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Mere Christianity
C. S. Lewis


Book 1.  Right and Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe
1 The Law of Human Nature
2 Some Objections
3 The Reality of the Law
4 What Lies Behind the Law
5 We have Cause to be Uneasy

Book 2.  What Christians Believe
1 The Rival Conceptions of God
2 The Invasion
3 The Shocking Alternative
4 The Perfect Penitent
5 The Practical Conclusion

Book 3.  Christian Behaviour
1 The Three Parts of Morality
2 The 'Cardinal Virtues'
3 Social Morality
4 Morality and Psychoanalysis
5 Sexual Morality
6 Christian Marriage
7 Forgiveness
8 The Great Sin
9 Charity
10 Hope
11 Faith
12 Faith

Book 4.  Beyond Personality: Or First Steps in the Doctrine of the Trinity
1 Making and Begetting
2 The Three-Personal God
3 Time and Beyond Time
4 Good Infection
5 The Obstinate Toy Soldiers
6 Two Notes
7 Let's Pretend
8 Is Christianity Hard or Easy?
9 Counting the Cost
10 Nice People or New Men
11 The New Men




PREFACE
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The contents of this book were first given on the air, and then published in
three separate parts as Broadcast Talks (1942), Christian Behaviour (1943) and
Beyond Personality (1944).  In the printed versions I made a few additions to
what I had said at the microphone, but otherwise left the text much as it had
been.  A 'talk' on the radio should, I think, be as like real talk as possible,
and should not sound like an essay being read aloud.  In my talks I had therefore
used all the contractions and colloquialisms I ordinarily use in conversation.
In the printed version I reproduced this, putting don't and we've for do not and
we have.  And wherever, in the talks, I had made the importance of a word clear
by the emphasis of my voice, I printed it in italics.  I am now inclined to think
that this was a mistake--an undesirable hybrid between the art of speaking and
the art of writing.  A talker ought to use variations of voice for emphasis
because his medium naturally lends itself to that method: but a writer ought not
to use italics for the same purpose.  He has his own, different, means of
bringing out the key words and ought to use them.  In this edition I have
expanded the contractions and replaced most of the italics by a recasting of the
sentences in which they occurred: but without altering, I hope, the 'popular' or
'familiar' tone which I had all along intended.  I have also added and deleted
where I thought I understood any part of my subject better now than ten years
ago or where I knew that the original version had been misunderstood by others.

The reader should be warned that I offer no help to anyone who is hesitating
between two Christian 'denominations'.  You will not learn from me whether you
ought to become an Anglican, a Methodist, a Presbyterian, or a Roman Catholic.
This omission is intentional (even in the list I have just given the order is
alphabetical).  There is no mystery about my own position.  I am a very ordinary
layman of the Church of England, not especially 'high', nor especially 'low',
nor especially anything else.  But in this book I am not trying to convert anyone
to my own position.  Ever since I became a Christian I have thought that the
best, perhaps the only, service I could do for my unbelieving neighbours was to
explain and defend the belief that has been common to nearly all Christians at
all times.  I had more than one reason for thinking this.  In the first place, the
questions which divide Christians from one another often involve points of high
Theology or even of ecclesiastical history, which ought never to be treated
except by real experts.  I should have been out of my depth in such waters: more
in need of help myself than able to help others.  And secondly, I think we must
admit that the discussion of these disputed points has no tendency at all to
bring an outsider into the Christian fold.  So long as we write and talk about
them we are much more likely to deter him from entering any Christian communion
than to draw him into our own.  Our divisions should never be discussed except in
the presence of those who have already come to believe that there is one God and
that Jesus Christ is His only Son.  Finally, I got the impression that far more,
and more talented, authors were already engaged in such controversial matters
than in the defence of what Baxter calls 'mere' Christianity.  That part of the
line where I thought I could serve best was also the part that seemed to be
thinnest.  And to it I naturally went.

So far as I know, these were my only motives, and I should be very glad if
people would not draw fanciful inferences from my silence on certain disputed
matters.

For example, such silence need not mean that I myself am sitting on the fence.
Sometimes I am.  There are questions at issue between Christians to which I do
not think we have been told the answer.  There are some to which I may never know
the answer: if I asked them, even in a better world, I might (for all I know) be
answered as a far greater questioner was answered: 'What is that to thee?  Follow
thou Me.' But there are other questions as to which I am definitely on one side
of the fence, and yet say nothing.  For I am not writing to expound something I
could call 'my religion', but to expound 'mere' Christianity, which is what it
is and what it was long before I was born and whether I like it or not.

Some people draw unwarranted conclusions from the fact that I never say more
about the Blessed Virgin Mary than is involved in asserting the Virgin Birth of
Christ.  But surely my reason for not doing so is obvious?  To say more would take
me at once into highly controversial regions.  And there is no controversy
between Christians which needs to be so delicately touched as this.  The Roman
Catholic beliefs on that subject are held not only with the ordinary fervour
that attaches to all sincere religious belief, but (very naturally) with the
peculiar and, as it were, chivalrous sensibility that a man feels when the
honour of his mother or his beloved is at stake.  It is very difficult so to
dissent from them that you will not appear to them a cad as well as a heretic.
And contrariwise, the opposed Protestant beliefs on this subject call forth
feelings which go down to the very roots of all Monotheism whatever.  To radical
Protestants it seems that the distinction between Creator and creature (however
holy) is imperilled: that Polytheism is risen again.  Hence it is hard so to
dissent from them that you will not appear something worse than a heretic--a
Pagan.  If any topic could be relied upon to wreck a book about 'mere'
Christianity--if any topic makes utterly unprofitable reading for those who do
not yet believe that the Virgin's son is God--surely this is it.

Oddly enough, you cannot even conclude, from my silence on disputed points,
either that I think them important or that I think them unimportant.  For this is
itself one of the disputed points.  One of the things Christians are disagreed
about is the importance of their disagreements.  When two Christians of different
denominations start arguing, it is usually not long before one asks whether
such-and-such a point 'really matters' and the other replies: 'Matter?  Why, it's
absolutely essential.'

All this is said simply in order to make clear what kind of book I was trying to
write; not in the least to conceal or evade responsibility for my own beliefs.
About those, as I said before, there is no secret.  To quote Uncle Toby: 'They
are written in the Common-Prayer Book.'

The danger clearly was that I should put forward as common Christianity anything
that was peculiar to the Church of England or (worse still) to myself.  I tried
to guard against this by sending the original script of what is now Book II to
four clergymen (Anglican, Methodist, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic) and asking
for their criticism.  The Methodist thought I had not said enough about Faith,
and the Roman Catholic thought I had gone rather too far about the comparative
unimportance of theories in explanation of the Atonement.  Otherwise all five of
us were agreed.  I did not have the remaining books similarly 'vetted' because in
them, though differences might arise among Christians, these would be
differences between individuals or schools of thought, not between
denominations.

So far as I can judge from reviews and from the numerous letters written to me,
the book, however faulty in other respects, did at least succeed in presenting
an agreed, or common, or central, or 'mere' Christianity.  In that way it may
possibly be of some help in silencing the view that, if we omit the disputed
points, we shall have left only a vague and bloodless H.C.F.  The H.C.F.  turns
out to be something not only positive but pungent; divided from all
non-Christian beliefs by a chasm to which the worst divisions inside Christendom
are not really comparable at all.  If I have not directly helped the cause of
reunion, I have perhaps made it clear why we ought to be reunited.  Certainly I
have met with little of the fabled odium theologicum from convinced members of
communions different from my own.  Hostility has come more from borderline people
whether within the Church of England or without it: men not exactly obedient to
any communion.  This I find curiously consoling.  It is at her centre, where her
truest children dwell, that each communion is really closest to every other in
spirit, if not in doctrine.  And this suggests that at the centre of each there
is a something, or a Someone, who against all divergencies of belief, all
differences of temperament, all memories of mutual persecution, speaks with the
same voice.

So much for my omissions on doctrine.  In Book III, which deals with morals, I
have also passed over some things in silence, but for a different reason.  Ever
since I served as an infantryman in the First World War I have had a great
dislike of people who, themselves in ease and safety, issue exhortations to men
in the front line.  As a result I have a reluctance to say much about temptations
to which I myself am not exposed.  No man, I suppose, is tempted to every sin.  It
so happens that the impulse which makes men gamble has been left out of my
make-up; and, no doubt, I pay for this by lacking some good impulse of which it
is the excess or perversion.  I therefore did not feel myself qualified to give
advice about permissible and impermissible gambling: if there is any
permissible, for I do not claim to know even that.  I have also said nothing
about birth-control.  I am not a woman nor even a married man, nor am I a priest.
I did not think it my place to take a firm line about pains, dangers and
expenses from which I am protected; having no pastoral office which obliged me
to do so.

Far deeper objections may be felt--and have been expressed--against my use of
the word Christian to mean one who accepts the common doctrines of Christianity.
People ask: 'Who are you, to lay down who is, and who is not a Christian?' or
'May not many a man who cannot believe these doctrines be far more truly a
Christian, far closer to the spirit of Christ, than some who do?' Now this
objection is in one sense very right, very charitable, very spiritual, very
sensitive.  It has every available quality except that of being useful.  We simply
cannot, without disaster, use language as these objectors want us to use it.  I
will try to make this clear by the history of another, and very much less
important, word.

The word gentleman originally meant something recognisable; one who had a coat
of arms and some landed property.  When you called someone 'a gentleman' you were
not paying him a compliment, but merely stating a fact.  If you said he was not
'a gentleman' you were not insulting him, but giving information.  There was no
contradiction in saying that John was a liar and a gentleman; any more than
there now is in saying that James is a fool and an M.A.  But then there came
people who said--so rightly, charitably, spiritually, sensitively, so anything
but usefully--'Ah, but surely the important thing about a gentleman is not the
coat of arms and the land, but the behaviour?  Surely he is the true gentleman
who behaves as a gentleman should?  Surely in that sense Edward is far more truly
a gentleman than John?' They meant well.  To be honourable and courteous and
brave is of course a far better thing than to have a coat of arms.  But it is not
the same thing.  Worse still, it is not a thing everyone will agree about.  To
call a man 'a gentleman' in this new, refined sense, becomes, in fact, not a way
of giving information about him, but a way of praising him: to deny that he is
'a gentleman' becomes simply a way of insulting him.  When a word ceases to be a
term of description and becomes merely a term of praise, it no longer tells you
facts about the object: it only tells you about the speaker's attitude to that
object.  (A 'nice' meal only means a meal the speaker likes.) A gentleman, once
it has been spiritualised and refined out of its old coarse, objective sense,
means hardly more than a man whom the speaker likes.  As a result, gentleman is
now a useless word.  We had lots of terms of approval already, so it was not
needed for that use; on the other hand if anyone (say, in a historical work)
wants to use it in its old sense, he cannot do so without explanations.  It has
been spoiled for that purpose.

Now if once we allow people to start spiritualising and refining, or as they
might say 'deepening', the sense of the word Christian, it too will speedily
become a useless word.  In the first place, Christians themselves will never be
able to apply it to anyone.  It is not for us to say who, in the deepest sense,
is or is not close to the spirit of Christ.  We do not see into men's hearts.  We
cannot judge, and are indeed forbidden to judge.  It would be wicked arrogance
for us to say that any man is, or is not, a Christian in this refined sense.  And
obviously a word which we can never apply is not going to be a very useful word.
As for the unbelievers, they will no doubt cheerfully use the word in the
refined sense.  It will become in their mouths simply a term of praise.  In
calling anyone a Christian they will mean that they think him a good man.  But
that way of using the word will be no enrichment of the language, for we already
have the word good.  Meanwhile, the word Christian will have been spoiled for any
really useful purpose it might have served.

We must therefore stick to the original, obvious meaning.  The name Christians
was first given at Antioch (Acts 11:26) to 'the disciples', to those who
accepted the teaching of the apostles.  There is no question of its being
restricted to those who profited by that teaching as much as they should have.
There is no question of its being extended to those who in some refined,
spiritual, inward fashion were 'far closer to the spirit of Christ' than the
less satisfactory of the disciples.  The point is not a theological or moral one.
It is only a question of using words so that we can all understand what is being
said.  When a man who accepts the Christian doctrine lives unworthily of it, it
is much clearer to say he is a bad Christian than to say he is not a Christian.

I hope no reader will suppose that 'mere' Christianity is here put forward as an
alternative to the creeds of the existing communions--as if a man could adopt it
in preference to Congregationalism or Greek Orthodoxy or anything else.  It is
more like a hall out of which doors open into several rooms.  If I can bring
anyone into that hall I shall have done what I attempted.  But it is in the
rooms, not in the hall, that there are fires and chairs and meals.  The hall is a
place to wait in, a place from which to try the various doors, not a place to
live in.  For that purpose the worst of the rooms (whichever that may be) is, I
think, preferable.  It is true that some people may find they have to wait in the
hall for a considerable time, while others feel certain almost at once which
door they must knock at.  I do not know why there is this difference, but I am
sure God keeps no one waiting unless He sees that it is good for him to wait.
When you do get into your room you will find that the long wait has done you
some kind of good which you would not have had otherwise.  But you must regard it
as waiting, not as camping.  You must keep on praying for light: and, of course,
even in the hall, you must begin trying to obey the rules which are common to
the whole house.  And above all you must be asking which door is the true one;
not which pleases you best by its paint and panelling.  In plain language, the
question should never be: 'Do I like that kind of service?' but 'Are these
doctrines true: Is holiness here?  Does my conscience move me towards this?  Is my
reluctance to knock at this door due to my pride, or my mere taste, or my
personal dislike of this particular door-keeper?'

When you have reached your own room, be kind to those who have chosen different
doors and to those who are still in the hall.  If they are wrong they need your
prayers all the more; and if they are your enemies, then you are under orders to
pray for them.  That is one of the rules common to the whole house.





FOREWORD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a book that begs to be seen in its historical context, as a bold act of
storytelling and healing in a world gone mad.  In 1942, just twenty-four years
after the end of a brutal war that had destroyed an entire generation of its
young men, Great Britain was at war again.  Now it was ordinary citizens who
suffered, as their small island nation was bombarded by four hundred planes a
night, in the infamous "blitz"1 that changed the face of war, turning civilians
and their cities into the front lines.

As a young man, C. S. Lewis had served in the awful trenches of World War I, and
in 1940, when the bombing of Britain began, he took up duties as an air raid
warden and gave talks to men in the Royal Air Force, who knew that after just
thirteen bombing missions, most of them would be declared dead or missing.  Their
situation prompted Lewis to speak about the problems of suffering, pain, and
evil, work that resulted in his being invited by the BBC to give a series of
wartime broadcasts on Christian faith.  Delivered over the air from 1942 to 1944,
these speeches eventually were gathered into the book we know today as Mere
Christianity.

This book, then, does not consist of academic philosophical musings.  Rather, it
is a work of oral literature, addressed to people at war.  How strange it must
have seemed to turn on the radio, which was every day bringing news of death and
unspeakable destruction, and hear one man talking, in an intelligent,
good-humored, and probing tone, about decent and humane behavior, fair play, and
the importance of knowing right from wrong.  Asked by the BBC to explain to his
fellow Britons what Christians believe, C. S. Lewis proceeded with the task as
if it were the simplest thing in the world, and also the most important.

We can only wonder about the metaphors that connected so deeply with this book's
original audience; images of our world as enemy-occupied territory, invaded by
powerful evils bent on destroying all that is good, still seem very relevant
today.  All of our notions of modernity and progress and all our advances in
technological expertise have not brought an end to war.  Our declaring the notion
of sin to be obsolete has not diminished human suffering.  And the easy answers:
blaming technology, or, for that matter, the world's religions, have not solved
the problem.  The problem, C. S. Lewis insists, is us.  And the crooked and
perverse generation of which the psalmists and prophets spoke many thousands of
years ago is our own, whenever we submit to systemic and individual evils as if
doing so were our only alternative.

C. S. Lewis, who was once described by a friend as a man in love with the
imagination, believed that a complacent acceptance of the status quo reflects
more than a failure of nerve.  In Mere Christianity, no less than in his more
fantastical works, the Narnia stories and science fiction novels, Lewis betrays
a deep faith in the power of the human imagination to reveal the truth about our
condition and bring us to hope.  "The longest way round is the shortest way
home"2 is the logic of both fable and of faith.

