I was asked once in Spiritual Direction,
“What is your greatest sin?”
And my heart went back
to something small—
a simple plate of cookies.
I was in high school.
A ninth‑grade spirit squad member
offered me what she had made
with kindness,
with sincerity,
with all she could give.
And instead of gratitude,
pride rose up in me.
I thought I deserved better.
I thought I had been slighted.
I thought others looked down on me
because the gift was small.
I still remember
the hurt in her eyes.
Because in that moment,
I did not preach the Good News.
I preached my own wounded pride.
Scripture tells us:
“Clothe yourselves with humility…
for God opposes the proud
but bestows favor on the humble.”
And again:
“Humble yourselves
under the mighty hand of God.”
The Gospel is never carried
by a proud heart.
It is carried by the grateful one—
the heart that receives
whatever is offered
as grace.
So as Christ sends us out—
“Go into the whole world
and proclaim the Gospel”—
preach from a place of humility.
The humility that sees the giver.
The humility that heals.
The humility that lets love speak.
Prayer
Lord Jesus,
Clothe my heart in humility.
Heal the pride that shadows my sight.
Teach me to receive with gratitude,
to honor the giver more than the gift.
Cleanse the wounds my arrogance has caused.
Let mercy be the language of my life.
Send me to proclaim Your Gospel with a humble heart.
Amen