Today's Reading
On kindness
Love is something more
stern and splendid than mere kindness.
For about a hundred years we have
so concentrated on one of the virtues—“kindness” or mercy—
that most of
us do not feel anything except kindness to be really good or anything
but cruelty to be really bad.
Such lopsided ethical developments are not
uncommon,
and other ages too have had their pet virtues and curious
insensibilities.
And if one virtue must be cultivated at the expense of
all the rest, none has a higher claim than mercy. . .
The real trouble
is that “kindness” is a quality fatally easy to attribute to ourselves
on quite inadequate grounds.
Everyone feels benevolent /if nothing
happens to be annoying him at the moment.
Thus a man easily comes to
console himself for all his other vices by a conviction that “his
heart’s in the right place”
and “he wouldn’t hurt a fly,” though in fact
he has never made the slightest sacrifice for a fellow creature.
We
think we are kind /when we are only happy:
it is not so easy, on the same
grounds, to imagine oneself temperate, chaste, or humble.
You cannot be
kind /unless you have all the other virtues.
If, being cowardly,
conceited and slothful, you have never yet done a fellow creature great
mischief,
that is only because your neighbour’s welfare has not yet
happened to conflict with your safety, self-approval,
or ease.
Every
vice leads to cruelty.
From The Problem of Pain
Compiled in Words to Live By
The Problem of Pain.
Copyright © 1940, C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. Copyright restored © 1996 by C.
S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers. Words to Live By: A Guide for the Merely Christian. Copyright © 2007 by C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
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