Tag Archives: Humility

When Self-Righteousness Sneaks In: How It Affects Your Faith, Relationships & Freedom

Introduction: Recognizing the Mask of Self-Righteousness

There was a time I believed I had faith all figured out. I attended my church, had my devotional routine, was serving others, and in my own mind I felt right with God. Until one day someone gently asked, “Do you ever feel superior to others because of what you do for God?” I bristled at the question. But that sting prompted a deeper look at my heart.

In Episode 120—“Self-Righteous”—I unpacked that self-righteousness isn’t just an arrogant posture; sometimes it’s subtle, even well-meaning. It can be a barrier between us and God, and between us and others. It’s the belief that my performance, my devotion, my righteousness puts me in a favored position. And that belief corrodes in quiet ways: pride, judgement, isolation, spiritual stagnation.

Today I want to walk with you through what self-righteousness really is, how it affects our relationship with God and with others, how we can recognize it, and how we can move toward humility, authenticity, and freedom in Christ. My hope is … you’ll see not only the trap—but the pathway out.


1. What Is Self-Righteousness? A Clear Definition

According to dictionary definitions, self-righteousness is “confidence in one’s own righteousness, especially when smugly moralistic and intolerant of the opinions and behavior of others.” Christianity.com+1

Biblically speaking, the sin of self-righteousness happens when we rely on our own works or moral standing to make us acceptable to God, or when we look down on others because we sense ourselves better. As one guide explains:

“Self-righteousness … is the idea that we can somehow generate within ourselves a righteousness that will be acceptable to God.”

It’s sometimes tied to legalism (rule-keeping) but also to a posture of superiority (“I’m better”). The result? We avoid seeing our need for grace, we judge, we alienate others, and we distort our relationship with God.

Some key markers of self-righteousness:

  • A belief my spiritual disciplines or good deeds make me right rather than trusting Christ’s righteousness.
  • A tendency to look down on others: their mistakes, their lack of service, their difference in doctrine.
  • A denial (or neglect) of my own flaws, failures, need for growth. Self-righteousness thrives in concealment.
  • A heart that says: “I have arrived,” when in truth the Christian life is always dependently walking with Christ.

2. How Self-Righteousness Affects Our Relationship with God

A. It Obscures Grace

When I believe my righteousness is derived from me, I fail to fully rest in Christ’s work for me. Scripture repeatedly warns of trusting in self rather than in God’s mercy. Romans 3:10 says, “There is none righteous, no not one.”

The Apostle Paul writes against those who sought righteousness by works rather than faith. When our trust shifts from God’s grace to our performance, we miss the heart of the gospel: saved not by what we do, but by what He has done.

In my own walk, I realized: when I started measuring my relationship with God based on my “spiritual achievements”—the number of devotionals, the outreach hours—I started to feel spiritually superior. That superiority replaced intimacy. Instead of “Father, I need you,” I shifted to “Father, see what I’ve done for you.” The dynamic changed—from dependency to display.

B. It Hinders Authentic Repentance

True repentance lives in humility: “I am wrong. I need you.” Self-righteousness whispers: “I am right. They are wrong.”

In the Gospels, Jesus rebukes the self-righteous religious leaders—the Pharisee in Luke 18:9-14, who thanked God he was not like the tax-collector. His heart was proud and distant.

When repentance is compromised, transformation is compromised. We keep the façade, but the interior remains untouched. Grace doesn’t flow, because we believe we don’t need it. Our walk with God becomes duty instead of delight.

C. It Damages Our Intimacy with God

If I constantly compare myself to others or to my past self and say, “Look at how far I’ve come,” I risk forgetting that Jesus’ rest is not in what I’ve done—but in who He is. Self-righteousness re-directs our gaze from Christ to self, from grace to performance, from relationship to regulation.

In contrast, Scripture invites us to cast ourselves upon Christ—dirty, broken, needy—and receive love. That’s the difference between religion and relationship. Self-righteousness pushes toward the former; humility opens the latter.


