Today's Reading
Screwtape examines the virtue of Humility:
Your
patient has become humble; have you drawn his attention to the fact?
All virtues are less formidable to us /once the man is aware that he has
them,
but this is specially true of humility.
* formidable. 1 : causing fear, dread, or apprehension
Catch him at the moment
/when he is really poor in spirit and smuggle /into his mind [the
gratifying reflection],
‘By Jove! I’m being humble’, and almost
immediately pride—pride at his own humility—will appear.
If he awakes to
the danger and tries to smother this new form of pride, make him proud
of his attempt
—and so on, through as many stages /as you please.
But
don’t try this too long, for fear you awake his sense of humour and
proportion,
in which case he will merely laugh at you and go to bed.
But
there are other profitable ways of fixing his attention on the virtue
of Humility.
By this virtue, as by all the others, our Enemy wants to
turn the man’s attention away from self to Him,
and to the man’s
neighbours.
All the abjection and self-hatred are designed, in the long
run, solely for this end;
unless they attain this end they do us little
harm;
and they may even do us good /if they keep the man concerned with
himself,
and, above all, if self-contempt can be made the starting point
for contempt of other selves,
and thus for gloom, cynicism, and
cruelty.
* our Enemy = devil's Enemy = God
* Abjection is a kind of depressed feeling, a bleak and heavyhearted state of mind.
From The Screwtape Letters
Compiled in A Year with C.S. Lewis
The Screwtape Letters.
Copyright © 1942, C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. Copyright restored © 1996 C. S.
Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers. A Year With C.S. Lewis: Daily Readings from His Classic Works. Copyright © 2003 by C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
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