Humility and Faith are Mutually Exclusive
The faith teaches humility. What humility actually means is not easy to discern. There are endless articles about it.
What has been called "The Benedict Option" is still widely discussed in the Christian media. It is about a century old monk named Benedict who advocated general withdrawal from society in order that the faith be preserved in its present form. It was brought up in a controversial article about a year ago as an option today's believers should consider.
The Benedict Option requires a certain kind of humility, however, that is difficult to come by. It is withdrawal from the public square. Some in the faith advocate that withdrawal now.
To withdraw from publicly advocating against abortion and gays would be carrying out the "Benedict Option." That would require humility. It is not going to happen.
It is not going to happen because being against gays and abortion is an ego driven enterprise. It is all about, "My moral plane is higher than yours and I'm going to let the world know of my superiority." It is about judging others, a favorite sport of the faith.
Humility is also absent from the concept that a god knows you or me personally. That an almighty knows you personally is the opposite of humility. The opposite of humility is also the tenet in the Bible which says man is above all other creatures on earth.
All of this illustrates that humility and faith are mutually exclusive.
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