3. How Self-Righteousness Affects Our Relationships with Others

A. It Builds Walls, Not Bridges

When we believe we are morally superior, we often treat others as inferior. The result: judgment replaces compassion, distance replaces connection. As one article puts it, self-righteousness often disguises itself in service or zeal—but underneath lies “misplaced trust that leads to misplaced judgment.”

In my community life, I’ve seen this: the volunteer who gives abundantly but resents those who give less; the believer who holds to a higher standard and judges those who don’t measure up. These patterns create alienation, not unity.

B. It Stunts Growth in Others—and in Us

When I claim moral authority rather than moral dependency, I stop growing. I presume I’m past certain struggles, dismiss others’ needs, and miss the opportunity to learn. Self-righteousness says: “I’ve arrived.” But discipleship says: “I’m still becoming.”

Additionally, others may be discouraged or shut out by my superiority. They see me not as fellow traveler but as unapproachable. Healthy fellowship thrives in humility, transparency, mutual growth. Self-righteousness thrives in isolation.

C. It Undermines Love and Grace

Christian community is built on grace—“forgive one another… bear one another’s burdens.” But self-righteousness says: “They should fix themselves first.” That stance empties love of its power. It removes the beauty of being loved when unlovely, forgiven when unworthy.

In Scripture, Jesus spends time with sinners, doesn’t ban them from the table. Self-righteousness would’ve shut the door. Grace opens it. Our relationships bear witness not only of what we are—but of what Christ is doing in us.


4. Signs That You Might Be Slipping into Self-Righteousness

Recognizing self-righteousness in your life isn’t easy—it often wears a mask of piety, service, devotion. Here are warning signs I’ve learned to watch for:

  • You feel justified because you give more, serve more, pray more.
  • You feel annoyed or superior toward those who serve less or struggle more.
  • You keep track of your spiritual accomplishments, and you secretly compare them with someone else’s.
  • When someone points out a flaw, you defend or deflect rather than repent.
  • You lose compassion for those who are weak or inconsistent.
  • You fear losing favor if your performance drops.
  • You begin to see your identity in your deeds rather than in Christ.

These signs don’t mean you’re beyond hope—they mean you’re aware. Awareness is the first step to transformation. As one reflection states: “Self-righteousness … keeps people from seeing their need for the gospel.”


5. How to Move from Self-Righteousness to Humility & Healthy Righteousness

A. Re-Root Your Identity in Christ’s Righteousness, Not Yours

Scripture teaches we are justified by faith, not works (Romans 3). We can do no work that earns God’s approval; instead we receive it through Christ’s work. Humility understands this truth and rests in it.

Daily I remind myself: I am not righteous because of me—I stand because of Him. That mindset shifts my motive from performance to gratitude.

B. Embrace Vulnerability and Confession

Humility begins with admitting we’re not right. In community, we confess our struggles, we own our mistakes, we receive forgiveness. This creates authenticity. A friend once said: “When I stopped pretending, people drew near.”

C. Cultivate Compassion and Grace Toward Others

Instead of judging flaws, I aim to see the divine image in others. I ask: What pressures do they carry? What hopes do they have? How can I serve rather than compare? Compassion dethrones superiority.

D. Let Your Service Be Outflow, Not Over-achievement

When serving becomes a commodity—“Look at how much I do for God”—it risks self-righteousness. When serving flows from gratitude to Christ, it becomes worship, not work. I try to check: Am I serving to be seen or serving to reflect Him?

E. Create Safe Community for Growth, Not Performance

I engage in relationships where I can show weakness, talk about failure, ask for help. Communities that only celebrate “success” breed self-righteousness. Communities that confess, support, and grow together reflect the gospel.

F. Rehearse the Gospel Continuously

Every morning, I rehearse: I was once lost. Christ found me. I am justified by His blood. I live now by His Spirit. That ongoing gospel reminder keeps the heart soft and eyes humble.


6. Reflecting Personally: My Journey Through This Struggle

In my own story, I see three phases:

Phase 1: Enthusiasm and performance. I was bold in ministry, active in service, and I felt spiritual. But a part of me believed I earned favor.

