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“The Bible leaves lots of questions unanswered.”

A thought by Larry Osborne, (2009-04-04) from his book, Accidental Pharisees: Avoiding Pride, Exclusivity, and the Other Dangers of Overzealous Faith (Kindle Location 649). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book) That is so true.   And we have a list of questions that we want to ask God when we make it into his presence, don’t we?   But the truth is there are reasons why they are unanswered.   God doesn’t think that they are important enough to spend the time on them.   He has more important truths to tell us.   And maybe we spend so much time on the unanswered because we don’t like the answers he does give us. Larry says, “Another way of avoiding the discomfort of looking at ourselves in the mirror of Scripture is to turn the Bible into a springboard for speculation. For instance, when I first became a Christian, I was excited to discover all the Bible had to say about God, sin, grace, and how I was supposed to live. But it wasn’t

“We never see ourselves as arrogant.”

A thought by Larry Osborne, (2009-04-04) from his book, Accidental Pharisees: Avoiding Pride, Exclusivity, and the Other Dangers of Overzealous Faith (Kindle Location 474). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book) Dave Roberts, our pastor here at Montrose Church said yesterday that each one of us have 3-4 blind spots in our personality.   We don’t see them but everyone else does.   Being arrogant could be one of those blind spots that a lot of us have.   And it's not a good one. Larry says, “It’s the ultimate blind spot. We never see ourselves as arrogant. We might admit to an occasional struggle with pride, but we never cop to full-blown arrogance. We never think we’re inappropriately looking down on others. We think we’re seeing things as they really are. We think the people we look down on really are beneath us.” Now that is not good is it? He goes one, “To keep from falling into that trap, I try to regularly ask mys

“Spiritual comparisons are particularly silly.”

A thought by Larry Osborne, (2009-04-04) from his book, Accidental Pharisees: Avoiding Pride, Exclusivity, and the Other Dangers of Overzealous Faith (Kindle Locations 416-417). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book) Larry goes on, “We don’t always know the full story. All we see is the outside. There’s no way to see the heart. This means that a lot of our conclusions about people are flat-out wrong.” He then says, “Our spiritual comparisons are also incredibly biased. We have an amazing ability to compare things in a way that causes us to come out on top. And when we come out on top, it’s hard not to look down on people who don’t measure up. It’s at this point that pride becomes particularly dangerous.” And there is the key word, the one that is the problem.   The word is pride.   He then says something that is so important, “Unfortunately, many of us fail to grasp how dangerous pride is. We know that we shouldn’t look