humility (mobile version)

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Humility Click or Swipe

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Virtue of humility. Sized for mobile phones.

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Page 1: Humility (mobile version)

Humility

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Page 2: Humility (mobile version)

If a person has humility, it means thatthey treat other people with respect.

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They freely listen to someonebefore trying to resolve their problems.

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They put themselvesat someone else’s service.

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Having humility does not mean that you have an inferiority

complex, that you have a poor image of yourself, that you are not

confident, or that you hide your talents in order to make someone

else feel better.

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It just means that you turn away from your selfishness and try to

enter into the other person’s world.

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A person with humility tries to understand another person’s

sufferings and joys.

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If the other person opens up to them, they keep their secrets and do not judge the person or spread

gossip about them.

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When someone is speaking to them,

they pay attention and try to see the other person’s point of view.

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They try to understand what the other person is really saying, even

if their own life is very different from that person’s.

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Instead of quickly saying, “I know how to get you back on

your feet, I’ll tell you what to do...”

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...they remain open and ask God to help them find the right pathway.

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A humble person does not alwayshave to be right.

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The attitude of humility comes from God’s power within us. It

helps us speak at the right moment, have good intentions, and ask God for the right words.

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If a person has humility, they will not feel superior to someone else just because they are poor or they

have a disability.

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Instead, the person with humility will think, “This person could have something unique to say, that I do

not even suspect. They may be able to teach me something very

good that I will never forget.”

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This is why people with humility will even go so far as to say that poor people are “their masters”-- because they have experienced that a poor person can preach to

them, just by being there.

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Often times a poor person will need a boost in confidence.

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A humble person will keep watching out for signs of the other person’s hopes or dreams as they

are telling their story.

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If the person feels understood, it then becomes possible to begin

something with them.

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A person with humility will not say, “Oh, the same thing happened to me once, let me tell you all about how I solved my problem and got

over it.” A humble person tries not to make

hurtful comparisons.

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It is human nature to make ourselves look good, to criticize, to

want to have power over other people, and to prove that we are

right.

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Humility is when we avoid all this, out of love for the other person.

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A person mostly needs to be acknowledged and listened to,

before being helped.

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The way that a person presents themselves to us depends a lot on

our attitude towards them.

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So it is best to practice humility, always reminding ourselves to

approach another person in faith and recognize the presence of God

in them.

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www.famvin.org

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The Vincentians

based on VincentWiki article“The Spirituality of the Daughters of Charity”

by Sr. Anne Prévost, DC