Phase 2: Confrontation and awakening. One friendship called me out gently and rightly: You’ve become more about your works than your walk. I realized my “good Christian” identity had become armor. My relationship with God had become duty rather than delight.

Phase 3: Transformation and dependence. I returned to the simplicity of the gospel, embraced my need for Christ daily, entered community with honesty, and began serving from overflow, not from obligation. I saw relationships heal, I saw freedom grow, I saw faith deepen.

Through that journey I discovered: humility doesn’t mean being weak—it means being honest, being dependent on Christ, being open to others, and living out love rather than status.


7. Why Healthy Righteousness Still Matters

Some might hear this and say: So works don’t matter? Service isn’t important? That’s not the message. Healthy righteousness matters; it flows out of gospel identity, not into it.

When I serve, when I obey, when I grow—it matters. But the difference is motive and root. Healthy righteousness says: Because I’m loved, I love. Because I’m transformed, I serve. Because Christ gives me conscience, I keep it. The focus remains Christ, not self.

The gospel gives power not only to believe once—but to live differently every day. Humility frees us to pursue obedience, service, love—not to prove, but to respond.


8. The Impact on Your Faith & Life When You Leave Self-Righteousness Behind

A. Freedom from Performance

When your righteousness is Christ-based, you stop living to be right and start living in right relationship. That brings freedom: from comparison, from shame, from the need to measure up.

B. Deeper Relationship with God

The gap between you and God narrows. You approach not as someone who must prove himself, but someone who rests in Christ. Intimacy grows. Worship becomes less about what you do and more about who He is.

C. More Authentic Relationships

Your relationships become real. You no longer have to perform for others. You can confess your struggles, receive grace, extend grace. Others draw near; community deepens.

D. Increased Compassion & Impact

When you’re no longer consumed with yourself, you’re free to serve others from a heart of empathy, not superiority. Your influence becomes relational, not regulatory. People follow the humble, not the haughty.

E. Eternal Perspective

Self-righteousness is temporal: how I look, what I do, how I compare. The gospel is eternal: the righteousness of Christ imputed, identity secured. That perspective shapes priorities, decisions, how we invest our lives.


Conclusion: From Self-Righteous to Rooted in Grace

If I were to say one thing from my journey and from Episode 120’s reflections: Ask yourself daily: “Am I living by my performance or by His grace?”

Self-righteousness may begin subtly—pride in service, in knowledge, in moral standing. It whispers that you can be good enough. But the gospel shouts: You are loved because of Him. Not because of you.

Let’s walk out together—not perfect, but humbled. Not superior, but connected. Not self-justified, but Christ-justified. Let our faith be anchored not in our efforts but in His work. Let our relationships reflect not our virtue but His mercy. Let our lives point not to our righteousness but to His—freely given, beautifully applied.

May you live emerging from self-righteousness into grace. May your faith deepen, your humility bloom, your relationships flourish. And above all, may you find your identity in Christ alone—righteous, beloved, free.

Humbling Ourselves: Discovering Strength in True Submission to God

Introduction: The Power in Letting Go

There’s a moment during Episode 109 of my podcast—“Humble Yourselves”—when I paused, my voice steady but my heart thundering. I said it plainly, maybe even boldly: “God is not looking for your greatness—He’s asking for your submission.” That truth hit me harder than I expected. It wasn’t just something I said—it was something I was living.

If I’ve learned anything on this journey, it’s this: humility is not weakness. It’s strength. It’s discipline. It’s the gateway to everything God wants to do through you. I’ve seen firsthand how pride can delay destiny, how ego can cloud divine assignments, and how trying to do life on our terms leads to spiritual burnout. But I’ve also seen what happens when we choose to bow low—how God lifts us up.

This blog isn’t a lecture. It’s a testimony. A personal reflection. An invitation to join me on a deeper walk of surrender. Because in humbling yourself, you don’t lose identity—you gain authority. You don’t give up power—you receive divine alignment. And most of all, you open yourself to let God do what only He can.


