Quotes about Humility
We should never become achievement satisfied, because there is always more gospel work to do. But we must always remind one another that achievement is a spiritual minefield. Achievement has the power to change us—to change who we think we are and what we think we are capable of doing. Sadly, achievement can turn humble servant leaders into proud, controlling, and unapproachable mini-kings. But there is powerful, right-here, right-now grace for this struggle.
— Paul David Tripp
We were meant to do more than make sure that all of our needs are fulfilled and all our desires are satisfied. We were never meant to be self-focused little kings ruling miniscule little kingdoms with a population of one.
— Paul David Tripp
need grace, and when you forget how much you need grace, you quit seeking the rescue and strength that only grace can give.
— Paul David Tripp
I still lack humility. I still tend to make life about my plan, my feelings, my desires, and my expectations. I am still tempted to assess the "good" of a day by whether it pleased me versus whether I pleased God and was loving toward others. I still am tempted to live as if I own my life and still fail to remember that I was bought with a price.
— Paul David Tripp
You deal with others with grace when you walk around with the humble realization of how deep your need for grace was and continues to be.
— Paul David Tripp
We were never meant to be self-focused little kings ruling miniscule little kingdoms with a population of one.
— Paul David Tripp
When you think you're righteous, you expect others to be righteous as well, so you become demanding, judgmental, and constantly disappointed.
— Paul David Tripp
Humility means that each leader's relationship to other leaders is characterized by an acknowledgment that he deserves none of the recognition, power, or influence that his position affords him.
— Paul David Tripp
When we replace vertical awe of God with awe of self, bad things happen in the horizontal community.
— Paul David Tripp
For the believer, harsh, critical, impatient, and irritated responses to others are always connected to forgetting or denying who we are and what we have been given in Jesus.
— Paul David Tripp
Humility means the willingness to look in the mirror of God's Word and being glad that whatever we see there has already been covered by the blood of Jesus.
— Paul David Tripp
Envy denies grace. The assumption of envy is that we deserve what another has been given, when, in fact, you and I deserve nothing.
— Paul David Tripp