Speaking with no authority but that of experience, as a layman and former
atheist, C. S. Lewis told his radio audience that he had been selected for the
job of describing Christianity to a new generation precisely because he was not
a specialist but "an amateur...and a beginner, not an old hand."3 He told
friends that he had accepted the task because he believed that England, which
had come to consider itself part of a "post-Christian" world, had never in fact
been told in basic terms what the religion is about.  Like Soren Kierkegaard
before him and his contemporary Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Lewis seeks in Mere
Christianity to help us see the religion with fresh eyes, as a radical faith
whose adherents might be likened to an underground group gathering in a war
zone, a place where evil seems to have the upper hand, to hear messages of hope
from the other side.

The "mere" Christianity of C. S. Lewis is not a philosophy or even a theology
that may be considered, argued, and put away in a book on a shelf.  It is a way
of life, one that challenges us always to remember, as Lewis once stated, that
"there are no ordinary people" and that "it is immortals whom we joke with, work
with, marry, snub, and exploit."4 Once we tune ourselves to this reality, Lewis
believes, we open ourselves to imaginatively transform our lives in such a way
that evil diminishes and good prevails.  It is what Christ asked of us in taking
on our humanity, sanctifying our flesh, and asking us in turn to reveal God to
one another.

If the world would make this seem a hopeless task, Lewis insists that it is not.
Even someone he envisions as "poisoned by a wretched upbringing in some house
full of vulgar jealousies and senseless quarrels"5 can be assured that God is
well aware of "what a wretched machine you are trying to drive," and asks only
that you "keep on, [doing] the best you can." The Christianity Lewis espouses is
humane, but not easy: it asks us to recognize that the great religious struggle
is not fought on a spectacular battleground, but within the ordinary human
heart, when every morning we awake and feel the pressures of the day crowding in
on us, and we must decide what sort of immortals we wish to be.  Perhaps it helps
us, as surely it helped the war-weary British people who first heard these
talks, to remember that God plays a great joke on those who would seek after
power at any cost.  As Lewis reminds us, with his customary humor and wit, "How
monotonously alike all the great tyrants and conquerors have been: how
gloriously different the saints."6

Kathleen Norris





BOOK ONE RIGHT AND WRONG AS A CLUE TO THE MEANING OF THE UNIVERSE

1).  THE LAW OF HUMAN NATURE

Every one has heard people quarrelling.  Sometimes it sounds funny and sometimes
it sounds merely unpleasant; but however it sounds, I believe we can learn
something very important from listening to the kind of things they say.  They say
things like this: 'How'd you like it if anyone did the same to you?'--'That's my
seat, I was there first'--'Leave him alone, he isn't doing you any harm'--'Why
should you shove in first?'--'Give me a bit of your orange, I gave you a bit of
mine'--'Come on, you promised.' People say things like that every day, educated
people as well as uneducated, and children as well as grown-ups.

Now what interests me about all these remarks is that the man who makes them is
not merely saying that the other man's behaviour does not happen to please him.
He is appealing to some kind of standard of behaviour which he expects the other
man to know about.  And the other man very seldom replies: 'To hell with your
standard.' Nearly always he tries to make out that what he has been doing does
not really go against the standard, or that if it does there is some special
excuse.  He pretends there is some special reason in this particular case why the
person who took the seat first should not keep it, or that things were quite
different when he was given the bit of orange, or that something has turned up
which lets him off keeping his promise.  It looks, in fact, very much as if both
parties had in mind some kind of Law or Rule of fair play or decent behaviour or
morality or whatever you like to call it, about which they really agreed.  And
they have.  If they had not, they might, of course, fight like animals, but they
could not quarrel in the human sense of the word.  Quarrelling means trying to
show that the other man is in the wrong.  And there would be no sense in trying
to do that unless you and he had some sort of agreement as to what Right and
Wrong are; just as there would be no sense in saying that a footballer had
committed a foul unless there was some agreement about the rules of football.

Now this Law or Rule about Right and Wrong used to be called the Law of Nature.
Nowadays, when we talk of the 'laws of nature' we usually mean things like
gravitation, or heredity, or the laws of chemistry.  But when the older thinkers
called the Law of Right and Wrong 'the Law of Nature', they really meant the Law
of Human Nature.  The idea was that, just as all bodies are governed by the law
of gravitation, and organisms by biological laws, so the creature called man
also had his law--with this great difference, that a body could not choose
whether it obeyed the law of gravitation or not, but a man could choose either
to obey the Law of Human Nature or to disobey it.

We may put this in another way.  Each man is at every moment subjected to several
different sets of law but there is only one of these which he is free to
disobey.  As a body, he is subjected to gravitation and cannot disobey it; if you
leave him unsupported in mid-air, he has no more choice about falling than a
stone has.  As an organism, he is subjected to various biological laws which he
cannot disobey any more than an animal can.  That is, he cannot disobey those
laws which he shares with other things; but the law which is peculiar to his
human nature, the law he does not share with animals or vegetables or inorganic
things, is the one he can disobey if he chooses.

This law was called the Law of Nature because people thought that every one knew
it by nature and did not need to be taught it.  They did not mean, of course,
that you might not find an odd individual here and there who did not know it,
just as you find a few people who are colour-blind or have no ear for a tune.
But taking the race as a whole, they thought that the human idea of decent
behaviour was obvious to every one.  And I believe they were right.  If they were
not, then all the things we said about the war were nonsense.  What was the sense
in saying the enemy were in the wrong unless Right is a real thing which the
Nazis at bottom knew as well as we did and ought to have practised?  If they had
had no notion of what we mean by right, then, though we might still have had to
fight them, we could no more have blamed them for that than for the colour of
their hair.

I know that some people say the idea of a Law of Nature or decent behaviour
known to all men is unsound, because different civilisations and different ages
have had quite different moralities.

But this is not true.  There have been differences between their moralities, but
these have never amounted to anything like a total difference.  If anyone will
take the trouble to compare the moral teaching of, say, the ancient Egyptians,
Babylonians, Hindus, Chinese, Greeks and Romans, what will really strike him
will be how very like they are to each other and to our own.  Some of the
evidence for this I have put together in the appendix of another book called The
Abolition of Man; but for our present purpose I need only ask the reader to
think what a totally different morality would mean.  Think of a country where
people were admired for running away in battle, or where a man felt proud of
double-crossing all the people who had been kindest to him.  You might just as
well try to imagine a country where two and two made five.  Men have differed as
regards what people you ought to be unselfish to--whether it was only your own
family, or your fellow countrymen, or every one.  But they have always agreed
that you ought not to put yourself first.  Selfishness has never been admired.
Men have differed as to whether you should have one wife or four.  But they have
always agreed that you must not simply have any woman you liked.

But the most remarkable thing is this.  Whenever you find a man who says he does
not believe in a real Right and Wrong, you will find the same man going back on
this a moment later.  He may break his promise to you, but if you try breaking
one to him he will be complaining 'It's not fair' before you can say Jack
Robinson.  A nation may say treaties don't matter; but then, next minute, they
spoil their case by saying that the particular treaty they want to break was an
unfair one.  But if treaties do not matter, and if there is no such thing as
Right and Wrong--in other words, if there is no Law of Nature--what is the
difference between a fair treaty and an unfair one?  Have they not let the cat
out of the bag and shown that, whatever they say, they really know the Law of
Nature just like anyone else?

It seems, then, we are forced to believe in a real Right and Wrong.  People may
be sometimes mistaken about them, just as people sometimes get their sums wrong;
but they are not a matter of mere taste and opinion any more than the
multiplication table.  Now if we are agreed about that, I go on to my next point,
which is this.  None of us are really keeping the Law of Nature.  If there are any
exceptions among you, I apol-ogise to them.  They had much better read some other
book, for nothing I am going to say concerns them.  And now, turning to the
ordinary human beings who are left:

I hope you will not misunderstand what I am going to say.  I am not preaching,
and Heaven knows I do not pretend to be better than anyone else.  I am only
trying to call attention to a fact; the fact that this year, or this month, or,
more likely, this very day, we have failed to practise ourselves the kind of
behaviour we expect from other people.  There may be all sorts of excuses for us.
That time you were so unfair to the children was when you were very tired.  That
slightly shady business about the money--the one you have almost forgotten--came
when you were very hard-up.  And what you promised to do for old So-and-so and
have never done--well, you never would have promised if you had known how
frightfully busy you were going to be.  And as for your behaviour to your wife
(or husband) or sister (or brother) if I knew how irritating they could be, I
would not wonder at it--and who the dickens am I, anyway?  I am just the same.
That is to say, I do not succeed in keeping the Law of Nature very well, and the
moment anyone tells me I am not keeping it, there starts up in my mind a string
of excuses as long as your arm.  The question at the moment is not whether they
are good excuses.  The point is that they are one more proof of how deeply,
whether we like it or not, we believe in the Law of Nature.  If we do not believe
in decent behaviour, why should we be so anxious to make excuses for not having
behaved decently?  The truth is, we believe in decency so much--we feel the Rule
of Law pressing on us so--that we cannot bear to face the fact that we are
breaking it, and consequently we try to shift the responsibility.  For you notice
that it is only for our bad behaviour that we find all these explanations.  It is
only our bad temper that we put down to being tired or worried or hungry; we put
our good temper down to ourselves.

These, then, are the two points I wanted to make.  First, that human beings, all
over the earth, have this curious idea that they ought to behave in a certain
way, and cannot really get rid of it.  Secondly, that they do not in fact behave
in that way.  They know the Law of Nature; they break it.  These two facts are the
foundation of all clear thinking about ourselves and the universe we live in.




2).  SOME OBJECTIONS

If they are the foundation, I had better stop to make that foundation firm
before I go on.  Some of the letters I have had show that a good many people find
it difficult to understand just what this Law of Human Nature, or Moral Law, or
Rule of Decent Behaviour is.

For example, some people wrote to me saying, 'Isn't what you call the Moral Law
simply our herd instinct and hasn't it been developed just like all our other
instincts?' Now I do not deny that we may have a herd instinct: but that is not
what I mean by the Moral Law.  We all know what it feels like to be prompted by
instinct--by mother love, or sexual instinct, or the instinct for food.  It means
that you feel a strong want or desire to act in a certain way.  And, of course,
we sometimes do feel just that sort of desire to help another person: and no
doubt that desire is due to the herd instinct.  But feeling a desire to help is
quite different from feeling that you ought to help whether you want to or not.
Supposing you hear a cry for help from a man in danger.  You will probably feel
two desires--one a desire to give help (due to your herd instinct), the other a
desire to keep out of danger (due to the instinct for self-preservation).  But
you will find inside you, in addition to these two impulses, a third thing which
tells you that you ought to follow the impulse to help, and suppress the impulse
to run away.  Now this thing that judges between two instincts, that decides
which should be encouraged, cannot itself be either of them.  You might as well
say that the sheet of music which tells you, at a given moment, to play one note
on the piano and not another, is itself one of the notes on the keyboard.  The
Moral Law tells us the tune we have to play: our instincts are merely the keys.

Another way of seeing that the Moral Law is not simply one of our instincts is
this.  If two instincts are in conflict, and there is nothing in a creature's
mind except those two instincts, obviously the stronger of the two must win.  But
at those moments when we are most conscious of the Moral Law, it usually seems
to be telling us to side with the weaker of the two impulses.  You probably want
to be safe much more than you want to help the man who is drowning: but the
Moral Law tells you to help him all the same.  And surely it often tells us to
try to make the right impulse stronger than it naturally is?  I mean, we often
feel it our duty to stimulate the herd instinct, by waking up our imaginations
and arousing our pity and so on, so as to get up enough steam for doing the
right thing.  But clearly we are not acting from instinct when we set about
making an instinct stronger than it is.  The thing that says to you, 'Your herd
instinct is asleep.  Wake it up,' cannot itself be the herd instinct.  The thing
that tells you which note on the piano needs to be played louder cannot itself
be that note.

Here is a third way of seeing it.  If the Moral Law was one of our instincts, we
ought to be able to point to some one impulse inside us which was always what we
call 'good,' always in agreement with the rule of right behaviour.  But you
cannot.  There is none of our impulses which the Moral Law may not sometimes tell
us to suppress, and none which it may not sometimes tell us to encourage.  It is
a mistake to think that some of our impulses--say mother love or patriotism--are
good, and others, like sex or the fighting instinct, are bad.  All we mean is
that the occasions on which the fighting instinct or the sexual desire need to
be restrained are rather more frequent than those for restraining mother love or
patriotism.  But there are situations in which it is the duty of a married man to
encourage his sexual impulse and of a soldier to encourage the fighting
instinct.  There are also occasions on which a mother's love for her own children
or a man's love for his own country have to be suppressed or they will lead to
unfairness towards other people's children or countries.  Strictly speaking,
there are no such things as good and bad impulses.  Think once again of a piano.
It has not got two kinds of notes on it, the 'right' notes and the 'wrong' ones.
Every single note is right at one time and wrong at another.  The Moral Law is
not any one instinct or set of instincts: it is something which makes a kind of
tune (the tune we call goodness or right conduct) by directing the instincts.

By the way, the point is of great practical consequence.  The most dangerous
thing you can do is to take any one impulse of your own nature and set it up as
the thing you ought to follow at all costs.  There is not one of them which will
not make us into devils if we set it up as an absolute guide.  You might think
love of humanity in general was safe, but it is not.  If you leave out justice
you will find yourself breaking agreements and faking evidence in trials 'for
the sake of humanity', and become in the end a cruel and treacherous man.

Other people wrote to me saying, 'Isn't what you call the Moral Law just a
social convention, something that is put into us by education?' I think there is
a misunderstanding here.  The people who ask that question are usually taking it
for granted that if we have learned a thing from parents and teachers, then that
thing must be merely a human invention.  But, of course, that is not so.  We all
learned the multiplication table at school.  A child who grew up alone on a
desert island would not know it.  But surely it does not follow that the
multiplication table is simply a human convention, something human beings have
made up for themselves and might have made different if they had liked?  I fully
agree that we learn the Rule of Decent Behaviour from parents and teachers, and
friends and books, as we learn everything else.  But some of the things we learn
are mere conventions which might have been different--we learn to keep to the
left of the road, but it might just as well have been the rule to keep to the
right--and others of them, like mathematics, are real truths.  The question is to
which class the Law of Human Nature belongs.

There are two reasons for saying it belongs to the same class as mathematics.
The first is, as I said in the first chapter, that though there are differences
between the moral ideas of one time or country and those of another, the
differences are not really very great--not nearly so great as most people
imagine--and you can recognise the same law running through them all: whereas
mere conventions, like the rule of the road or the kind of clothes people wear,
may differ to any extent.  The other reason is this.  When you think about these
differences between the morality of one people and another, do you think that
the morality of one people is ever better or worse than that of another?  Have
any of the changes been improvements?  If not, then of course there could never
be any moral progress.  Progress means not just changing, but changing for the
better.  If no set of moral ideas were truer or better than any other, there
would be no sense in preferring civilised morality to savage morality, or
Christian morality to Nazi morality.  In fact, of course, we all do believe that
some moralities are better than others.  We do believe that some of the people
who tried to change the moral ideas of their own age were what we would call
Reformers or Pioneers--people who understood morality better than their
neighbours did.  Very well then.  The moment you say that one set of moral ideas
can be better than another, you are, in fact, measuring them both by a standard,
saying that one of them conforms to that standard more nearly than the other.
But the standard that measures two things is something different from either.
You are, in fact, comparing them both with some Real Morality, admitting that
there is such a thing as a real Right, independent of what people think, and
that some people's ideas get nearer to that real Right than others.  Or put it
this way.  If your moral ideas can be truer, and those of the Nazis less true,
there must be something--some Real Morality--for them to be true about.  The
reason why your idea of New York can be truer or less true than mine is that New
York is a real place, existing quite apart from what either of us thinks.  If
when each of us said 'New York' each means merely 'The town I am imagining in my
own head', how could one of us have truer ideas than the other?  There would be
no question of truth or falsehood at all.  In the same way, if the Rule of Decent
Behaviour meant simply 'whatever each nation happens to approve', there would be
no sense in saying that any one nation had ever been more correct in its
approval than any other; no sense in saying that the world could ever grow
morally better or morally worse.