What True Humility Looks Like

Let’s clear something up right now: humility isn’t self-hatred or pretending you’re less than who God made you to be. It’s not shrinking back. It’s not living under shame or minimizing your purpose. That’s false humility—and it’s just another form of pride dressed in insecurity.

True humility, as I’ve come to understand, is powerful. It’s an accurate view of yourself in light of who God is. It’s acknowledging that every gift you have—every opportunity, every success—isn’t a result of your doing alone. It’s being willing to say, “God, I don’t want to go anywhere or do anything if You’re not in it.”

C.S. Lewis once said, “Humility is not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.” That landed hard with me. Because I realized that so much of what we do—even “good” things—can be rooted in our need to be seen or validated. Humility takes the spotlight off us and puts it back on Him.

It means living with open hands and an open heart. It means being teachable. Being correctable. And yes—it means admitting when you’re wrong. But more than anything, it means yielding your will to God’s.


Humility Is Our Greatest Strength

You want to know the real flex? Surrender. Because humility unlocks strength you didn’t know you had.

When I operate out of humility, I have access to wisdom beyond my experience. I stop reacting out of emotion and start moving with intention. I don’t need to prove myself—I just need to obey. And in that obedience, power flows. Peace flows. Purpose gets clearer. And doors that I couldn’t open in my own strength? They swing wide, all because I got out of the way.

Humility doesn’t make you invisible. It makes you available.

And trust me—God does His best work through those who are available. That’s why the humble rise. That’s why they’re elevated. That’s why Jesus said, “Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:4).

Humility strengthens our relationships. It silences our need to always be right. It fuels unity and dissolves conflict. In ministry, in business, in family—where humility leads, grace follows.


Christ: The Blueprint of Humility

Nowhere is humility more vividly displayed than in Jesus Himself.

Philippians 2:5–8 tells us that Christ, though He was God, “did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped.” Instead, He emptied Himself. Took on the form of a servant. Became obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross.

That’s divine humility. The Son of God stooped down, washed dirty feet, and let Himself be crucified by the very people He came to save.

Jesus didn’t have to prove who He was. He knew who He was. That’s why He could kneel and serve. That’s why He could keep silent in front of His accusers. His power came from surrender.

If the One who holds the universe in His hands could choose humility—what excuse do we have?


Why Full Submission to God Changes Everything

Here’s where it gets personal.

Humbling myself wasn’t easy. It meant letting go of control. It meant silencing my plans and listening—really listening—for His voice. It meant repentance. It meant forgiveness. It meant trusting that God’s timing was better than mine.

But it changed everything.

Full submission isn’t passive. It’s fierce. It’s active. It’s saying: “Lord, take my ideas, my goals, my fears, my pride. I trust You more than I trust myself.”

And when you submit like that, you make room for the Holy Spirit to flow. You stop striving. You start hearing. You begin to operate in divine rhythm.

In my life, submission has brought clarity where there was confusion, peace where there was chaos, and purpose where there was wandering. And it’s not because I figured it out. It’s because I finally got low enough for God to lift me.


How to Walk in Humility Daily

Humility isn’t a one-time decision. It’s a daily discipline. Here’s what I’ve learned:

  1. Start your day surrendered.
    Before you scroll, before you speak—ask God: “Lead me today. Keep me humble. Correct me quickly.” That posture sets the tone.
  2. Ask for feedback.
    It takes humility to let people speak truth into your life. But those conversations? They’re gold. Don’t run from correction—run to it.
  3. Serve when it’s inconvenient.
    Humility doesn’t wait for applause. It serves in silence. In secret. And that’s where growth happens.
  4. Own your mistakes.
    Pride deflects. Humility owns. Say “I was wrong.” Say “I’m sorry.” Watch healing follow.
  5. Celebrate others.
    A humble heart is secure enough to cheer others on. No comparison. Just joy.

Humility Impacts Everything

When you choose humility, you shift atmospheres.

Your relationships change. Your leadership changes. Your inner world transforms. Pride builds walls—but humility builds bridges. And in those bridges, God moves.

People aren’t drawn to perfection. They’re drawn to authenticity. To gentleness. To leaders and friends who walk low and lift others up.

