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The Office of Rabbi Sacks

Greatness of Humility (Shoftim, Covenant & Conversation 5776 on Spirituality)

The Office of Rabbi Sacks

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks

Religion & Spirituality

4.8601 Ratings

🗓️ 7 September 2016

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Shoftim. Covenant and Conversation 5776 on Spirituality is kindly supported by the Maurice Wohl Charitable Foundation in memory of Maurice and Vivienne Wohl z”l. To join Rabbi Sacks’ mailing list, please subscribe via www.rabbisacks.org. You can also follow him on Twitter @RabbiSacks.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The greatness of humility.

0:02.8

At a dinner to celebrate the work of a communal leader,

0:05.5

the guest speaker paid lavish tribute to his many qualities,

0:09.4

his dedication, hard work and foresight.

0:11.8

As he sat down, the leader leaned over and said,

0:14.9

you forgot to mention one thing.

0:16.2

What was that, asked the speaker.

0:17.8

The leader replied, my humility.

0:20.7

Well, quite so. Great leaders have many

0:23.4

qualities, but usually humility is not one of them. With rare exceptions, they tend to be ambitious,

0:30.1

with a high measure of self-regard. They expect to be obeyed, honored, respected, even feared.

0:35.5

They may wear their superiority effortlessly. Eleanor Roosevelt called

0:41.3

this wearing an invisible crown. But there's a difference between that and humility. This makes one

0:48.6

provision in our pasha unexpected and powerful. The Torah is speaking about a king. Now, knowing as Lord Acton put it,

0:57.4

the power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely, it specifies three

1:02.5

temptations to which a king in ancient times was exposed. A king, it says, shouldn't accumulate

1:08.3

many horses or wives or wealth, the three traps into

1:14.1

which centuries later King Solomon eventually fell.

1:17.9

Then it adds, when the king is established on his royal throne, he is to write for himself

1:23.4

on a scroll a copy of this Torah.

1:26.3

It's to be with him and he's to read it all the days of his life so that he may learn,

1:30.5

to be in awe of the Lord His God and follow carefully all the words of this law and these decrees and not feel superior to his brethren.

...

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