I conclude then, that though the difference between people's ideas of Decent
Behaviour often make you suspect that there is no real natural Law of Behaviour
at all, yet the things we are bound to think about these differences really
prove just the opposite.  But one word before I end.  I have met people who
exaggerate the differences, because they have not distinguished between
differences of morality and differences of belief about facts.  For example, one
man said to me, 'Three hundred years ago people in England were putting witches
to death.  Was that what you call the Rule of Human Nature or Right Conduct?' But
surely the reason we do not execute witches is that we do not believe there are
such things.  If we did--if we really thought that there were people going about
who had sold themselves to the devil and received supernatural powers from him
in return and were using these powers to kill their neighbours or drive them mad
or bring bad weather--surely we would all agree that if anyone deserved the
death penalty, then these filthy quislings did?  There is no difference of moral
principle here: the difference is simply about matter of fact.  It may be a great
advance in knowledge not to believe in witches: there is no moral advance in not
executing them when you do not think they are there.  You would not call a man
humane for ceasing to set mousetraps if he did so because he believed there were
no mice in the house.




3).  THE REALITY OF THE LAW

I now go back to what I said at the end of the first chapter, that there were
two odd things about the human race.  First, that they were haunted by the idea
of a sort of behaviour they ought to practise, what you might call fair play, or
decency, or morality, or the Law of Nature.  Second, that they did not in fact do
so.  Now some of you may wonder why I called this odd.  It may seem to you the
most natural thing in the world.  In particular, you may have thought I was
rather hard on the human race.  After all, you may say, what I call breaking the
Law of Right and Wrong or of Nature, only means that people are not perfect.  And
why on earth should I expect them to be?  That would be a good answer if what I
was trying to do was to fix the exact amount of blame which is due to us for not
behaving as we expect others to behave.  But that is not my job at all.  I am not
concerned at present with blame; I am trying to find out truth.  And from that
point of view the very idea of something being imperfect, of its not being what
it ought to be, has certain consequences.

If you take a thing like a stone or a tree, it is what it is and there seems no
sense in saying it ought to have been otherwise.  Of course you may say a stone
is 'the wrong shape' if you want to use it for a rockery, or that a tree is a
bad tree because it does not give you as much shade as you expected.  But all you
mean is that the stone or the tree does not happen to be convenient for some
purpose of your own.  You are not, except as a joke, blaming them for that.  You
really know, that, given the weather and the soil, the tree could not have been
any different.  What we, from our point of view, call a 'bad' tree is obeying the
laws of its nature just as much as a 'good' one.

Now have you noticed what follows?  It follows that what we usually call the laws
of nature--the way weather works on a tree for example--may not really be laws
in the strict sense, but only in a manner of speaking.  When you say that falling
stones always obey the law of gravitation, is not this much the same as saying
that the law only means 'what stones always do'?  You do not really think that
when a stone is let go, it suddenly remembers that it is under orders to fall to
the ground.  You only mean that, in fact, it does fall.  In other words, you
cannot be sure that there is anything over and above the facts themselves, any
law about what ought to happen, as distinct from what does happen.  The laws of
nature, as applied to stones or trees, may only mean 'what Nature, in fact,
does'.  But if you turn to the Law of Human Nature, the Law of Decent Behaviour,
it is a different matter.  That law certainly does not mean 'what human beings,
in fact, do'; for as I said before, many of them do not obey this law at all,
and none of them obey it completely.  The law of gravity tells you what stones do
if you drop them; but the Law of Human Nature tells you what human beings ought
to do and do not.  In other words, when you are dealing with humans, something
else comes in above and beyond the actual facts.  You have the facts (how men do
behave) and you also have something else (how they ought to behave).  In the rest
of the universe there need not be anything but the facts.  Electrons and
molecules behave in a certain way, and certain results follow, and that may be
the whole story.* But men behave in a certain way and that is not the whole
story, for all the time you know that they ought to behave differently.

Now this is really so peculiar that one is tempted to try to explain it away.
For instance, we might try to make out that when you say a man ought not to act
as he does, you only mean the same as when you say that a stone is the wrong
shape; namely, that what he is doing happens to be inconvenient to you.  But that
is simply untrue.  A man occupying the corner seat in the train because he got
there first, and a man who slipped into it while my back was turned and removed
my bag, are both equally inconvenient.  But I blame the second man and do not
blame the first.  I am not angry--except perhaps for a moment before I come to my
senses--with a man who trips me up by accident; I am angry with a man who tries
to trip me up even if he does not succeed.  Yet the first has hurt me and the
second has not.  Sometimes the behaviour which I call bad is not inconvenient to
me at all, but the very opposite.  In war, each side may find a traitor on the
other side very useful.  But though they use him and pay him they regard him as
human vermin.  So you cannot say that what we call decent behaviour in others is
simply the behaviour that happens to be useful to us.  And as for decent
behaviour in ourselves, I suppose it is pretty obvious that it does not mean the
behaviour that pays.  It means things like being content with thirty shillings
when you might have got three pounds, doing school work honestly when it would
be easy to cheat, leaving a girl alone when you would like to make love to her,
staying in dangerous places when you would rather go somewhere safer, keeping
promises you would rather not keep, and telling the truth even when it makes you
look a fool.

Some people say that though decent conduct does not mean what pays each
particular person at a particular moment, still, it means what pays the human
race as a whole; and that consequently there is no mystery about it.  Human
beings, after all, have some sense; they see that you cannot have any real
safety or happiness except in a society where every one plays fair, and it is
because they see this that they try to behave decently.  Now, of course, it is
perfectly true that safety and happiness can only come from individ-uals,
classes, and nations being honest and fair and kind to each other.  It is one of
the most important truths in the world.  But as an explanation of why we feel as
we do about Right and Wrong it just misses the point.  If we ask: 'Why ought I to
be unselfish?' and you reply 'Because it is good for society,' we may then ask,
'Why should I care what's good for society except when it happens to pay me
personally?' and then you will have to say, 'Because you ought to be
unselfish'--which simply brings us back to where we started.  You are saying what
is true, but you are not getting any further.  If a man asked what was the point
of playing football, it would not be much good saying 'in order to score goals',
for trying to score goals is the game itself, not the reason for the game, and
you would really only be saying that football was football--which is true, but
not worth saying.  In the same way, if a man asks what is the point of behaving
decently, it is no good replying, 'in order to benefit society', for trying to
benefit society, in other words being unselfish (for 'society' after all only
means 'other people'), is one of the things decent behaviour consists in; all
you are really saying is that decent behaviour is decent behaviour.  You would
have said just as much if you had stopped at the statement, 'Men ought to be
unselfish.'

And that is where I do stop.  Men ought to be unselfish, ought to be fair.  Not
that men are unselfish, not that they like being unselfish, but that they ought
to be.  The Moral Law, or Law of Human Nature, is not simply a fact about human
behaviour in the same way as the Law of Gravitation is, or may be, simply a fact
about how heavy objects behave.  On the other hand, it is not a mere fancy, for
we cannot get rid of the idea, and most of the things we say and think about men
would be reduced to nonsense if we did.  And it is not simply a statement about
how we should like men to behave for our own convenience; for the behaviour we
call bad or unfair is not exactly the same as the behaviour we find
inconvenient, and may even be the opposite.  Consequently, this Rule of Right and
Wrong, or Law of Human Nature, or whatever you call it, must somehow or other be
a real thing--a thing that is really there, not made up by ourselves.  And yet it
is not a fact in the ordinary sense, in the same way as our actual behaviour is
a fact.  It begins to look as if we shall have to admit that there is more than
one kind of reality; that, in this particular case, there is something above and
beyond the ordinary facts of men's behaviour, and yet quite definitely real--a
real law, which none of us made, but which we find pressing on us.




4).  WHAT LIES BEHIND THE LAW

Let us sum up what we have reached so far.  In the case of stones and trees and
things of that sort, what we call the Laws of Nature may not be anything except
a way of speaking.  When you say that nature is governed by certain laws, this
may only mean that nature does, in fact, behave in a certain way.  The so-called
laws may not be anything real--anything above and beyond the actual facts which
we observe.  But in the case of Man, we saw that this will not do.  The Law of
Human Nature, or of Right and Wrong, must be something above and beyond the
actual facts of human behaviour.  In this case, besides the actual facts, you
have something else--a real law which we did not invent and which we know we
ought to obey.

I now want to consider what this tells us about the universe we live in.  Ever
since men were able to think they have been wondering what this universe really
is and how it came to be there.  And, very roughly, two views have been held.
First, there is what is called the materialist view.  People who take that view
think that matter and space just happen to exist, and always have existed,
nobody knows why; and that the matter, behaving in certain fixed ways, has just
happened, by a sort of fluke, to produce creatures like ourselves who are able
to think.  By one chance in a thousand something hit our sun and made it produce
the planets; and by another thousandth chance the chemicals necessary for life,
and the right temperature, occurred on one of these planets, and so some of the
matter on this earth came alive; and then, by a very long series of chances, the
living creatures developed into things like us.  The other view is the religious
view.* According to it, what is behind the universe is more like a mind than it
is like anything else we know.  That is to say, it is conscious, and has
purposes, and prefers one thing to another.  And on this view it made the
universe, partly for purposes we do not know, but partly, at any rate, in order
to produce creatures like itself--I mean, like itself to the extent of having
minds.  Please do not think that one of these views was held a long time ago and
that the other has gradually taken its place.  Wherever there have been thinking
men both views turn up.  And note this too.  You cannot find out which view is the
right one by science in the ordinary sense.  Science works by experiments.  It
watches how things behave.  Every scientific statement in the long run, however
complicated it looks, really means something like, 'I pointed the telescope to
such and such a part of the sky at 2.20 a.m.  on January 15th and saw so-and-so,'
or, 'I put some of this stuff in a pot and heated it to such-and-such a
temperature and it did so-and-so.' Do not think I am saying anything against
science: I am only saying what its job is.  And the more scientific a man is, the
more (I believe) he would agree with me that this is the job of science--and a
very useful and necessary job it is too.  But why anything comes to be there at
all, and whether there is anything behind the things science observes--something
of a different kind--this is not a scientific question.  If there is 'Something
Behind', then either it will have to remain altogether unknown to men or else
make itself known in some different way.  The statement that there is any such
thing, and the statement that there is no such thing, are neither of them
statements that science can make.  And real scientists do not usually make them.
It is usually the journalists and popular novelists who have picked up a few
odds and ends of half-baked science from textbooks who go in for them.  After
all, it is really a matter of common sense.  Supposing science ever became
complete so that it knew every single thing in the whole universe.  Is it not
plain that the questions, 'Why is there a universe?' 'Why does it go on as it
does?' 'Has it any meaning?' would remain just as they were?

Now the position would be quite hopeless but for this.  There is one thing, and
only one, in the whole universe which we know more about than we could learn
from external observation.  That one thing is Man.  We do not merely observe men,
we are men.  In this case we have, so to speak, inside information; we are in the
know.  And because of that, we know that men find themselves under a moral law,
which they did not make, and cannot quite forget even when they try, and which
they know they ought to obey.  Notice the following point.  Anyone studying Man
from the outside as we study electricity or cabbages, not knowing our language
and consequently not able to get any inside knowledge from us, but merely
observing what we did, would never get the slightest evidence that we had this
moral law.  How could he?  for his observations would only show what we did, and
the moral law is about what we ought to do.  In the same way, if there were
anything above or behind the observed facts in the case of stones or the
weather, we, by studying them from outside, could never hope to discover it.

The position of the question, then, is like this.  We want to know whether the
universe simply happens to be what it is for no reason or whether there is a
power behind it that makes it what it is.  Since that power, if it exists, would
be not one of the observed facts but a reality which makes them, no mere
observation of the facts can find it.  There is only one case in which we can
know whether there is anything more, namely our own case.  And in that one case
we find there is.  Or put it the other way round.  If there was a controlling
power outside the universe, it could not show itself to us as one of the facts
inside the universe--no more than the architect of a house could actually be a
wall or staircase or fireplace in that house.  The only way in which we could
expect it to show itself would be inside ourselves as an influence or a command
trying to get us to behave in a certain way.  And that is just what we do find
inside ourselves.  Surely this ought to arouse our suspicions?  In the only case
where you can expect to get an answer, the answer turns out to be Yes; and in
the other cases, where you do not get an answer, you see why you do not.  Suppose
someone asked me, when I see a man in blue uniform going down the street leaving
little paper packets at each house, why I suppose that they contain letters?  I
should reply, 'Because whenever he leaves a similar little packet for me I find
it does contain a letter.' And if he then objected--'But you've never seen all
these letters which you think the other people are getting,' I should say, 'Of
course not, and I shouldn't expect to, because they're not addressed to me.  I'm
explaining the packets I'm not allowed to open by the ones I am allowed to
open.' It is the same about this question.  The only packet I am allowed to open
is Man.  When I do, especially when I open that particular man called Myself, I
find that I do not exist on my own, that I am under a law; that somebody or
something wants me to behave in a certain way.  I do not, of course, think that
if I could get inside a stone or a tree I should find exactly the same thing,
just as I do not think all the other people in the street get the same letters
as I do.  I should expect, for instance, to find that the stone had to obey the
law of gravity--that whereas the sender of the letters merely tells me to obey
the law of my human nature, he compels the stone to obey the laws of its stony
nature.  But I should expect to find that there was, so to speak, a sender of
letters in both cases, a Power behind the facts, a Director, a Guide.

Do not think I am going faster than I really am.  I am not yet within a hundred
miles of the God of Christian theology.  All I have got to is a Something which
is directing the universe, and which appears in me as a law urging me to do
right and making me feel responsible and uncomfortable when I do wrong.  I think
we have to assume it is more like a mind than it is like anything else we
know--because after all the only other thing we know is matter and you can
hardly imagine a bit of matter giving instructions.  But, of course, it need not
be very like a mind, still less like a person.  In the next chapter we shall see
if we can find out anything more about it.  But one word of warning.  There has
been a great deal of soft soap talked about God for the last hundred years.  That
is not what I am offering.  You can cut all that out.


NOTE:-In order to keep this section short enough when it was given on the air, I
mentioned only the Materialist view and the Religious view.  But to be complete I
ought to mention the In-between view called Life-Force philosophy, or Creative
Evolution, or Emergent Evolution.  The wittiest expositions of it come in the
works of Bernard Shaw, but the most profound ones in those of Bergson.  People
who hold this view say that the small variations by which life on this planet
'evolved' from the lowest forms to Man were not due to chance but to the
'striving' or 'purposiveness' of a Life-Force.  When people say this we must ask
them whether by Life-Force they mean something with a mind or not.  If they do,
then 'a mind bringing life into existence and leading it to perfection' is
really a God, and their view is thus identical with the Religious.  If they do
not, then what is the sense in saying that something without a mind 'strives' or
has 'purposes'?  This seems to me fatal to their view.  One reason why many people
find Creative Evolution so attractive is that it gives one much of the emotional
comfort of believing in God and none of the less pleasant consequences.  When you
are feeling fit and the sun is shining and you do not want to believe that the
whole universe is a mere mechanical dance of atoms, it is nice to be able to
think of this great mysterious Force rolling on through the centuries and
carrying you on its crest.  If, on the other hand, you want to do something
rather shabby, the Life-Force, being only a blind force, with no morals and no
mind, will never interfere with you like that troublesome God we learned about
when we were children.  The Life-Force is a sort of tame God.  You can switch it
on when you want, but it will not bother you.  All the thrills of religion and
none of the cost.  Is the Life-Force the greatest achievement of wishful thinking
the world has yet seen?




5).  WE HAVE CAUSE TO BE UNEASY

I ended my last chapter with the idea that in the Moral Law somebody or
something from beyond the material universe was actually getting at us.  And I
expect when I reached that point some of you felt a certain annoyance.  You may
even have thought that I had played a trick on you--that I had been carefully
wrapping up to look like philosophy what turns out to be one more 'religious
jaw'.  You may have felt you were ready to listen to me as long as you thought I
had anything new to say; but if it turns out to be only religion, well, the
world has tried that and you cannot put the clock back.  If anyone is feeling
that way I should like to say three things to him.

