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(7) Render therefore to all their due: taxes to
whom taxes are due, customs to whom customs, fear to whom fear, honor to
whom honor. New
King James Version Change your email Bible version
According to the thesaurus, honor has these synonyms: "esteem,
respect, pay homage to, assign value to." The Greek word translated "honor" in
our English Bibles, timao, means "to prize, i.e. fix a valuation upon; by
implication, to revere" (Strong's Concordance). Showing honor, then,
means treating another respectfully because we value them highly.
So is honor due anyone? Should we put value on any man or woman, or
should we honor God
alone? What does the Bible say? A study with a concordance reveals just how much
God has to say about honoring others. He does not limit it to honoring our
parents.
This verse tells us clearly honor is due certain ones, but it begs the
questions: To whom is honor due besides God? And how do we honor others?
The truth
is that we will never sincerely respect, prize, value, or honor anyone until and
unless we start with an attitude of meekness.
Honoring and respecting others will not happen when a superior or
holier-than-thou attitude is present. Paul tells us to "esteem others better
than" ourselves (Philippians 2:3).
When we truly repent
of what we are, and how we regularly fall short of God's holiness,
we cannot remain in a pompous mood. Perhaps we can learn from some of
those who have lived God's way before us. John the Baptist says of himself: "He
[Christ] must increase, but I must
decrease" (John 3:30). Paul considers himself "the least of the
apostles, who am not worthy to be called an apostle" (I Corinthians 15:9). He also writes that he is "less than
the least of all the saints" (Ephesians 3:8). History will conclude otherwise, but it
opens a window into Paul's thinking. When we dishonor others, it is a sure sign
we are thinking of ourselves or others wrongly. We are to love
others as ourselves, honoring them.
Honoring from a pure motive is possible only when we have a proper
perspective of who God is, what we are, and who others are in relation to us and
God. It begins with deep honor and respect for God—and thus for all He says. The
first four commandments lay the foundation for doing this.
— Staff
To learn more, see: A Matter of Honor
Related Topics: Esteem Honor Humility Meekness Respect
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