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Which of these 3 kinds of people are
you?
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
“until
Christ is formed in you” Galatians
4:19
C.S.
Lewis tells us that there are three kinds of people in the world:
“The
first class is of those who live simply for their own sake and pleasure,
regarding Man and Nature as so much raw material to be cut up into whatever
shape may serve them.
In the second class are
those who acknowledge some other claim upon them—the will of God, the
categorical imperative, or the good of society—and honestly try to pursue
their own interests no further than this claim will allow. They try to surrender
to the higher claim as much as it demands, like men paying a tax, but hope, like
other taxpayers, that what is left over will be enough for them to live on.
Their life is divided, like a soldier’s or a schoolboy’s life, into time
“on parade” and “off parade,” “in school” and “out of school.”
But the third class is of those who can say like St. Paul that for
them “to live is Christ” (Philippians
1:21). These
people have got rid of the tiresome business of adjusting the rival claims of
Self and God by the simple expedient of rejecting the claims of Self altogether.
The old egoistic will has been turned round, reconditioned, and made into a new
thing. The will of Christ no longer limits theirs; it is theirs. All their time,
in belonging to Him, belongs also to them, for they are His.
And
because there are three classes, any merely twofold division of the world into
good and bad is disastrous.
It
overlooks the fact that the members of the second class (to which most of us
belong) are always and necessarily
unhappy. The
tax which moral conscience levies on our desires does not in fact leave us
enough to live on.
As
long as we are in this class we must either
feel guilt because we have not paid the tax or
feel deprived because we have.
The
Christian doctrine that there is no “salvation” by works done according to
the moral law is a fact of daily experience. Back or on we must go. But
there is no going on simply by our own efforts.
If
the new Self, the new Will, does not come at His own good pleasure to be born in
us, we cannot produce Him synthetically.
The
price of Christ is something, in a way, much easier than moral effort—it
is to want Him. It is true that the wanting itself would be beyond our power
but for one fact. The world is so built that, to help us desert our own satisfactions,
they desert us.
War
and trouble and finally old age take from
us one by one all those things that the natural Self hoped for at its setting
out. Begging is our only wisdom,
and want in the end makes it easier for us to be beggars.
Even
on those terms the Mercy will receive us”
(excerpted from Present Concerns: Essays by C.S. Lewis, ed. Walter Hooper (Harcourt
Bruce, 1986), p. 21-22)
“Lord, thank you for building into my
world the constant reminder that every time I succumb to my desires over yours,
my deepest desires and yearnings will go unmet.
Give me the courage, Lord, to succumb to your desires for me and not my
own. Amen”
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