First, as to putting the clock back.  Would you think I was joking if I said that
you can put a clock back, and that if the clock is wrong it is often a very
sensible thing to do?  But I would rather get away from that whole idea of
clocks.  We all want progress.  But progress means getting nearer to the place
where you want to be.  And if you have taken a wrong turning, then to go forward
does not get you any nearer.  If you are on the wrong road, progress means doing
an about-turn and walking back to the right road; and in that case the man who
turns back soonest is the most progressive man.  We have all seen this when doing
arithmetic.  When I have started a sum the wrong way, the sooner I admit this and
go back and start again, the faster I shall get on.  There is nothing progressive
about being pig headed and refusing to admit a mistake.  And I think if you look
at the present state of the world, it is pretty plain that humanity has been
making some big mistake.  We are on the wrong road.  And if that is so, we must go
back.  Going back is the quickest way on.

Then, secondly, this has not yet turned exactly into a 'religious jaw'.  We have
not yet got as far as the God of any actual religion, still less the God of that
particular religion called Christianity.  We have only got as far as a Somebody
or Something behind the Moral Law.  We are not taking anything from the Bible or
the Churches, we are trying to see what we can find out about this Somebody on
our own steam.  And I want to make it quite clear that what we find out on our
own steam is something that gives us a shock.  We have two bits of evidence about
the Somebody.  One is the universe He has made.  If we used that as our only clue,
then I think we should have to conclude that He was a great artist (for the
universe is a very beautiful place), but also that He is quite merciless and no
friend to man (for the universe is a very dangerous and terrifying place).  The
other bit of evidence is that Moral Law which He has put into our minds.  And
this is a better bit of evidence than the other, because it is inside
information.  You find out more about God from the Moral Law than from the
universe in general just as you find out more about a man by listening to his
conversation than by looking at a house he has built.  Now, from this second bit
of evidence we conclude that the Being behind the universe is intensely
interested in right conduct--in fair play, unselfishness, courage, good faith,
honesty and truthfulness.  In that sense we should agree with the account given
by Christianity and some other religions, that God is 'good'.  But do not let us
go too fast here.  The Moral Law does not give us any grounds for thinking that
God is 'good' in the sense of being indulgent, or soft, or sympathetic.  There is
nothing indulgent about the Moral Law.  It is as hard as nails.  It tells you to
do the straight thing and it does not seem to care how painful, or dangerous, or
difficult it is to do.  If God is like the Moral Law, then He is not soft.  It is
no use, at this stage, saying that what you mean by a 'good' God is a God who
can forgive.  You are going too quickly.  Only a Person can forgive.  And we have
not yet got as far as a personal God--only as far as a power, behind the Moral
Law, and more like a mind than it is like anything else.  But it may still be
very unlike a Person.  If it is pure impersonal mind, there may be no sense in
asking it to make allowances for you or let you off, just as there is no sense
in asking the multiplication table to let you off when you do your sums wrong.
You are bound to get the wrong answer.  And it is no use either saying that if
there is a God of that sort--an impersonal absolute goodness--then you do not
like Him and are not going to bother about Him.  For the trouble is that one part
of you is on His side and really agrees with his disapproval of human greed and
trickery and exploitation.  You may want Him to make an exception in your own
case, to let you off this one time; but you know at bottom that unless the power
behind the world really and unalterably detests that sort of behaviour, then He
cannot be good.  On the other hand, we know that if there does exist an absolute
goodness it must hate most of what we do.  This is the terrible fix we are in.  If
the universe is not governed by an absolute goodness, then all our efforts are
in the long run hopeless.  But if it is, then we are making ourselves enemies to
that goodness every day, and are not in the least likely to do any better
tomorrow, and so our case is hopeless again.  We cannot do without it, and we
cannot do with it.  God is the only comfort, He is also the supreme terror: the
thing we most need and the thing we most want to hide from.  He is our only
possible ally, and we have made ourselves His enemies.  Some people talk as if
meeting the gaze of absolute goodness would be fun.  They need to think again.
They are still only playing with religion.  Goodness is either the great safety
or the great danger--according to the way you react to it.  And we have reacted
the wrong way.

Now my third point.  When I chose to get to my real subject in this roundabout
way, I was not trying to play any kind of trick on you.  I had a different
reason.  My reason was that Christianity simply does not make sense until you
have faced the sort of facts I have been describing.  Christianity tells people
to repent and promises them forgiveness.  It therefore has nothing (as far as I
know) to say to people who do not know they have done anything to repent of and
who do not feel that they need any forgiveness.  It is after you have realized
that there is a real Moral Law, and a Power behind the law, and that you have
broken that law and put yourself wrong with that Power--it is after all this,
and not a moment sooner, that Christianity begins to talk.  When you know you are
sick, you will listen to the doctor.  When you have realised that our position is
nearly desperate you will begin to understand what the Christians are talking
about.  They offer an explanation of how we got into our present state of both
hating goodness and loving it.  They offer an explanation of how God can be this
impersonal mind at the back of the Moral Law and yet also a Person.  They tell
you how the demands of this law, which you and I cannot meet, have been met on
our behalf, how God Himself becomes a man to save man from the disapproval of
God.  It is an old story and if you want to go into it you will no doubt consult
people who have more authority to talk about it than I have.  All I am doing is
to ask people to face the facts--to understand the questions which Christianity
claims to answer.  And they are very terrifying facts.  I wish it was possible to
say something more agreeable.  But I must say what I think true.  Of course, I
quite agree that the Christian religion is, in the long run, a thing of
unspeakable comfort.  But it does not begin in comfort; it begins in the dismay I
have been describing, and it is no use at all trying to go on to that comfort
without first going through that dismay.  In religion, as in war and everything
else, comfort is the one thing you cannot get by looking for it.  If you look for
truth, you may find comfort in the end: if you look for comfort you will not get
either comfort or truth--only soft soap and wishful thinking to begin with and,
in the end, despair.  Most of us have got over the pre-war wishful thinking about
international politics.  It is time we did the same about religion.



--bmk

BOOK TWO
WHAT CHRISTIANS BELIEVE


1).
THE RIVAL CONCEPTIONS OF GOD




I have been asked to tell you what Christians believe, and I am going to begin by
telling you one thing that Christians do not need to believe.  If you are a
Christian you do not have to believe that all the other religions are simply wrong
all through.  If you are an atheist you do have to believe that the main point in
all the religions of the whole world is simply one huge mistake.  If you are a
Christian, you are free to think that all those religions, even the queerest ones,
contain at least some hint of the truth.  When I was an atheist I had to try to
persuade myself that most of the human race have always been wrong about the
question that mattered to them most; when I became a Christian I was able to take
a more liberal view.  But, of course, being a Christian does mean thinking that
where Christianity differs from other religions, Christianity is right and they
are wrong.  As in arithmetic--there is only one right answer to a sum, and all
other answers are wrong; but some of the wrong answers are much nearer being right
than others.

The first big division of humanity is into the majority, who believe in some kind
of God or gods, and the minority who do not.  On this point, Christianity lines up
with the majority--lines up with ancient Greeks and Romans, modern savages,
Stoics, Platonists, Hindus, Mohammedans, etc., against the modern Western European
materialist.

Now I go on to the next big division.  People who all believe in God can be
divided according to the sort of God they believe in.  There are two very
different ideas on this subject.  One of them is the idea that He is beyond good
and evil.  We humans call one thing good and another thing bad.  But according to
some people that is merely our human point of view.  These people would say that
the wiser you become the less you would want to call anything good or bad, and the
more clearly you would see that everything is good in one way and bad in another,
and that nothing could have been different.  Consequently, these people think that
long before you got anywhere near the divine point of view the distinction would
have disappeared altogether.  We call a cancer bad, they would say, because it
kills a man; but you might just as well call a successful surgeon bad because he
kills a cancer.  It all depends on the point of view.  The other and opposite idea
is that God is quite definitely 'good' or 'righteous', a God who takes sides, who
loves love and hates hatred, who wants us to behave in one way and not in another.
The first of these views--the one that thinks God beyond good and evil--is called
Pantheism.  It was held by the great Prussian philosopher Hegel and, as far as I
can understand them, by the Hindus.  The other view is held by Jews, Mohammedans
and Christians.

And with this big difference between Pantheism and the Christian idea of God,
there usually goes another.  Pantheists usually believe that God, so to speak,
animates the universe as you animate your body: that the universe almost is God,
so that if it did not exist He would not exist either, and anything you find in
the universe is a part of God.  The Christian idea is quite different.  They think
God invented and made the universe--like a man making a picture or composing a
tune.  A painter is not a picture, and he does not die if his picture is
destroyed.  You may say, 'He's put a lot of himself into it,' but you only mean
that all its beauty and interest has come out of his head.  His skill is not in
the picture in the same way that it is in his head, or even in his hands.  I
expect you see how this difference between Pantheists and Christians hangs
together with the other one.  If you do not take the distinction between good and
bad very seriously, then it is easy to say that anything you find in this world is
a part of God.  But, of course, if you think some things really bad, and God
really good, then you cannot talk like that.  You must believe that God is
separate from the world and that some of the things we see in it are contrary to
His will.  Confronted with a cancer or a slum the Pantheist can say, 'If you could
only see it from the divine point of view, you would realise that this also is
God.' The Christian replies, 'Don't talk damned nonsense.'* For Christianity is a
fighting religion.  It thinks God made the world--that space and time, heat and
cold, and all the colours and tastes, and all the animals and vegetables, are
things that God 'made up out of His head' as a man makes up a story.  But it also
thinks that a great many things have gone wrong with the world that God made and
that God insists, and insists very loudly, on our putting them right again.

And, of course, that raises a very big question.  If a good God made the world why
has it gone wrong?  And for many years I simply refused to listen to the Christian
answers to this question, because I kept on feeling 'whatever you say, and however
clever your arguments are, isn't it much simpler and easier to say that the world
was not made by any intelligent power?  Aren't all your arguments simply a
complicated attempt to avoid the obvious?' But then that threw me back into
another difficulty.

My argument against God was that the universe seemed so cruel and unjust.  But how
had I got this idea of just and unjust?  A man does not call a line crooked unless
he has some idea of a straight line.  What was I comparing this universe with when
I called it unjust?  If the whole show was bad and senseless from A to Z, so to
speak, why did I, who was supposed to be part of the show, find myself in such
violent reaction against it?  A man feels wet when he falls into water, because
man is not a water animal: a fish would not feel wet.  Of course I could have
given up my idea of justice by saying it was nothing but a private idea of my own.
But if I did that, then my argument against God collapsed too--for the argument
depended on saying that the world was really unjust, not simply that it did not
happen to please my fancies.  Thus in the very act of trying to prove that God did
not exist--in other words, that the whole of reality was senseless--I found I was
forced to assume that one part of reality--namely my idea of justice--was full of
sense.  Consequently atheism turns out to be too simple.  If the whole universe
has no meaning, we should never have found out that it has no meaning: just as, if
there were no light in the universe and therefore no creatures with eyes, we
should never know it was dark.  Dark would be a word without meaning.





2


THE INVASION




Very well then, atheism is too simple.  And I will tell you another view that is
also too simple.  It is the view I call Christianity-and-water, the view which
simply says there is a good God in Heaven and everything is all right--leaving out
all the difficult and terrible doctrines about sin and hell and the devil, and the
redemption.  Both these are boys' philosophies.

It is no good asking for a simple religion.  After all, real things are not
simple.  They look simple, but they are not.  The table I am sitting at looks
simple: but ask a scientist to tell you what it is really made of--all about the
atoms and how the light waves rebound from them and hit my eye and what they do to
the optic nerve and what it does to my brain--and, of course, you find that what
we call 'seeing a table' lands you in mysteries and complications which you can
hardly get to the end of.  A child saying a child's prayer looks simple.  And if
you are content to stop there, well and good.  But if you are not--and the modern
world usually is not--if you want to go on and ask what is really happening--then
you must be prepared for something difficult.  If we ask for something more than
simplicity, it is silly then to complain that the something more is not simple.

Very often, however, this silly procedure is adopted by people who are not silly,
but who, consciously or unconsciously, want to destroy Christianity.  Such people
put up a version of Christianity suitable for a child of six and make that the
object of their attack.  When you try to explain the Christian doctrine as it is
really held by an instructed adult, they then complain that you are making their
heads turn round and that it is all too complicated and that if there really were
a God they are sure He would have made 'religion' simple, because simplicity is so
beautiful, etc.  You must be on your guard against these people for they will
change their ground every minute and only waste your time.  Notice, too, their
idea of God 'making religion simple'; as if 'religion' were something God
invented, and not His statement to us of certain quite unalterable facts about His
own nature.

Besides being complicated, reality, in my experience, is usually odd.  It is not
neat, not obvious, not what you expect.  For instance, when you have grasped that
the earth and the other planets all go round the sun, you would naturally expect
that all the planets were made to match--all at equal distances from each other,
say, or distances that regularly increased, or all the same size, or else getting
bigger or smaller as you go further from the sun.  In fact, you find no rhyme or
reason (that we can see) about either the sizes or the distances; and some of them
have one moon, one has four, one has two, some have none, and one has a ring.

Reality, in fact, is usually something you could not have guessed.  That is one of
the reasons I believe Christianity.  It is a religion you could not have guessed.
If it offered us just the kind of universe we had always expected, I should feel
we were making it up.  But, in fact, it is not the sort of thing anyone would have
made up.  It has just that queer twist about it that real things have.  So let us
leave behind all these boys' philosophies--these over-simple answers.  The problem
is not simple and the answer is not going to be simple either.

What is the problem?  A universe that contains much that is obviously bad and
apparently meaningless, but containing creatures like ourselves who know that it
is bad and meaningless.  There are only two views that face all the facts.  One is
the Christian view that this is a good world that has gone wrong, but still
retains the memory of what it ought to have been.  The other is the view called
Dualism.  Dualism means the belief that there are two equal and independent powers
at the back of everything, one of them good and the other bad, and that this
universe is the battlefield in which they fight out an endless war.  I personally
think that next to Christianity Dualism is the manliest and most sensible creed on
the market.  But it has a catch in it.

The two powers, or spirits, or gods--the good one and the bad one--are supposed to
be quite independent.  They both existed from all eternity.  Neither of them made
the other, neither of them has any more right than the other to call itself God.
Each presumably thinks it is good and thinks the other bad.  One of them likes
hatred and cruelty, the other likes love and mercy, and each backs its own view.
Now what do we mean when we call one of them the Good Power and the other the Bad
Power?  Either we are merely saying that we happen to prefer the one to the
other--like preferring beer to cider--or else we are saying that, whatever the two
powers think about it, and whichever we humans, at the moment, happen to like, one
of them is actually wrong, actually mistaken, it regarding itself as good.  Now if
we mean merely that we happen to prefer the first, then we must give up talking
about good and evil at all.  For good means what you ought to prefer quite
regardless of what you happen to like at any given moment.  If 'being good' meant
simply joining the side you happened to fancy, for no real reason, then good would
not deserve to be called good.  So we must mean that one of the two powers is
actually wrong and the other actually right.

But the moment you say that, you are putting into the universe a third thing in
addition to the two Powers: some law or standard or rule of good which one of the
powers conforms to and the other fails to conform to.  But since the two powers
are judged by this standard, then this standard, or the Being who made this
standard, is farther back and higher up than either of them, and He will be the
real God.  In fact, what we meant by calling them good and bad turns out to be
that one of them is in a right relation to the real ultimate God and the other in
a wrong relation to Him.

