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/2022/02/09/mortality-and-humility

[{"status":"publish","site_id":"1","date":1644364800000,"title":"Mortality and Humility","author":"12571","bible_in_a_year":"<a href=\"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Leviticus+6%E2%80%937%3B+Matthew+25%3A1%E2%80%9330\" rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"scripture reference verse\" class=\"scripture-link\" data-category=\"scripture-link\" data-action=\"bible-in-a-year\" data-label=\"Bible in a Year\">Leviticus 6–7; Matthew 25:1–30</a>","bible_in_a_year_references":"Leviticus 6–7; Matthew 25:1–30","bible_in_a_year_url":"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Leviticus+6%E2%80%937%3B+Matthew+25%3A1%E2%80%9330","content":"<p>Ancient scholars Jerome and Tertullian referenced stories of how in ancient Rome, after a general triumphed in an epic victory, he would be paraded atop a gleaming chariot down the capital&rsquo;s central thoroughfares from dawn to sunset. The crowd would roar. The general would bask in the adoration, reveling in the greatest honor of his life. However, legend has it that a servant stood behind the general the entire day, whispering into his ear,&nbsp;<em>Memento mori</em> (&ldquo;Remember you will die&rdquo;). Amid all the adulation, the general desperately needed the humility that came with remembering that he was mortal.</p>\n<p>James wrote to a community infected with prideful desires and an inflated sense of self-sufficiency. Confronting their arrogance, he spoke a piercing word: &ldquo;God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble&rdquo; (James 4:6). What they needed was to &ldquo;humble [themselves] before the Lord&rdquo; (v. 10). And how would they embrace this humility? Like Roman generals, they needed to remember that they would die. &ldquo;You do not even know what will happen tomorrow,&rdquo; James insisted. &ldquo;You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes&rdquo; (v. 14). And owning their frailty freed them to live under the solidity of the &ldquo;Lord&rsquo;s will&rdquo; rather than their own fading efforts (v. 15).</p>\n<p>When we forget that our days are numbered, it can lead to pride. But when we&rsquo;re humbled by our mortality, we see every breath and every moment as grace. <em>Memento mori</em>.</p>\n","excerpt":"<p>Ancient scholars Jerome and Tertullian referenced stories of how in ancient Rome, after a general triumphed in an epic victory, he would be paraded atop a gleaming chariot down the capital&rsquo;s central thoroughfares from dawn to sunset. The crowd would roar. The general would bask in the adoration, reveling in the greatest honor of his life. However, legend has it that a servant stood behind the general the entire day, whispering into his ear: <em>Memento Mori</em> (&ldquo;Remember you will die&rdquo;). Amid all the adulation, the general desperately needed the humility that came with remembering that he was mortal.</p>\r\n<p>James wrote to a community infected with prideful desires and an inflated sense of self-sufficiency. Confronting their arrogance, he spoke a piercing word: &ldquo;God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble&rdquo; (James 4:6). What they needed was to &ldquo;humble [themselves] before the Lord&rdquo; (v. 10). And how would they embrace this humility? Like Roman generals, they needed to remember that they would die. &ldquo;You do not even know what will happen tomorrow,&rdquo; James insisted. &ldquo;You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes&rdquo; (v. 14). And owning their frailty freed them to live under the solidity of the &ldquo;Lord&rsquo;s will&rdquo; rather than their own fading efforts (v. 15).</p>\r\n<p>When we forget that our days are numbered, it can lead to pride. But when we&rsquo;re humbled by our mortality, we see every breath and every moment as grace. <em>Memento Mori</em>.</p>","insights":"<p>Several men in the New Testament are named James, including the son of Zebedee/brother of John (Matthew 4:21; Acts 12:2) and the son of Alphaeus (Matthew 10:3). The James who authored the book of James was the half-brother of Jesus (13:55). While early in Jesus’ ministry James didn’t believe in Him, after he saw the risen Christ (1 Corinthians 15:7), he moved from unbelief to belief. In Acts 1:14, James appears to be present in the upper room after Jesus’ ascension and became a leader in the Jerusalem church (12:17; 15:13).</p>","passage":"<a href=\"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James+4%3A7%E2%80%9317\" rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"scripture reference verse\" class=\"scripture-link\" data-category=\"scripture-link\" data-action=\"passage\" data-label=\"Scripture Passage\">James 4:7–17</a>","passage_url":"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James+4%3A7%E2%80%9317","passage_reference":"James 4:7–17","response":"<p>What does this story of the Roman generals and the phrase <em>Memento mori</em> say to you? Why do you need to remember your mortality?</p>","thought":"<p>God, I like to think that my life is in my control. I sometimes act as though I’ll live forever. Humble me. Help me find life only in You.</p>","verse":"<p>What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. <a href=\"https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James+4%3A14\" rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"scripture reference verse\" class=\"scripture-link\" data-category=\"scripture-link\" data-action=\"verse\" data-label=\"Key Verse\">James 4:14</a></p>\r\n","insight_question":"","author_name":"Winn Collier","lang_author_name":"","author_link":"https://odb.org/author/wcollier/","slug":"mortality-and-humility","insights_author":"31","insights_author_name":"Bill Crowder","insights_author_id":"31","shareable_image":"https://d626yq9e83zk1.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/23/2021/10/04132751/share_odb_2022-02-09.jpg","image_url":"https://d626yq9e83zk1.cloudfront.net/files/2022/02/odb20220209.jpg","email_image_url":"https://d626yq9e83zk1.cloudfront.net/ebread/dailyimages/odbdevo_20220209e.jpg","audio_url":"https://dzxuyknqkmi1e.cloudfront.net/odb/2022/02/odb-02-09-22.mp3","brandName":"Our Daily Bread","preheader_text":"Ancient scholars Jerome and Tertullian referenced stories of how in ancient Rome, ...","sku_listname":"EEN100","brand_logo_url":"https://odb.org/wp-content/themes/odbm-base-ourdailybread/images/odb_logo.svg","language":"en_US","date_id":1644364800000}]