If you want to find out how proud you are the easiest way is to ask yourself, ‘How much do I dislike it when other people snub me, or refuse to take any notice of me, or shove their oar in, or patronize me, or show off?’ The point is that each person’s pride is in competition with every one else’s pride. It is because I wanted to be the big noise at the party that I am so annoyed at someone else being the big noise. Two of a trade never agree.
Now what you want to get clear is that Pride is essentially competitive—is competitive by its very nature— while the other vices are competitive only, so to speak, by accident. Pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of having more of it than the next man. We say that people are proud of being rich, or clever, or good-looking, but they are not. They are proud of being richer, or cleverer, or better-looking than others. If everyone else became equally rich, or clever, or good-looking there would be nothing to be proud about. It is the comparison that makes you proud: the pleasure of being above the rest.
Once the element of competition has gone, pride has gone. That is why I say that Pride is essentially competitive in a way the other vices are not. . . . . Greed may drive men into competition if there is not enough to go round; but the proud man, even when he has got more than he can possibly want, will try to get still more just to assert his power. Nearly all those evils in the world which people put down to greed or selfishness are really far more the result of Pride.
From Mere Christianity
Compiled in A Year with C.S. Lewis
Compiled in A Year with C.S. Lewis
Mere Christianity. Copyright © 1952, C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. Copyright renewed © 1980, 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.
And now we get to the kernel of truth that underlies what Lewis calls “the center of Christian morals” and “that by which the devil became the devil”…pride. The competitive nature of pride is based on the false illusion of separation, the results of which are known as sin. To be “better than someone else” we must first succumb to the lie that we are separate from the other person. As we learned in America, and as stated by the Supreme Court, separate is inherently unequal. It is not only the law, but also our faith upon which that law is based, that describes sin as the false notion of separation from God and others.
So, the false perception of separation leads to the sin of pride, the greatest of sins, the gateway sin, the sin which blinds us to the light and subjects us to the dark, the absence, the no thing. Today Father, let us remove the blinding scales of false separation and pride from our eyes, so we can see all things by the true light and see clearly the Eden that is waiting here for us.
Seeing clearly,
Z gardener
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