The same point can be made in a different way.  If Dualism is true, then the bad
Power must be a being who likes badness for its own sake.  But in reality we have
no experience of anyone liking badness just because it is bad.  The nearest we can
get to it is in cruelty.  But in real life people are cruel for one of two
reasons--either because they are sadists, that is, because they have a sexual
perversion which makes cruelty a cause of sensual pleasure to them, or else for
the sake of something they are going to get out of it--money, or power, or safety.
But pleasure, money, power, and safety are all, as far as they go, good things.
The badness consists in pursuing them by the wrong method, or in the wrong way, or
too much.  I do not mean, of course, that the people who do this are not
desperately wicked.  I do mean that wickedness, when you examine it, turns out to
be the pursuit of some good in the wrong way.  You can be good for the mere sake
of goodness: you cannot be bad for the mere sake of badness.  You can do a kind
action when you are not feeling kind and when it gives you no pleasure, simply
because kindness is right; but no one ever did a cruel action simply because
cruelty is wrong--only because cruelty was pleasant or useful to him.  In other
words badness cannot succeed even in being bad in the same way in which goodness
is good.  Goodness is, so to speak, itself: badness is only spoiled goodness.  And
there must be something good first before it can be spoiled.  We called sadism a
sexual perversion; but you must first have the idea of a normal sexuality before
you can talk of its being perverted; and you can see which is the perversion,
because you can explain the perverted from the normal, and cannot explain the
normal from the perverted.  It follows that this Bad Power, who is supposed to be
on an equal footing with the Good Power, and to love badness in the same way as
the Good Power loves goodness, is a mere bogy.  In order to be bad he must have
good things to want and then to pursue in the wrong way: he must have impulses
which were originally good in order to be able to pervert them.  But if he is bad
he cannot supply himself either with good things to desire or with good impulses
to pervert.  He must be getting both from the Good Power.  And if so, then he is
not independent.  He is part of the Good Power's world: he was made either by the
Good Power or by some power above them both.

Put it more simply still.  To be bad, he must exist and have intelligence and
will.  But existence, intelligence and will are in themselves good.  Therefore he
must be getting them from the Good Power: even to be bad he must borrow or steal
from his opponent.  And do you now begin to see why Christianity has always said
that the devil is a fallen angel?  That is not a mere story for the children.  It
is a real recognition of the fact that evil is a parasite, not an original thing.
The powers which enable evil to carry on are powers given it by goodness.  All the
things which enable a bad man to be effectively bad are in themselves good
things--resolution, cleverness, good looks, existence itself.  That is why
Dualism, in a strict sense, will not work.

But I freely admit that real Christianity (as distinct from
Christianity-and-water) goes much nearer to Dualism than people think.  One of the
things that surprised me when I first read the New Testament seriously was that it
talked so much about a Dark Power in the universe--a mighty evil spirit who was
held to be the Power behind death and disease, and sin.  The difference is that
Christianity thinks this Dark Power was created by God, and was good when he was
created, and went wrong.  Christianity agrees with Dualism that this universe is
at war.  But it does not think this is a war between independent powers.  It
thinks it is a civil war, a rebellion, and that we are living in a part of the
universe occupied by the rebel.

Enemy-occupied territory--that is what this world is.  Christianity is the story
of how the rightful king has landed, you might say landed in disguise, and is
calling us all to take part in a great campaign of sabotage.  When you go to
church you are really listening-in to the secret wireless from our friends: that
is why the enemy is so anxious to prevent us from going.  He does it by playing on
our conceit and laziness and intellectual snobbery.  I know someone will ask me,
'Do you really mean, at this time of day, to re-introduce our old friend the
devil--hoofs and horns and all?' Well, what the time of day has to do with it I do
not know.  And I am not particular about the hoofs and horns.  But in other
respects my answer is 'Yes, I do.' I do not claim to know anything about his
personal appearance.  If anybody really wants to know him better I would say to
that person, 'Don't worry.  If you really want to, you will.  Whether you'll like
it when you do is another question.'





3


THE SHOCKING ALTERNATIVE




Christians, then, believe that an evil power has made himself for the present the
Prince of this World.  And, of course, that raises problems.  Is this state of
affairs in accordance with God's will, or not?  If it is, He is a strange God, you
will say: and if it is not, how can anything happen contrary to the will of a
being with absolute power?

But anyone who has been in authority knows how a thing can be in accordance with
your will in one way and not in another.  It may be quite sensible for a mother to
say to the children, 'I'm not going to go and make you tidy the schoolroom every
night.  You've got to learn to keep it tidy on your own.' Then she goes up one
night and finds the Teddy bear and the ink and the French Grammar all lying in the
grate.  That is against her will.  She would prefer the children to be tidy.  But
on the other hand, it is her will which has left the children free to be untidy.
The same thing arises in any regiment, or trade union, or school.  You make a
thing voluntary and then half the people do not do it.  That is not what you
willed, but your will has made it possible.

It is probably the same in the universe.  God created things which had free will.
That means creatures which can go either wrong or right.  Some people think they
can imagine a creature which was free but had no possibility of going wrong; I
cannot.  If a thing is free to be good it is also free to be bad.  And free will
is what has made evil possible.  Why, then, did God give them free will?  Because
free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes
possible any love or goodness or joy worth having.  A world of automata--of
creatures that worked like machines--would hardly be worth creating.  The
happiness which God designs for His higher creatures is the happiness of being
freely, voluntarily united to Him and to each other in an ecstasy of love and
delight compared with which the most rapturous love between a man and a woman on
this earth is mere milk and water.  And for that they must be free.

Of course God knew what would happen if they used their freedom the wrong way:
apparently He thought it worth the risk.  Perhaps we feel inclined to disagree
with Him.  But there is a difficulty about disagreeing with God.  He is the source
from which all your reasoning power comes: you could not be right and He wrong any
more than a stream can rise higher than its own source.  When you are arguing
against Him you are arguing against the very power that makes you able to argue at
all: it is like cutting off the branch you are sitting on.  If God thinks this
state of war in the universe a price worth paying for free will--that is, for
making a live world in which creatures can do real good or harm and something of
real importance can happen, instead of a toy world which only moves when He pulls
the strings--then we may take it it is worth paying.

When we have understood about free will, we shall see how silly it is to ask, as
somebody once asked me: 'Why did God make a creature of such rotten stuff that it
went wrong?' The better stuff a creature is made of--the cleverer and stronger and
freer it is--then the better it will be if it goes right, but also the worse it
will be if it goes wrong.  A cow cannot be very good or very bad; a dog can be
both better and worse; a child better and worse still; an ordinary man, still more
so; a man of genius, still more so; a superhuman spirit best--or worst--of all.

How did the Dark Power go wrong?  Here, no doubt, we ask a question to which human
beings cannot give an answer with any certainty.  A reasonable (and traditional)
guess, based on our own experiences of going wrong, can, however, be offered.  The
moment you have a self at all, there is a possibility of putting yourself
first--wanting to be the centre--wanting to be God, in fact.  That was the sin of
Satan: and that was the sin he taught the human race.  Some people think the fall
of man had something to do with sex, but that is a mistake.  (The story in the
Book of Genesis rather suggests that some corruption in our sexual nature followed
the fall and was its result, not its cause.) What Satan put into the heads of our
remote ancestors was the idea that they could 'be like gods'--could set up on
their own as if they had created themselves--be their own masters--invent some
sort of happiness for themselves outside God, apart from God.  And out of that
hopeless attempt has come nearly all that we call human history--money, poverty,
ambition, war, prostitution, classes, empires, slavery--the long terrible story of
man trying to find something other than God which will make him happy.

The reason why it can never succeed is this.  God made us: invented us as a man
invents an engine.  A car is made to run on petrol, and it would not run properly
on anything else.  Now God designed the human machine to run on Himself.  He
Himself is the fuel our spirits were designed to burn, or the food our spirits
were designed to feed on.  There is no other.  That is why it is just no good
asking God to make us happy in our own way without bothering about religion.  God
cannot give us a happiness and peace apart from Himself, because it is not there.
There is no such thing.

That is the key to history.  Terrific energy is expended--civilisations are built
up--excellent institutions devised; but each time something goes wrong.  Some
fatal flaw always brings the selfish and cruel people to the top and it all slides
back into misery and ruin.  In fact, the machine conks.  It seems to start up all
right and runs a few yards, and then it breaks down.  They are trying to run it on
the wrong juice.  That is what Satan has done to us humans.

And what did God do?  First of all He left us conscience, the sense of right and
wrong: and all through history there have been people trying (some of them very
hard) to obey it.  None of them ever quite succeeded.  Secondly, He sent the human
race what I call good dreams: I mean those queer stories scattered all through the
heathen religions about a god who dies and comes to life again and, by his death,
has somehow given new life to men.  Thirdly, He selected one particular people and
spent several centuries hammering into their heads the sort of God He was--that
there was only one of Him and that He cared about right conduct.  Those people
were the Jews, and the Old Testament gives an account of the hammering process.

Then comes the real shock.  Among these Jews there suddenly turns up a man who
goes about talking as if He was God.  He claims to forgive sins.  He says He has
always existed.  He says He is coming to judge the world at the end of time.  Now
let us get this clear.  Among Pantheists, like the Indians, anyone might say that
he was a part of God, or one with God: there would be nothing very odd about it.
But this man, since He was a Jew, could not mean that kind of God.  God, in their
language, meant the Being outside the world, who had made it and was infinitely
different from anything else.  And when you have grasped that, you will see that
what this man said was, quite simply, the most shocking thing that has ever been
uttered by human lips.

One part of the claim tends to slip past us unnoticed because we have heard it so
often that we no longer see what it amounts to.  I mean the claim to forgive sins:
any sins.  Now unless the speaker is God, this is really so preposterous as to be
comic.  We can all understand how a man forgives offences against himself.  You
tread on my toes and I forgive you, you steal my money and I forgive you.  But
what should we make of a man, himself unrobbed and untrodden on, who announced
that he forgave you for treading on other men's toes and stealing other men's
money?  Asinine fatuity is the kindest description we should give of his conduct.
Yet this is what Jesus did.  He told people that their sins were forgiven, and
never waited to consult all the other people whom their sins had undoubtedly
injured.  He unhesitatingly behaved as if He was the party chiefly concerned, the
person chiefly offended in all offences.  This makes sense only if He really was
the God whose laws are broken and whose love is wounded in every sin.  In the
mouth of any speaker who is not God, these words would imply what I can only
regard as a silliness and conceit unrivalled by any other character in history.

Yet (and this is the strange, significant thing) even His enemies, when they read
the Gospels, do not usually get the impression of silliness and conceit.  Still
less do unprejudiced readers.  Christ says that He is 'humble and meek' and we
believe Him; not noticing that, if He were merely a man, humility and meekness are
the very last characteristics we could attribute to some of His sayings.

I am trying here to prevent anyone saying the really foolish thing that people
often say about Him: 'I'm ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher, but I
don't accept His claim to be God.' That is the one thing we must not say.  A man
who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great
moral teacher.  He would either be a lunatic--on a level with the man who says he
is a poached egg--or else he would be the Devil of Hell.  You must make your
choice.  Either this man was, and is, the Son of God: or else a madman or
something worse.  You can shut Him up for a fool, you can spit at Him and kill Him
as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God.  But let us not
come with any patronising nonsense about His being a great human teacher.  He has
not left that open to us.  He did not intend to.





4


THE PERFECT PENITENT




We are faced, then, with a frightening alternative.  This man we are talking about
either was (and is) just what He said or else a lunatic, or something worse.  Now
it seems to me obvious that He was neither a lunatic nor a fiend: and
consequently, however strange or terrifying or unlikely it may seem, I have to
accept the view that He was and is God.  God has landed on this enemy-occupied
world in human form.

And now, what was the purpose of it all?  What did he come to do?  Well, to teach,
of course; but as soon as you look into the New Testament or any other Christian
writing you will find they are constantly talking about something different--about
His death and His coming to life again.  It is obvious that Christians think the
chief point of the story lies there.  They think the main thing He came to earth
to do was to suffer and be killed.

Now before I became a Christian I was under the impression that the first thing
Christians had to believe was one particular theory as to what the point of this
dying was.  According to that theory God wanted to punish men for having deserted
and joined the Great Rebel, but Christ volunteered to be punished instead, and so
God let us off.  Now I admit that even this theory does not seem to me quite so
immoral and so silly as it used to; but that is not the point I want to make.
What I came to see later on was that neither this theory nor any other is
Christianity.  The central Christian belief is that Christ's death has somehow put
us right with God and given us a fresh start.  Theories as to how it did this are
another matter.  A good many different theories have been held as to how it works;
what all Christians are agreed on is that it does work.  I will tell you what I
think it is like.  All sensible people know that if you are tired and hungry a
meal will do you good.  But the modern theory of nourishment--all about the
vitamins and proteins--is a different thing.  People ate their dinners and felt
better long before the theory of vitamins was ever heard of: and if the theory of
vitamins is some day abandoned they will go on eating their dinners just the same.
Theories about Christ's death are not Christianity: they are explanations about
how it works.  Christians would not all agree as to how important those theories
are.  My own church--the Church of England--does not lay down any one of them as
the right one.  The Church of Rome goes a bit further.  But I think they will all
agree that the thing itself is infinitely more important than any explanations
that theologians have produced.  I think they would probably admit that no
explanation will ever be quite adequate to the reality.  But as I said in the
preface to this book, I am only a layman, and at this point we are getting into
deep water.  I can only tell you, for what it is worth, how I, personally, look at
the matter.

In my view the theories are not themselves the thing you are asked to accept.
Many of you no doubt have read Jeans or Eddington.  What they do when they want to
explain the atom, or something of that sort, is to give you a description out of
which you can make a mental picture.  But then they warn you that this picture is
not what the scientists actually believe.  What the scientists believe is a
mathematical formula.  The pictures are there only to help you to understand the
formula.  They are not really true in the way the formula is; they do not give you
the real thing but only something more or less like it.  They are only meant to
help, and if they do not help you can drop them.  The thing itself cannot be
pictured, it can only be expressed mathematically.  We are in the same boat here.
We believe that the death of Christ is just that point in history at which
something absolutely unimaginable from outside shows through into our own world.
And if we cannot picture even the atoms of which our own world is built, of course
we are not going to be able to picture this.  Indeed, if we found that we could
fully understand it, that very fact would show it was not what it professes to
be--the inconceivable, the uncreated, the thing from beyond nature, striking down
into nature like lightning.  You may ask what good it will be to us if we do not
understand it.  But that is easily answered.  A man can eat his dinner without
understanding exactly how food nourishes him.  A man can accept what Christ has
done without knowing how it works: indeed, he certainly would not know how it
works until he has accepted it.

We are told that Christ was killed for us, that His death has washed out our sins,
and that by dying He disabled death itself.  That is the formula.  That is
Christianity.  That is what has to be believed.  Any theories we build up as to
how Christ's death did all this are, in my view, quite secondary: mere plans or
diagrams to be left alone if they do not help us, and, even if they do help us,
not to be confused with the thing itself.  All the same, some of these theories
are worth looking at.

The one most people have heard is the one I mentioned before--the one about our
being let off because Christ has volunteered to bear a punishment instead of us.
Now on the face of it that is a very silly theory.  If God was prepared to let us
off, why on earth did He not do so?  And what possible point could there be in
punishing an innocent person instead?  None at all that I can see, if you are
thinking of punishment in the police-court sense.  On the other hand, if you think
of a debt, there is plenty of point in a person who has some assets paying it on
behalf of someone who has not.  Or if you take 'paying the penalty', not in the
sense of being punished, but in the more general sense of 'standing the racket' or
'footing the bill', then, of course, it is a matter of common experience that,
when one person has got himself into a hole, the trouble of getting him out
usually falls on a kind friend.

Now what was the sort of 'hole' man had got himself into?  He had tried to set up
on his own, to behave as if he belonged to himself.  In other words, fallen man is
not simply an imperfect creature who needs improvement: he is a rebel who must lay
down his arms.  Laying down your arms, surrendering, saying you are sorry,
realising that you have been on the wrong track and getting ready to start life
over again from the ground floor--that is the only way out of our 'hole'.  This
process of surrender--this movement full speed astern--is what Christians call
repentance.  Now repentance is no fun at all.  It is something much harder than
merely eating humble pie.  It means unlearning all the self-conceit and self-will
that we have been training ourselves into for thousands of years.  It means
killing part of yourself, undergoing a kind of death.  In fact, it needs a good
man to repent.  And here comes the catch.  Only a bad person needs to repent: only
a good person can repent perfectly.  The worse you are the more you need it and
the less you can do it.  The only person who could do it perfectly would be a
perfect person--and he would not need it.

