Mark 12:35-40 · Whose Son is the Christ?
Six Nails of the Cross I: The Nail of Pride
Mark 12:35-40
Sermon
by Wesley T. Runk
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One Sunday morning following the divine worship, the pastor greeted his parishioners at the door and accepted comments on his sermon. He had preached a searching sermon on the sin of pride. One particular woman had obviously hung back in order to confess her sin. When all the others had left, she told him that because of his sermon she realized what a sin she had committed during the past week. The minister asked her what the sin was. She replied, "My sin is pride. I sat in front of the mirror for one hour the day before yesterday and admired my beauty." "Oh," responded the pastor, "that isn't a sin of pride, that is the sin of imagination."

All of us realize that both conditions exist in the minds and lives of people. Jesus knew the paralyzing effect of pride and the terrible damage it could inflict upon the people's spirits. Of all the deadly sins, pride is perhaps the deadliest. When someone is filled with pride, he cannot experience spiritual growth. Some call pride "stiff kneed." A person with pride can never kneel to pray. Jesus had an image, a picture of what a person looked like, and how he acted when he was filled with pride.

In some ways it seems strange that Jesus zeroed in on the religious community with specific reference to the scribes. These were among Israel's finest. They were the epitome of a good example, and mothers cherished the hope that their sons would be like them. But Jesus said that men who despise manual labor, who court recognition with a passion, and who always expect the seat of honor at feast and worship while forcing the poor to their knees are a sad lot and filled with pride. These are the ones who pray loud and long. Such pride not only destroys, but also separates.

In Dickens' work, Dombey and Son, the effect of pride upon the human soul is described devastatingly. Dombey's whole life centered on his business until the birth of his son, Paul. The firm then became Dombey and Son and seemed to be more than compensation for the death of the mother in childbirth. But the father was not satisfied with normal progress and he drove his son toward excellence with such ferocity that the boy sickened and died. To overcome his grief, he married a beautiful and proud woman. When he tried to control her through means of humiliation, she humiliated him by running off with one of his clerks. Eventually the result of pride returns to where it all began with the failure of Dombey and Son. That night as he walked from room to room througoh his house with candle in hand, he came to the room where his son had slept and studied. He hurt, and he cried, but his pride was such still that if a man would have offered a hand, or a woman a tear of sympathy, he would have turned away in silence.

Our pride is not only self-destructive, but it is one of the nails that punctured the flesh of Jesus and held him to the cross. The torture and pain inflicted upon Jesus by our thinking we are better than we are is barbaric.

Jesus was stinging with his comments about the religious who survived on false pride. There were few who were not reached by his comparison of the Pharisee with the publican. "God be merciful to me, a sinner," is not only the insight of one man, but the key to salvation for us all. Any person who doesn't believe that he is in need of an overwhelming and undeserved love is unaware of his soul's trouble. The book of Proverbs declares to us that "Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall. It is better to be a lowly spirit with the poor than to divide the spoil with the proud."

This day marks the beginning of Lent, the time when we concentrate upon our shortcomings, and the grace of God showed to us through the sacrificial death of the Christ. The key to Lent is penitence, a change of heart that allows God to work beneath the skin surface and rid us of our false egos.

Which of us cherishes the name hypocrite, or likes being the professionally religious? Not one of us. Yet with mallet or hammer in hand, we put the nail in place and ram it home with arrogance into the flesh of Christ.

Pride, such a large sin, takes such small steps. Pride in Sunday school and worship attendance, memorization of scriptures, election to boards of leadership, donations given to good causes, friendships with influential people, et cetera. What can we do so that we attend worship, read and learn our Bibles, serve in positions of trust, give generously and befriend all without sinning with pride?

We must always know the extent of our personal stature when it is compared with God Almighty. We must understand, too, that we do this all in response to God's love and his generosity to us. When we are serving, we know the true meaning of humility.

Tonight we see the placement of the first nail which hanged Christ on a cross. Its name is Pride, and it is deadly. Jesus died with one of these nails in his flesh, and we put it there. But hope always abounds for the penitent and humble, and this is the direction that the Spirit of God takes us.

Perhaps you would like to reappraise your life as you stand at the foot of the cross. Do you feel like you have a hammer in your hand, or do you weep in harmony with the humble who believe that he dies for all?

CSS Publishing Company, Six Nails of the Cross, Sermons for Lent, by Wesley T. Runk