Week 4 Day 3


On Humility

Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them; and them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.

Hebrews 13:3

With pity let my breast o’erflow,

When I behold another’s woe;

And bear a sympathizing part,

Whene’er I meet a wounded heart.

Judge Joseph Gillespie was a friend of Abraham Lincoln and went to Springfield to see him shortly before Lincoln’s departure for the presidential inauguration. “It was,” said Judge Gillespie, “Lincoln’s Gethsemane. He feared he was not the man for the great position and the great events that confronted him. Untried in national affairs, unversed in international diplomacy, unacquainted with the men who were foremost in the politics of the nation, he groaned when he saw the inevitable War of the Rebellion coming on. It was in humility of spirit that he told me he believed that the American people had made a mistake in selecting him.” It is almost unbelievable that a man as capable as Lincoln would feel so inadequate. It is a testament to his humility and his ability to see the hugeness of the task at hand. While many other politicians would have jumped at the chance to be president, Lincoln knew the hugeness of the task was bigger than any one man. The next time you’re looking for someone to help you with a big task, try those who tell you they’re not so sure they can help.