Remember, this repentance, this willing submission to humiliation and a kind of
death, is not something God demands of you before He will take you back and which
He could let you off if He chose: it is simply a description of what going back to
Him is like.  If you ask God to take you back without it, you are really asking
Him to let you go back without going back.  It cannot happen.  Very well, then, we
must go through with it.  But the same badness which makes us need it, makes us
unable to do it.  Can we do it if God helps us?  Yes, but what do we mean when we
talk of God helping us?  We mean God putting into us a bit of Himself, so to
speak.  He lends us a little of His reasoning powers and that is how we think: He
puts a little of His love into us and that is how we love one another.  When you
teach a child writing, you hold its hand while it forms the letters: that is, it
forms the letters because you are forming them.  We love and reason because God
loves and reasons and holds our hand while we do it.  Now if we had not fallen,
that would be all plain sailing.  But unfortunately we now need God's help in
order to do something which God, in His own nature, never does at all--to
surrender, to suffer, to submit, to die.  Nothing in God's nature corresponds to
this process at all.  So that the one road for which we now need God's leadership
most of all is a road God, in His own nature, has never walked.  God can share
only what He has: this thing, in His own nature, He has not.

But supposing God became a man--suppose our human nature which can suffer and die
was amalgamated with God's nature in one person--then that person could help us.
He could surrender His will, and suffer and die, because He was man; and He could
do it perfectly because He was God.  You and I can go through this process only if
God does it in us; but God can do it only if He becomes man.  Our attempts at this
dying will succeed only if we men share in God's dying, just as our thinking can
succeed only because it is a drop out of the ocean of His intelligence: but we
cannot share God's dying unless God dies; and He cannot die except by being a man.
That is the sense in which He pays our debt, and suffers for us what He Himself
need not suffer at all.

I have heard some people complain that if Jesus was God as well as man, then His
sufferings and death lose all value in their eyes, 'because it must have been so
easy for Him'.  Others may (very rightly) rebuke the ingratitude and
ungraciousness of this objection; what staggers me is the misunderstanding it
betrays.  In one sense, of course, those who make it are right.  They have even
understated their own case.  The perfect submission, the perfect suffering, the
perfect death were not only easier to Jesus because He was God, but were possible
only because He was God.  But surely that is a very odd reason for not accepting
them?  The teacher is able to form the letters for the child because the teacher
is grown-up and knows how to write.  That, of course, makes it easier for the
teacher; and only because it is easier for him can he help the child.  If it
rejected him because 'it's easy for grown-ups' and waited to learn writing from
another child who could not write itself (and so had no 'unfair' advantage), it
would not get on very quickly.  If I am drowning in a rapid river, a man who still
has one foot on the bank may give me a hand which saves my life.  Ought I to shout
back (between my gasps) 'No, it's not fair!  You have an advantage!  You're
keeping one foot on the bank'?  That advantage--call it 'unfair' if you like--is
the only reason why he can be of any use to me.  To what will you look for help if
you will not look to that which is stronger than yourself?

Such is my own way of looking at what Christians call the Atonement.  But remember
this is only one more picture.  Do not mistake it for the thing itself: and if it
does not help you, drop it.





5


THE PRACTICAL CONCLUSION




The perfect surrender and humiliation were undergone by Christ: perfect because He
was God, surrender and humiliation because He was man.  Now the Christian belief
is that if we somehow share the humility and suffering of Christ we shall also
share in His conquest of death and find a new life after we have died and in it
become perfect, and perfectly happy, creatures.  This means something much more
than our trying to follow His teaching.  People often ask when the next step in
evolution--the step to something beyond man--will happen.  But in the Christian
view, it has happened already.  In Christ a new kind of man appeared: and the new
kind of life which began in Him is to be put into us.

How is this to be done?  Now, please remember how we acquired the old, ordinary
kind of life.  We derived it from others, from our father and mother and all our
ancestors, without our consent--and by a very curious process, involving pleasure,
pain, and danger.  A process you would never have guessed.  Most of us spend a
good many years in childhood trying to guess it: and some children, when they are
first told, do not believe it--and I am not sure that I blame them, for it is very
odd.  Now the God who arranged that process is the same God who arranges how the
new kind of life--the Christ-life--is to be spread.  We must be prepared for it
being odd too.  He did not consult us when He invented sex: He has not consulted
us either when He invented this.

There are three things that spread the Christ-life to us: baptism, belief, and
that mysterious action which different Christians call by different names--Holy
Communion, the Mass, the Lord's Supper.  At least, those are the three ordinary
methods.  I am not saying there may not be special cases where it is spread
without one or more of these.  I have not time to go into special cases, and I do
not know enough.  If you are trying in a few minutes to tell a man how to get to
Edinburgh you will tell him the trains: he can, it is true, get there by boat or
by a plane, but you will hardly bring that in.  And I am not saying anything about
which of these three things is the most essential.  My Methodist friend would like
me to say more about belief and less (in proportion) about the other two.  But I
am not going into that.  Anyone who professes to teach you Christian doctrine
will, in fact, tell you to use all three, and that is enough for our present
purpose.

I cannot myself see why these things should be the conductors of the new kind of
life.  But then, if one did not happen to know, I should never have seen any
connection between a particular physical pleasure and the appearance of a new
human being in the world.  We have to take reality as it comes to us: there is no
good jabbering about what it ought to be like or what we should have expected it
to be like.  But though I cannot see why it should be so, I can tell you why I
believe it is so.  I have explained why I have to believe that Jesus was (and is)
God.  And it seems plain as a matter of history that He taught His followers that
the new life was communicated in this way.  In other words, I believe it on His
authority.  Do not be scared by the word authority.  Believing things on authority
only means believing them because you have been told them by someone you think
trustworthy.  Ninety-nine per cent of the things you believe are believed on
authority.  I believe there is such a place as New York.  I have not seen it
myself.  I could not prove by abstract reasoning that there must be such a place.
I believe it because reliable people have told me so.  The ordinary man believes
in the Solar System, atoms, evolution, and the circulation of the blood on
authority--because the scientists say so.  Every historical statement in the world
is believed on authority.  None of us has seen the Norman Conquest or the defeat
of the Armada.  None of us could prove them by pure logic as you prove a thing in
mathematics.  We believe them simply because people who did see them have left
writings that tell us about them: in fact, on authority.  A man who jibbed at
authority in other things as some people do in religion would have to be content
to know nothing all his life.

Do not think I am setting up baptism and belief and the Holy Communion as things
that will do instead of your own attempts to copy Christ.  Your natural life is
derived from your parents; that does not mean it will stay there if you do nothing
about it.  You can lose it by neglect, or you can drive it away by committing
suicide.  You have to feed it and look after it: but always remember you are not
making it, you are only keeping up a life you got from someone else.  In the same
way a Christian can lose the Christ-life which has been put into him, and he has
to make efforts to keep it.  But even the best Christian that ever lived is not
acting on his own steam--he is only nourishing or protecting a life he could never
have acquired by his own efforts.  And that has practical consequences.  As long
as the natural life is in your body, it will do a lot towards repairing that body.
Cut it, and up to a point it will heal, as a dead body would not.  A live body is
not one that never gets hurt, but one that can to some extent repair itself.  In
the same way a Christian is not a man who never goes wrong, but a man who is
enabled to repent and pick himself up and begin over again after each
stumble--because the Christ-life is inside him, repairing him all the time,
enabling him to repeat (in some degree) the kind of voluntary death which Christ
Himself carried out.

That is why the Christian is in a different position from other people who are
trying to be good.  They hope, by being good, to please God if there is one;
or--if they think there is not--at least they hope to deserve approval from good
men.  But the Christian thinks any good he does comes from the Christ-life inside
him.  He does not think God will love us because we are good, but that God will
make us good because He loves us; just as the roof of a greenhouse does not
attract the sun because it is bright, but becomes bright because the sun shines on
it.

And let me make it quite clear that when Christians say the Christ-life is in
them, they do not mean simply something mental or moral.  When they speak of being
'in Christ' or of Christ being 'in them', this is not simply a way of saying that
they are thinking about Christ or copying Him.  They mean that Christ is actually
operating through them; that the whole mass of Christians are the physical
organism through which Christ acts--that we are His fingers and muscles, the cells
of His body.  And perhaps that explains one or two things.  It explains why this
new life is spread not only by purely mental acts like belief, but by bodily acts
like baptism and Holy Communion.  It is not merely the spreading of an idea; it is
more like evolution--a biological or superbiological fact.  There is no good
trying to be more spiritual than God.  God never meant man to be a purely
spiritual creature.  That is why He uses material things like bread and wine to
put the new life into us.  We may think this rather crude and unspiritual.  God
does not: He invented eating.  He likes matter.  He invented it.

Here is another thing that used to puzzle me.  Is it not frightfully unfair that
this new life should be confined to people who have heard of Christ and been able
to believe in Him?  But the truth is God has not told us what His arrangements
about the other people are.  We do know that no man can be saved except through
Christ; we do not know that only those who know Him can be saved through Him.  But
in the meantime, if you are worried about the people outside, the most
unreasonable thing you can do is to remain outside yourself.  Christians are
Christ's body, the organism through which He works.  Every addition to that body
enables Him to do more.  If you want to help those outside you must add your own
little cell to the body of Christ who alone can help them.  Cutting off a man's
fingers would be an odd way of getting him to do more work.

Another possible objection is this.  Why is God landing in this enemy-occupied
world in disguise and starting a sort of secret society to undermine the devil?
Why is He not landing in force, invading it?  Is it that He is not strong enough?
Well, Christians think He is going to land in force; we do not know when.  But we
can guess why He is delaying.  He wants to give us the chance of joining His side
freely.  I do not suppose you and I would have thought much of a Frenchman who
waited till the Allies were marching into Germany and then announced he was on our
side.  God will invade.  But I wonder whether people who ask God to interfere
openly and directly in our world quite realise what it will be like when He does.
When that happens, it is the end of the world.  When the author walks on to the
stage the play is over.  God is going to invade, all right: but what is the good
of saying you are on His side then, when you see the whole natural universe
melting away like a dream and something else--something it never entered your head
to conceive--comes crashing in; something so beautiful to some of us and so
terrible to others that none of us will have any choice left?  For this time it
will be God without disguise; something so overwhelming that it will strike either
irresistible love or irresistible horror into every creature.  It will be too late
then to choose your side.  There is no use saying you choose to lie down when it
has become impossible to stand up.  That will not be the time for choosing: it
will be the time when we discover which side we really have chosen, whether we
realised it before or not.  Now, today, this moment, is our chance to choose the
right side.  God is holding back to give us that chance.  It will not last for
ever.  We must take it or leave it.





BOOK THREE



CHRISTIAN BEHAVIOUR





1


THE THREE PARTS OF MORALITY




There is a story about a schoolboy who was asked what he thought God was like.  He
replied that, as far as he could make out, God was 'the sort of person who is
always snooping around to see if anyone is enjoying himself and then trying to
stop it'.  And I am afraid that is the sort of idea that the word Morality raises
in a good many people's minds: something that interferes, something that stops you
having a good time.  In reality, moral rules are directions for running the human
machine.  Every moral rule is there to prevent a breakdown, or a strain, or a
friction, in the running of that machine.  That is why these rules at first seem
to be constantly interfering with our natural inclinations.  When you are being
taught how to use any machine, the instructor keeps on saying, 'No, don't do it
like that,' because, of course, there are all sorts of things that look all right
and seem to you the natural way of treating the machine, but do not really work.

Some people prefer to talk about moral 'ideals' rather than moral rules and about
moral 'idealism' rather than moral obedience.  Now it is, of course, quite true
that moral perfection is an 'ideal' in the sense that we cannot achieve it.  In
that sense every kind of perfection is, for us humans, an ideal; we cannot succeed
in being perfect car drivers or perfect tennis players or in drawing perfectly
straight lines.  But there is another sense in which it is very misleading to call
moral perfection an ideal.  When a man says that a certain woman, or house, or
ship, or garden is 'his ideal' he does not mean (unless he is rather a fool) that
everyone else ought to have the same ideal.  In such matters we are entitled to
have different tastes and, therefore, different ideals.  But it is dangerous to
describe a man who tries very hard to keep the moral law as a 'man of high
ideals', because this might lead you to think that moral perfection was a private
taste of his own and that the rest of us were not called on to share it.  This
would be a disastrous mistake.  Perfect behaviour may be as unattainable as
perfect gear-changing when we drive; but it is a necessary ideal prescribed for
all men by the very nature of the human machine just as perfect gear-changing is
an ideal prescribed for all drivers by the very nature of cars.  And it would be
even more dangerous to think of oneself as a person 'of high ideals' because one
is trying to tell no lies at all (instead of only a few lies) or never to commit
adultery (instead of committing it only seldom) or not to be a bully (instead of
being only a moderate bully).  It might lead you to become a prig and to think you
were rather a special person who deserved to be congratulated on his 'idealism'.
In reality you might just as well expect to be congratulated because, whenever you
do a sum, you try to get it quite right.  To be sure, perfect arithmetic is 'an
ideal'; you will certainly make some mistakes in some calculations.  But there is
nothing very fine about trying to be quite accurate at each step in each sum.  It
would be idiotic not to try; for every mistake is going to cause you trouble later
on.  In the same way every moral failure is going to cause trouble, probably to
others and certainly to yourself.  By talking about rules and obedience instead of
'ideals' and 'idealism' we help to remind ourselves of these facts.

Now let us go a step further.  There are two ways in which the human machine goes
wrong.  One is when human individ-uals drift apart from one another, or else
collide with one another and do one another damage, by cheating or bullying.  The
other is when things go wrong inside the individual--when the different parts of
him (his different faculties and desires and so on) either drift apart or
interfere with one another.  You can get the idea plain if you think of us as a
fleet of ships sailing in formation.  The voyage will be a success only, in the
first place, if the ships do not collide and get in one another's way; and,
secondly, if each ship is seaworthy and has her engines in good order.  As a
matter of fact, you cannot have either of these two things without the other.  If
the ships keep on having collisions they will not remain seaworthy very long.  On
the other hand, if their steering gears are out of order they will not be able to
avoid collisions.  Or, if you like, think of humanity as a band playing a tune.
To get a good result, you need two things.  Each player's individual instrument
must be in tune and also each must come in at the right moment so as to combine
with all the others.

But there is one thing we have not yet taken into account.  We have not asked
where the fleet is trying to get to, or what piece of music the band is trying to
play.  The instruments might be all in tune and might all come in at the right
moment, but even so the performance would not be a success if they had been
engaged to provide dance music and actually played nothing but Dead Marches.  And
however well the fleet sailed, its voyage would be a failure if it were meant to
reach New York and actually arrived at Calcutta.

Morality, then, seems to be concerned with three things.  Firstly, with fair play
and harmony between individuals.  Secondly, with what might be called tidying up
or harmonising the things inside each individual.  Thirdly, with the general
purpose of human life as a whole: what man was made for: what course the whole
fleet ought to be on: what tune the conductor of the band wants it to play.

You may have noticed that modern people are nearly always thinking about the first
thing and forgetting the other two.  When people say in the newspapers that we are
striving for Christian moral standards, they usually mean that we are striving for
kindness and fair play between nations, and classes, and individuals; that is,
they are thinking only of the first thing.  When a man says about something he
wants to do, 'It can't be wrong because it doesn't do anyone else any harm,' he is
thinking only of the first thing.  He is thinking it does not matter what his ship
is like inside provided that he does not run into the next ship.  And it is quite
natural, when we start thinking about morality, to begin with the first thing,
with social relations.  For one thing, the results of bad morality in that sphere
are so obvious and press on us every day: war and poverty and graft and lies and
shoddy work.  And also, as long as you stick to the first thing, there is very
little disagreement about morality.  Almost all people at all times have agreed
(in theory) that human beings ought to be honest and kind and helpful to one
another.  But though it is natural to begin with all that, if our thinking about
morality stops there, we might just as well not have thought at all.  Unless we go
on to the second thing--the tidying up inside each human being--we are only
deceiving ourselves.

What is the good of telling the ships how to steer so as to avoid collisions if,
in fact, they are such crazy old tubs that they cannot be steered at all?  What is
the good of drawing up, on paper, rules for social behaviour, if we know that, in
fact, our greed, cowardice, ill temper, and self-conceit are going to prevent us
from keeping them?  I do not mean for a moment that we ought not to think, and
think hard, about improvements in our social and economic system.  What I do mean
is that all that thinking will be mere moonshine unless we realise that nothing
but the courage and unselfishness of individuals is ever going to make any system
work properly.  It is easy enough to remove the particular kinds of graft or
bullying that go on under the present system: but as long as men are twisters or
bullies they will find some new way of carrying on the old game under the new
system.  You cannot make men good by law: and without good men you cannot have a
good society.  That is why we must go on to think of the second thing: of morality
inside the individual.

