski was here last 
week.” The American continued, “And did he play the piano too?” “No,” said the 
old concierge, “He said he wasn’t worthy.” Ignacy Jan Pererewski was a 
brilliant Polish pianist, composer, orator, writer, social worker and 
philosopher who eventually became Prime Minister of Poland in 1919. He was 
deeply humble and is a model of what today’s readings exhort us to be.Francis 
Gonsalves in ‘Sunday Seeds for Daily Deeds’
May we live humbly and walk unassumingly with all people!

 Fr. Jude Botelho [email protected]
PS. The stories, incidents and anecdotes used in the reflections have been 
collected over the years from books as well as from sources over the net and 
from e-mails received. Every effort is made to acknowledge authors whenever 
possible. If you send in stories or illustrations I would be grateful if you 
could quote the source as well so that they can be acknowledged if used in 
these reflections. These reflections are also available on my Web site 
www.NetForLife.net Thank you.

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