When pride is named as an invisible disease,
humility can quietly become fear.
When confidence is treated as suspicion,
conscience begins to tremble.
And when submission is framed
as the safest spiritual position,
discernment can slowly be surrendered.
There is a reason the Nephite cycle repeats.
Pride follows prosperity.
Contempt follows comparison.
Division follows elevation.
“Because of their riches they were lifted up in the pride of their eyes…”
(Helaman 3:36)
“They began to be scornful, one towards another.”
(Alma 4:8)
Pride in scripture is not subtle self-awareness.
It is visible superiority—
forgetting the poor,
ranking souls,
assuming spiritual height.
“Only by pride cometh contention.”
(Proverbs 13:10)
Pride produces division.
So when pride is reframed
as something always hidden,
always present,
even in steadiness—
the battlefield shifts inward.
And humility begins to resemble caution
instead of love.
A teacher placed a mirror before his students
and said,
“Look carefully. Pride may be hiding where you cannot see it.”
The students searched their faces.
Their posture.
Their thoughts.
One asked,
“How will we know when we are free of pride?”
The teacher replied,
“If you think you are free of it, you are already afflicted.”
So the students became careful—very careful.
They lowered their voices.
They questioned their steadiness.
They monitored their hearts.
But over time, an older student noticed something:
The mirror had moved.
It no longer reflected arrogance toward others—
it reflected suspicion toward oneself.
And the students began guarding their confidence
more than guarding their love.
The older student said gently,
“Perhaps pride is not in the steadiness of our step,
but in whether we walk above others
instead of beside them.”
And the mirror settled back into place.
Scripture defines pride clearly.
Setting the heart upon riches.
Becoming scornful.
Forgetting the poor.
Elevating the self above others.
Humility, by contrast, is:
“Meek, humble, patient, full of love.”
(Mosiah 3:19)
Love—not anxiety—is its fruit.
Humility yields to God.
It refines the conscience.
It does not erase it.
When pride is expanded
to include spiritual steadiness itself,
humility can shift
from alignment
to apprehension.
The warning was never
that we might feel steady.
The warning was
that we might elevate ourselves
above others
while calling it righteousness.
That is the disease.
And it is visible.
Humility does not shrink the soul.
It enlarges love.
The most dangerous pride
is not confidence in Christ.
It is confidence
that places us above another human being
while calling it righteousness.
Humility is not self-doubt.
It is walking beside—
not above.
And when love increases,
pride decreases—
not because we fear it,
but because we no longe
r need it.

The Space
Not a storefront.
Not a schedule.
Just something you return to
when it calls you back.
© Rabbit’s Warren “All things made with intention”
“No gatekeepers. Just paths.”