But I do not think we can stop there either.  We are now getting to the point at
which different beliefs about the universe lead to different behaviour.  And it
would seem, at first sight, very sensible to stop before we got there, and just
carry on with those parts of morality that all sensible people agree about.  But
can we?  Remember that religion involves a series of statements about facts, which
must be either true or false.  If they are true, one set of conclusions will
follow about the right sailing of the human fleet: if they are false, quite a
different set.  For example, let us go back to the man who says that a thing
cannot be wrong unless it hurts some other human being.  He quite understands that
he must not damage the other ships in the convoy, but he honestly thinks that what
he does to his own ship is simply his own business.  But does it not make a great
difference whether his ship is his own property or not?  Does it not make a great
difference whether I am, so to speak, the landlord of my own mind and body, or
only a tenant, responsible to the real landlord?  If somebody else made me, for
his own purposes, then I shall have a lot of duties which I should not have if I
simply belonged to myself.

Again, Christianity asserts that every individual human being is going to live for
ever, and this must be either true or false.  Now there are a good many things
which would not be worth bothering about if I were going to live only seventy
years, but which I had better bother about very seriously if I am going to live
for ever.  Perhaps my bad temper or my jealousy are gradually getting worse--so
gradually that the increase in seventy years will not be very noticeable.  But it
might be absolute hell in a million years: in fact, if Christianity is true, Hell
is the precisely correct technical term for what it would be.  And immortality
makes this other difference, which, by the by, has a connection with the
difference between totalitarianism and democracy.  If individuals live only
seventy years, then a state, or a nation, or a civilisation, which may last for a
thousand years, is more important than an individual.  But if Christianity is
true, then the individual is not only more important but incomparably more
important, for he is everlasting and the life of a state or a civilisation,
compared with his, is only a moment.

It seems, then, that if we are to think about morality, we must think of all three
departments: relations between man and man: things inside each man: and relations
between man and the power that made him.  We can all co-operate in the first one.
Disagreements begin with the second and become more serious with the third.  It is
dealing with the third that the main differences between Christian and
non-Christian morality come out.  For the rest of this book I am going to assume
the Christian point of view, and look at the whole picture as it will be if
Christianity is true.





2


THE 'CARDINAL VIRTUES'




The previous section was originally composed to be given as a short talk on the
air.

If you are allowed to talk for only ten minutes, pretty well everything else has
to be sacrificed to brevity.  One of my chief reasons for dividing morality up
into three parts (with my picture of the ships sailing in convoy) was that this
seemed the shortest way of covering the ground.  Here I want to give some idea of
another way in which the subject has been divided by old writers, which was too
long to use in my talk, but which is a very good one.

According to this longer scheme there are seven 'virtues'.  Four of them are
called 'Cardinal' virtues, and the remaining three are called 'Theological'
virtues.  The 'Cardinal' ones are those which all civilised people recognise: the
'Theological' are those which, as a rule, only Christians know about.  I shall
deal with the Theological ones later on: at present I am talking about the four
Cardinal virtues.  (The word 'cardinal' has nothing to do with 'Cardinals' in the
Roman Church.  It comes from a Latin word meaning 'the hinge of a door'.  These
were called 'cardinal' virtues because they are, as we should say, 'pivotal'.)
They are PRUDENCE, TEMPERANCE, JUSTICE and FORTITUDE.

Prudence means practical common sense, taking the trouble to think out what you
are doing and what is likely to come of it.  Nowadays most people hardly think of
Prudence as one of the 'virtues'.  In fact, because Christ said we could only get
into His world by being like children, many Christians have the idea that,
provided you are 'good', it does not matter being a fool.  But that is a
misunderstanding.  In the first place, most children show plenty of 'prudence'
about doing the things they are really interested in, and think them out quite
sensibly.  In the second place, as St Paul points out, Christ never meant that we
were to remain children in intelligence: on the contrary.  He told us to be not
only 'as harmless as doves', but also 'as wise as serpents'.  He wants a child's
heart, but a grown-up's head.  He wants us to be simple, single-minded,
affectionate, and teachable, as good children are; but He also wants every bit of
intelligence we have to be alert at its job, and in first-class fighting trim.
The fact that you are giving money to a charity does not mean that you need not
try to find out whether that charity is a fraud or not.  The fact that what you
are thinking about is God Himself (for example, when you are praying) does not
mean that you can be content with the same babyish ideas which you had when you
were a five-year-old.  It is, of course, quite true that God will not love you any
the less, or have less use for you, if you happen to have been born with a very
second-rate brain.  He has room for people with very little sense, but He wants
every one to use what sense they have.  The proper motto is not 'Be good, sweet
maid and let who can be clever,' but 'Be good, sweet maid, and don't forget that
this involves being as clever as you can.' God is no fonder of intellectual
slackers than of any other slackers.  If you are thinking of becoming a Christian,
I warn you, you are embarking on something which is going to take the whole of
you, brains and all.  But, fortunately, it works the other way round.  Anyone who
is honestly trying to be a Christian will soon find his intelligence being
sharpened: one of the reasons why it needs no special education to be a Christian
is that Christianity is an education itself.  That is why an uneducated believer
like Bunyan was able to write a book that has astonished the whole world.

Temperance is, unfortunately, one of those words that has changed its meaning.  It
now usually means teetotalism.  But in the days when the second Cardinal virtue
was christened 'Temperance', it meant nothing of the sort.  Temperance referred
not specially to drink, but to all pleasures; and it meant not abstaining, but
going the right length and no further.  It is a mistake to think that Christians
ought all to be teetotallers; Mohammedanism, not Christianity, is the teetotal
religion.  Of course it may be the duty of a particular Christian, or of any
Christian, at a particular time, to abstain from strong drink, either because he
is the sort of man who cannot drink at all without drinking too much, or because
he is with people who are inclined to drunkenness and must not encourage them by
drinking himself.  But the whole point is that he is abstaining, for a good
reason, from something which he does not condemn and which he likes to see other
people enjoying.  One of the marks of a certain type of bad man is that he cannot
give up a thing himself without wanting every one else to give it up.  That is not
the Christian way.  An individual Christian may see fit to give up all sorts of
things for special reasons--marriage, or meat, or beer, or the cinema; but the
moment he starts saying the things are bad in themselves, or looking down his nose
at other people who do use them, he has taken the wrong turning.

One great piece of mischief has been done by the modern restriction of the word
Temperance to the question of drink.  It helps people to forget that you can be
just as intemperate about lots of other things.  A man who makes his golf or his
motor-bicycle the centre of his life, or a woman who devotes all her thoughts to
clothes or bridge or her dog, is being just as 'intemperate' as someone who gets
drunk every evening.  Of course, it does not show on the outside so easily:
bridge-mania or golf-mania do not make you fall down in the middle of the road.
But God is not deceived by externals.

Justice means much more than the sort of thing that goes on in law courts.  It is
the old name for everything we should now call 'fairness'; it includes honesty,
give and take, truthfulness, keeping promises, and all that side of life.  And
Fortitude includes both kinds of courage--the kind that faces danger as well as
the kind that 'sticks it' under pain.  'Guts' is perhaps the nearest modern
English.  You will notice, of course, that you cannot practise any of the other
virtues very long without bringing this one into play.

There is one further point about the virtues that ought to be noticed.  There is a
difference between doing some particular just or temperate action and being a just
or temperate man.  Someone who is not a good tennis player may now and then make a
good shot.  What you mean by a good player is a man whose eye and muscles and
nerves have been so trained by making innumerable good shots that they can now be
relied on.  They have a certain tone or quality which is there even when he is not
playing, just as a mathematician's mind has a certain habit and outlook which is
there even when he is not doing mathematics.  In the same way a man who perseveres
in doing just actions gets in the end a certain quality of character.  Now it is
that quality rather than the particular actions which we mean when we talk of a
'virtue'.

This distinction is important for the following reason.  If we thought only of the
particular actions we might encourage three wrong ideas.

(1) We might think that, provided you did the right thing, it did not matter how
or why you did it--whether you did it willingly or unwillingly, sulkily or
cheerfully, through fear of public opinion or for its own sake.  But the truth is
that right actions done for the wrong reason do not help to build the internal
quality or character called a 'virtue', and it is this quality or character that
really matters.  (If the bad tennis player hits very hard, not because he sees
that a very hard stroke is required, but because he has lost his temper, his
stroke might possibly, by luck, help him to win that particular game; but it will
not be helping him to become a reliable player.)

(2) We might think that God wanted simply obedience to a set of rules: whereas He
really wants people of a particular sort.

(3) We might think that the 'virtues' were necessary only for this present
life--that in the other world we could stop being just because there is nothing to
quarrel about and stop being brave because there is no danger.  Now it is quite
true that there will probably be no occasion for just or courageous acts in the
next world, but there will be every occasion for being the sort of people that we
can become only as the result of doing such acts here.  The point is not that God
will refuse you admission to His eternal world if you have not got certain
qualities of character: the point is that if people have not got at least the
beginnings of those qualities inside them, then no possible external conditions
could make a 'Heaven' for them--that is, could make them happy with the deep,
strong, unshakable kind of happiness God intends for us.





3


SOCIAL MORALITY




The first thing to get clear about Christian morality between man and man is that
in this department Christ did not come to preach any brand new morality.  The
Golden Rule of the New Testament (Do as you would be done by) is a summing up of
what every one, at bottom, had always known to be right.  Really great moral
teachers never do introduce new moralities: it is quacks and cranks who do that.
As Dr Johnson said, 'People need to be reminded more often than they need to be
instructed.' The real job of every moral teacher is to keep on bringing us back,
time after time, to the old simple principles which we are all so anxious not to
see; like bringing a horse back and back to the fence it has refused to jump or
bringing a child back and back to the bit in its lesson that it wants to shirk.

The second thing to get clear is that Christianity has not, and does not profess
to have, a detailed political programme for applying 'Do as you would be done by'
to a particular society at a particular moment.  It could not have.  It is meant
for all men at all times and the particular programme which suited one place or
time would not suit another.  And, anyhow, that is not how Christianity works.
When it tells you to feed the hungry it does not give you lessons in cookery.
When it tells you to read the Scriptures it does not give you lessons in Hebrew
and Greek, or even in English grammar.  It was never intended to replace or
supersede the ordinary human arts and sciences: it is rather a director which will
set them all to the right jobs, and a source of energy which will give them all
new life, if only they will put themselves at its disposal.

People say, 'The Church ought to give us a lead.' That is true if they mean it in
the right way, but false if they mean it in the wrong way.  By the Church they
ought to mean the whole body of practising Christians.  And when they say that the
Church should give us a lead, they ought to mean that some Christians--those who
happen to have the right talents--should be economists and statesmen, and that all
economists and statesmen should be Christians, and that their whole efforts in
politics and economics should be directed to putting 'Do as you would be done by'
into action.  If that happened, and if we others were really ready to take it,
then we should find the Christian solution for our own social problems pretty
quickly.  But, of course, when they ask for a lead from the Church most people
mean they want the clergy to put out a political programme.  That is silly.  The
clergy are those particular people within the whole Church who have been specially
trained and set aside to look after what concerns us as creatures who are going to
live for ever: and we are asking them to do a quite different job for which they
have not been trained.  The job is really on us, on the laymen.  The application
of Christian principles, say, to trade unionism or education, must come from
Christian trade unionists and Christian schoolmasters: just as Christian
literature comes from Christian novelists and dramatists--not from the bench of
bishops getting together and trying to write plays and novels in their spare time.

All the same, the New Testament, without going into details, gives us a pretty
clear hint of what a fully Christian society would be like.  Perhaps it gives us
more than we can take.  It tells us that there are to be no passengers or
parasites: if man does not work, he ought not to eat.  Every one is to work with
his own hands, and what is more, every one's work is to produce something good:
there will be no manufacture of silly luxuries and then of sillier advertisements
to persuade us to buy them.  And there is to be no 'swank' or 'side', no putting
on airs.  To that extent a Christian society would be what we now call Leftist.
On the other hand, it is always insisting on obedience--obedience (and outward
marks of respect) from all of us to properly appointed magistrates, from children
to parents, and (I am afraid this is going to be very unpopular) from wives to
husbands.  Thirdly, it is to be a cheerful society: full of singing and rejoicing,
and regarding worry or anxiety as wrong.  Courtesy is one of the Christian
virtues; and the New Testament hates what it calls 'busybodies'.

If there were such a society in existence and you or I visited it, I think we
should come away with a curious impression.  We should feel that its economic life
was very socialistic and, in that sense, 'advanced', but that its family life and
its code of manners were rather old fashioned--perhaps even ceremonious and
aristocratic.  Each of us would like some bits of it, but I am afraid very few of
us would like the whole thing.  That is just what one would expect if Christianity
is the total plan for the human machine.  We have all departed from that total
plan in different ways, and each of us wants to make out that his own modification
of the original plan is the plan itself.  You will find this again and again about
anything that is really Christian: every one is attracted by bits of it and wants
to pick out those bits and leave the rest.  That is why we do not get much
further: and that is why people who are fighting for quite opposite things can
both say they are fighting for Christianity.

Now another point.  There is one bit of advice given to us by the ancient heathen
Greeks, and by the Jews in the Old Testament, and by the great Christian teachers
of the Middle Ages, which the modern economic system has completely disobeyed.
All these people told us not to lend money at interest; and lending money at
interest--what we call investment--is the basis of our whole system.  Now it may
not absolutely follow that we are wrong.  Some people say that when Moses and
Aristotle and the Christians agreed in forbidding interest (or 'usury' as they
called it), they could not foresee the joint stock company, and were only thinking
of the private moneylender, and that, therefore, we need not bother about what
they said.  That is a question I cannot decide on.  I am not an economist and I
simply do not know whether the investment system is responsible for the state we
are in or not.  This is where we want the Christian economist.  But I should not
have been honest if I had not told you that three great civilisations had agreed
(or so it seems at first sight) in condemning the very thing on which we have
based our whole life.

One more point and I am done.  In the passage where the New Testament says that
every one must work, it gives as a reason 'in order that he may have something to
give to those in need'.  Charity--giving to the poor--is an essential part of
Christian morality: in the frightening parable of the sheep and the goats it seems
to be the point on which everything turns.  Some people nowadays say that charity
ought to be unnecessary and that instead of giving to the poor we ought to be
producing a society in which there were no poor to give to.  They may be quite
right in saying that we ought to produce this kind of society.  But if anyone
thinks that, as a consequence, you can stop giving in the meantime, then he has
parted company with all Christian morality.  I do not believe one can settle how
much we ought to give.  I am afraid the only safe rule is to give more than we can
spare.  In other words, if our expenditure on comforts, luxuries, amusements,
etc., is up to the standard common among those with the same income as our own, we
are probably giving away too little.  If our charities do not at all pinch or
hamper us, I should say they are too small.  There ought to be things we should
like to do and cannot do because our charities expenditure excludes them.  I am
speaking now of 'charities' in the common way.  Particular cases of distress among
your own relatives, friends, neighbours or employees, which God, as it were,
forces upon your notice, may demand much more: even to the crippling and
endangering of your own position.  For many of us the great obstacle to charity
lies not in our luxurious living or desire for more money, but in our fear--fear
of insecurity.  This must often be recognised as a temptation.  Sometimes our
pride also hinders our charity; we are tempted to spend more than we ought on the
showy forms of generosity (tipping, hospitality) and less than we ought on those
who really need our help.

And now, before I end, I am going to venture on a guess as to how this section has
affected any who have read it.  My guess is that there are some Leftist people
among them who are very angry that it has not gone further in that direction, and
some people of an opposite sort who are angry because they think it has gone much
too far.  If so, that brings us right up against the real snag in all this drawing
up of blueprints for a Christian society.  Most of us are not really approaching
the subject in order to find out what Christianity says: we are approaching it in
the hope of finding support from Christianity for the views of our own party.  We
are looking for an ally where we are offered either a Master or--a Judge.  I am
just the same.  There are bits in this section that I wanted to leave out.  And
that is why nothing whatever is going to come of such talks unless we go a much
longer way round.  A Christian society is not going to arrive until most of us
really want it: and we are not going to want it until we become fully Christian.
I may repeat 'Do as you would be done by' till I am black in the face, but I
cannot really carry it out till I love my neighbour as myself: and I cannot learn
to love my neighbour as myself till I learn to love God: and I cannot learn to
love God except by learning to obey Him.  And so, as I warned you, we are driven
on to something more inward--driven on from social matters to religious matters.
For the longest way round is the shortest way home.





