Chosen-ness does not lead...
Illustration
Chosen-ness does not lead automatically to arrogance, but without vigilance it can slide into it. People unusually blessed or gifted need to be on their guard against this vice.
John Kenneth Galbraith was a Harvard graduate, U.S. ambassador to India, and later advisor to President John F. Kennedy. On the morning when The New York Times published a profile of Galbraith, he was having breakfast with the president. When Kennedy asked him what he thought of the article, Galbraith said it was all right but he could not understand why they had to call him arrogant.
"I don't see why not," said the president. "Everybody else does."
John Kenneth Galbraith was a Harvard graduate, U.S. ambassador to India, and later advisor to President John F. Kennedy. On the morning when The New York Times published a profile of Galbraith, he was having breakfast with the president. When Kennedy asked him what he thought of the article, Galbraith said it was all right but he could not understand why they had to call him arrogant.
"I don't see why not," said the president. "Everybody else does."
