(b) When a man regards what successes he has met with as due to his merits. Success may be, and probably is, due in most cases to frugality, sound judgment, caution at one time and daring at another; but there is ever in it an element of the unforeseen, due to God’s ordering. Moreover, the good qualities, the prudence, frugality, and so on, in the man are the growth of good elements implanted in him by God. A man must always acknowledge God as the Giver of all good things, recognize His hand in the inception and the carrying out of whatever succeeds, and must not attribute it solely to himself. The thought of self drives the thought of God out of the mind.
(c) When a man boasts himself of what he has not. When, that is, in order to flatter his self-pride before others, he pretends to be, or to have what he is not, or has not got. Thus living under false appearances, living beyond one’s income, are due to Pride.
(d) When a man despises others. Every man who looks down on, disparages, and regards others as common and vile, is guilty of Pride.
The rich have no occasion to despise the poor, those of one social class to talk contemptuously of those of another, or as being common people, as Nobodies. With God nothing is common, and not one of His creatures is a Nobody. Moreover, it is possible to sin through pride if those who have committed no mortal sins despise such as have sinned. Spiritual Pride is the worst kind of Pride.
3. Pride produces a good many children, all bad when overgrown.
(a) Ambition. The desire to distinguish oneself above others. Harmless when moderate, evil when excessive.
(b) Vain-glory. The desire to make parade of those qualities one has, and to attribute to oneself qualities one has not. Always bad.
(c) Ostentation. The affectation of making display of those advantages we possess—wealth, cleverness, knowledge, &c. Always not only bad, but vulgar.
(d) Contempt for others, leading to disparaging what is good in others, and exaggerating their faults. Never other than bad.
(e) Presumption, which impels to attempt what is beyond one’s powers. It is not wrong to have self-confidence in what one has. It is wrong when one presumes on what one has not.