And the best part? God honors it. He promises in James 4:10, “Humble yourselves before the Lord, and He will lift you up.”

I’ve seen it. I’m living it.


Conclusion: A Call to Bow Low So God Can Lift High

Let me leave you with this: Don’t be afraid to humble yourself.

It’s not the end of your influence—it’s the beginning of your impact. It’s not about thinking less of yourself—it’s about thinking more of God.

If Episode 109 taught me anything, it’s that God is still looking for vessels—not performers. He’s looking for people who will say, “Not my will, but Yours.” People who will go low so that He can go high. People who will carry His heart and not just His name.

So here’s my challenge to you this week: Pick one area where pride is hiding. Surrender it. Serve in secret. Apologize first. Let go of the need to be right. And ask the Holy Spirit to help you live humbled, not humiliated—surrendered, not silenced.

And watch what God does.

Giving Weakness to God: A Journey to Inner Strength

In our lives, we all face personal weaknesses that can often hold us back. It’s easy to become bogged down by our shortcomings and feel overwhelmed by the challenges they present. However, by surrendering our weaknesses to God, we can transform them into sources of strength and empowerment. In this blog post, we will explore the concept of giving weakness to God and provide strategies that will help you develop inner strength. By embarking on this journey, you will discover the power of faith and find the motivation to make lasting changes in your life.

  1. Understanding the Concept of Giving Weakness to God

Giving weakness to God is the act of acknowledging our limitations and surrendering them to a higher power. This doesn’t mean we are giving up or becoming passive, but rather recognizing that we cannot control everything in our lives. By surrendering our weaknesses to God, we invite Him to work in our lives and help us overcome our challenges. This act of faith can lead to inner strength and a deeper sense of purpose.

  1. The Benefits of Giving Weakness to God

There are numerous benefits to giving weakness to God, such as increased faith, improved self-awareness, and a greater sense of inner peace. By surrendering our limitations to a higher power, we can experience spiritual growth and develop a more intimate relationship with God. Additionally, giving weakness to God can lead to a renewed sense of purpose and a stronger desire to live a life that honors Him.

  1. Strategies to Develop Inner Strength by Surrendering Weaknesses to God

a. Prayer: Prayer is a powerful tool that can help you connect with God and surrender your weaknesses. Spend time in prayer, asking God to help you overcome your challenges and develop inner strength. Be open to His guidance and listen for His voice as He leads you through the journey of transformation.

b. Meditation: Meditation is another effective strategy for surrendering your weaknesses to God. Set aside time each day to meditate on His word and seek His guidance. Allow your mind to be at peace as you connect with Him, and trust that He will lead you to a place of inner strength.

c. Community: Surrounding yourself with a supportive community can be instrumental in developing inner strength. Find a group of like-minded individuals who share your faith and values, and lean on them for support and encouragement. Together, you can help each other overcome your weaknesses and grow in your relationship with God.

d. Gratitude: Practicing gratitude can help shift your focus from your weaknesses to the blessings in your life. Take time each day to reflect on the things you are thankful for, and express your gratitude to God for His provision and guidance. By focusing on the positive, you will be better equipped to face your challenges with inner strength and resilience.

e. Service: Serving others is a powerful way to develop inner strength and overcome personal weaknesses. Look for opportunities to help those in need, and use your gifts and talents to make a positive impact in the world. By focusing on the needs of others, you will find that your own challenges become less daunting, and your inner strength will grow as you serve God and His people.

Conclusion

Giving weakness to God is a powerful way to develop inner strength and overcome the challenges we face in our lives. By surrendering our limitations to a higher power, we invite Him to work in our lives and help us grow in our faith. Through prayer, meditation, community, gratitude, and service, we can transform our weaknesses into sources of strength and empowerment. As you embark on this journey, trust in God’s plan for your life and be open to the incredible power of faith.

May your journey to inner strength be filled with blessings, and may you find the motivation to make lasting changes in your life. Remember, you are never alone – God is with you every step of the way.

“Giving Weakness to God” – Episode 39