4


MORALITY AND PSYCHOANALYSIS




I have said that we should never get a Christian society unless most of us became
Christian individuals.  That does not mean, of course, that we can put off doing
anything about society until some imaginary date in the far future.  It means that
we must begin both jobs at once--(1) the job of seeing how 'Do as you would be
done by' can be applied in detail to modern society, and (2) the job of becoming
the sort of people who really would apply it if we saw how.  I now want to begin
considering what the Christian idea of a good man is--the Christian specification
for the human machine.

Before I come down to details there are two more general points I should like to
make.  First of all, since Christian morality claims to be a technique for putting
the human machine right, I think you would like to know how it is related to
another technique which seems to make a similar claim--namely, psychoanalysis.

Now you want to distinguish very clearly between two things: between the actual
medical theories and technique of the psychoanalysts, and the general
philosophical view of the world which Freud and some others have gone on to add to
this.  The second thing--the philosophy of Freud--is in direct contradiction to
the other great psychologist, Jung.  And furthermore, when Freud is talking about
how to cure neurotics he is speaking as a specialist on his own subject, but when
he goes on to talk general philosophy he is speaking as an amateur.  It is
therefore quite sensible to attend to him with respect in the one case and not in
the other--and that is what I do.  I am all the readier to do it because I have
found that when he is talking off his own subject and on a subject I do know
something about (namely, language) he is very ignorant.  But psychoanalysis
itself, apart from all the philosophical additions that Freud and others have made
to it, is not in the least contradictory to Christianity.  Its technique overlaps
with Christian morality at some points and it would not be a bad thing if every
person knew something about it: but it does not run the same course all the way,
for the two techniques are doing rather different things.

When a man makes a moral choice two things are involved.  One is the act of
choosing.  The other is the various feelings, impulses and so on which his
psychological outfit presents him with, and which are the raw material of his
choice.  Now this raw material may be of two kinds.  Either it may be what we
would call normal: it may consist of the sort of feelings that are common to all
men.  Or else it may consist of quite unnatural feelings due to things that have
gone wrong in his subconscious.  Thus fear of things that are really dangerous
would be an example of the first kind: an irrational fear of cats or spiders would
be an example of the second kind.  The desire of a man for a woman would be of the
first kind: the perverted desire of a man for a man would be of the second.  Now
what psychoanalysis undertakes to do is to remove the abnormal feelings, that is,
to give the man better raw material for his acts of choice; morality is concerned
with the acts of choice themselves.

Put it this way.  Imagine three men who go to a war.  One has the ordinary natural
fear of danger that any man has and he subdues it by moral effort and becomes a
brave man.  Let us suppose that the other two have, as a result of things in their
subconscious, exaggerated, irrational fears, which no amount of moral effort can
do anything about.  Now suppose that a psychoanalyst comes along and cures these
two: that is, he puts them both back in the position of the first man.  Well it is
just then that the psychoanalytical problem is over and the moral problem begins.
Because, now that they are cured, these two men might take quite different lines.
The first might say, 'Thank goodness I've got rid of all those doo-dahs.  Now at
last I can do what I always wanted to do--my duty to my country.' But the other
might say, 'Well, I'm very glad that I now feel moderately cool under fire, but,
of course, that doesn't alter the fact that I'm still jolly well determined to
look after Number One and let the other chap do the dangerous job whenever I can.
Indeed one of the good things about feeling less frightened is that I can now look
after myself much more efficiently and can be much cleverer at hiding the fact
from the others.' Now this difference is a purely moral one and psychoanalysis
cannot do anything about it.  However much you improve the man's raw material, you
have still got something else: the real, free choice of the man, on the material
presented to him, either to put his own advantage first or to put it last.  And
this free choice is the only thing that morality is concerned with.

The bad psychological material is not a sin but a disease.  It does not need to be
repented of, but to be cured.  And by the way, that is very important.  Human
beings judge one another by their external actions.  God judges them by their
moral choices.  When a neurotic who has a pathological horror of cats forces
himself to pick up a cat for some good reason, it is quite possible that in God's
eyes he has shown more courage than a healthy man may have shown in winning the
V.C.  When a man who has been perverted from his youth and taught that cruelty is
the right thing, does some tiny little kindness, or refrains from some cruelty he
might have committed, and thereby, perhaps, risks being sneered at by his
companions, he may, in God's eyes, be doing more than you and I would do if we
gave up life itself for a friend.

It is as well to put this the other way round.  Some of us who seem quite nice
people may, in fact, have made so little use of a good heredity and a good
upbringing that we are really worse than those whom we regard as fiends.  Can we
be quite certain how we should have behaved if we had been saddled with the
psychological outfit, and then with the bad upbringing, and then with the power,
say, of Himmler?  That is why Christians are told not to judge.  We see only the
results which a man's choices make out of his raw material.  But God does not
judge him on the raw material at all, but on what he has done with it.  Most of
the man's psychological makeup is probably due to his body: when his body dies all
that will fall off him, and the real central man, the thing that chose, that made
the best or the worst out of this material, will stand naked.  All sorts of nice
things which we thought our own, but which were really due to a good digestion,
will fall off some of us: all sorts of nasty things which were due to complexes or
bad health will fall off others.  We shall then, for the first time, see every one
as he really was.  There will be surprises.

And that leads on to my second point.  People often think of Christian morality as
a kind of bargain in which God says, 'If you keep a lot of rules I'll reward you,
and if you don't I'll do the other thing.' I do not think that is the best way of
looking at it.  I would much rather say that every time you make a choice you are
turning the central part of you, the part of you that chooses, into something a
little different from what it was before.  And taking your life as a whole, with
all your innumerable choices, all your life long you are slowly turning this
central thing either into a heavenly creature or into a hellish creature: either
into a creature that is in harmony with God, and with other creatures, and with
itself, or else into one that is in a state of war and hatred with God, and with
its fellow-creatures, and with itself.  To be the one kind of creature is heaven:
that is, it is joy and peace and knowledge and power.  To be the other means
madness, horror, idiocy, rage, impotence, and eternal loneliness.  Each of us at
each moment is progressing to the one state or the other.

That explains what always used to puzzle me about Christian writers; they seem to
be so very strict at one moment and so very free and easy at another.  They talk
about mere sins of thought as if they were immensely important: and then they talk
about the most frightful murders and treacheries as if you had only got to repent
and all would be forgiven.  But I have come to see that they are right.  What they
are always thinking of is the mark which the action leaves on that tiny central
self which no one sees in this life but which each of us will have to endure--or
enjoy--for ever.  One man may be so placed that his anger sheds the blood of
thousands, and another so placed that however angry he gets he will only be
laughed at.  But the little mark on the soul may be much the same in both.  Each
has done something to himself which, unless he repents, will make it harder for
him to keep out of the rage next time he is tempted, and will make the rage worse
when he does fall into it.  Each of them, if he seriously turns to God, can have
that twist in the central man straightened out again: each is, in the long run,
doomed if he will not.  The bigness or smallness of the thing, seen from the
outside, is not what really matters.

One last point.  Remember that, as I said, the right direction leads not only to
peace but to knowledge.  When a man is getting better he understands more and more
clearly the evil that is still left in him.  When a man is getting worse he
understands his own badness less and less.  A moderately bad man knows he is not
very good: a thoroughly bad man thinks he is all right.  This is common sense,
really.  You understand sleep when you are awake, not while you are sleeping.  You
can see mistakes in arithmetic when your mind is working properly: while you are
making them you cannot see them.  You can understand the nature of drunkenness
when you are sober, not when you are drunk.  Good people know about both good and
evil: bad people do not know about either.





5


SEXUAL MORALITY




We must now consider Christian morality as regards sex, what Christians call the
virtue of chastity.  The Christian rule of chastity must not be confused with the
social rule of 'modesty' (in one sense of that word); i.e.  propriety, or decency.
The social rule of propriety lays down how much of the human body should be
displayed and what subjects can be referred to, and in what words, according to
the customs of a given social circle.  Thus, while the rule of chastity is the
same for all Christians at all times, the rule of propriety changes.  A girl in
the Pacific islands wearing hardly any clothes and a Victorian lady completely
covered in clothes might both be equally 'modest', proper, or decent, according to
the standards of their own societies: and both, for all we could tell by their
dress, might be equally chaste (or equally unchaste).  Some of the language which
chaste women used in Shakespeare's time would have been used in the nineteenth
century only by a woman completely abandoned.  When people break the rule of
propriety current in their own time and place, if they do so in order to excite
lust in themselves or others, then they are offending against chastity.  But if
they break it through ignorance or carelessness they are guilty only of bad
manners.  When, as often happens, they break it defiantly in order to shock or
embarrass others, they are not necessarily being unchaste, but they are being
uncharitable: for it is uncharitable to take pleasure in making other people
uncomfortable.  I do not think that a very strict or fussy standard of propriety
is any proof of chastity or any help to it, and I therefore regard the great
relaxation and simplifying of the rule which has taken place in my own lifetime as
a good thing.  At its present stage, however, it has this inconvenience, that
people of different ages and different types do not all acknowledge the same
standard, and we hardly know where we are.  While this confusion lasts I think
that old, or old-fashioned, people should be very careful not to assume that young
or 'emancipated' people are corrupt whenever they are (by the old standard)
improper; and, in return, that young people should not call their elders prudes or
puritans because they do not easily adopt the new standard.  A real desire to
believe all the good you can of others and to make others as comfortable as you
can will solve most of the problems.

Chastity is the most unpopular of the Christian virtues.  There is no getting away
from it; the Christian rule is, 'Either marriage, with complete faithfulness to
your partner, or else total abstinence.' Now this is so difficult and so contrary
to our instincts, that obviously either Christianity is wrong or our sexual
instinct, as it now is, has gone wrong.  One or the other.  Of course, being a
Christian, I think it is the instinct which has gone wrong.

But I have other reasons for thinking so.  The biological purpose of sex is
children, just as the biological purpose of eating is to repair the body.  Now if
we eat whenever we feel inclined and just as much as we want, it is quite true
most of us will eat too much: but not terrifically too much.  One man may eat
enough for two, but he does not eat enough for ten.  The appetite goes a little
beyond its biological purpose, but not enormously.  But if a healthy young man
indulged his sexual appetite whenever he felt inclined, and if each act produced a
baby, then in ten years he might easily populate a small village.  This appetite
is in ludicrous and preposterous excess of its function.

Or take it another way.  You can get a large audience together for a strip-tease
act--that is, to watch a girl undress on the stage.  Now suppose you come to a
country where you could fill a theatre by simply bringing a covered plate on to
the stage and then slowly lifting the cover so as to let every one see, just
before the lights went out, that it contained a mutton chop or a bit of bacon,
would you not think that in that country something had gone wrong with the
appetite for food?  And would not anyone who had grown up in a different world
think there was something equally queer about the state of the sex instinct among
us?

One critic said that if he found a country in which such strip-tease acts with
food were popular, he would conclude that the people of that country were
starving.  He meant, of course, to imply that such things as the strip-tease act
resulted not from sexual corruption but from sexual starvation.  I agree with him
that if, in some strange land, we found that similar acts with mutton chops were
popular, one of the possible explanations which would occur to me would be famine.
But the next step would be to test our hypothesis by finding out whether, in fact,
much or little food was being consumed in that country.  If the evidence showed
that a good deal was being eaten, then of course we should have to abandon the
hypothesis of starvation and try to think of another one.  In the same way, before
accepting sexual starvation as the cause of the strip-tease, we should have to
look for evidence that there is in fact more sexual abstinence in our age than in
those ages when things like the strip-tease were unknown.  But surely there is no
such evidence.  Contraceptives have made sexual indulgence far less costly within
marriage and far safer outside it than ever before, and public opinion is less
hostile to illicit unions and even to perversion than it has been since Pagan
times.  Nor is the hypothesis of 'starvation' the only one we can imagine.
Everyone knows that the sexual appetite, like our other appetites, grows by
indulgence.  Starving men may think much about food, but so do gluttons; the
gorged, as well as the famished, like titillations.

Here is a third point.  You find very few people who want to eat things that
really are not food or to do other things with food instead of eating it.  In
other words, perversions of the food appetite are rare.  But perversions of the
sex instinct are numerous, hard to cure, and frightful.  I am sorry to have to go
into all these details but I must.  The reason why I must is that you and I, for
the last twenty years, have been fed all day long on good solid lies about sex.
We have been told, till one is sick of hearing it, that sexual desire is in the
same state as any of our other natural desires and that if only we abandon the
silly old Victorian idea of hushing it up, everything in the garden will be
lovely.  It is not true.  The moment you look at the facts, and away from the
propaganda, you see that it is not.

They tell you sex has become a mess because it was hushed up.  But for the last
twenty years it has not been.  It has been chattered about all day long.  Yet it
is still in a mess.  If hushing up had been the cause of the trouble, ventilation
would have set it right.  But it has not.  I think it is the other way round.  I
think the human race originally hushed it up because it had become such a mess.
Modern people are always saying, 'Sex is nothing to be ashamed of.' They may mean
two things.  They may mean 'There is nothing to be ashamed of in the fact that the
human race reproduces itself in a certain way, nor in the fact that it gives
pleasure.' If they mean that, they are right.  Christianity says the same.  It is
not the thing, nor the pleasure, that is the trouble.  The old Christian teachers
said that if man had never fallen, sexual pleasure, instead of being less than it
is now, would actually have been greater.  I know some muddleheaded Christians
have talked as if Christianity thought that sex, or the body, or pleasure, were
bad in themselves.  But they were wrong.  Christianity is almost the only one of
the great religions which thoroughly approves of the body--which believes that
matter is good, that God Himself once took on a human body, that some kind of body
is going to be given to us even in Heaven and is going to be an essential part of
our happiness, or beauty and our energy.  Christianity has glorified marriage more
than any other religion: and nearly all the greatest love poetry in the world has
been produced by Christians.  If anyone says that sex, in itself, is bad,
Christianity contradicts him at once.  But, of course, when people say, 'Sex is
nothing to be ashamed of,' they may mean 'the state into which the sexual instinct
has now got is nothing to be ashamed of'.

If they mean that, I think they are wrong.  I think it is everything to be ashamed
of.  There is nothing to be ashamed of in enjoying your food: there would be
everything to be ashamed of if half the world made food the main interest of their
lives and spent their time looking at pictures of food and dribbling and smacking
their lips.  I do not say you and I are individually responsible for the present
situation.  Our ancestors have handed over to us organisms which are warped in
this respect: and we grow up surrounded by propaganda in favour of unchastity.
There are people who want to keep our sex instinct inflamed in order to make money
out of us.  Because, of course, a man with an obsession is a man who has very
little sales-resistance.  God knows our situation; He will not judge us as if we
had no difficulties to overcome.  What matters is the sincerity and perseverance
of our will to overcome them.

Before we can be cured we must want to be cured.  Those who really wish for help
will get it; but for many modern people even the wish is difficult.  It is easy to
think that we want something when we do not really want it.  A famous Christian
long ago told us that when he was a young man he prayed constantly for chastity;
but years later he realised that while his lips had been saying, 'Oh Lord, make me
chaste,' his heart had been secretly adding, 'But please don't do it just yet.'
This may happen in prayers for other virtues too; but there are three reasons why
it is now specially difficult for us to desire--let alone to achieve--complete
chastity.

In the first place our warped natures, the devils who tempt us, and all the
contemporary propaganda for lust, combine to make us feel that the desires we are
resisting are so 'natural', so 'healthy', and so reasonable, that it is almost
perverse and abnormal to resist them.  Poster after poster, film after film, novel
after novel, associate the idea of sexual indulgence with the ideas of health,
normality, youth, frankness, and good humour.  Now this association is a lie.
Like all powerful lies, it is based on a truth--the truth, acknowledged above,
that sex in itself (apart from the excesses and obsessions that have grown round
it) is 'normal' and 'healthy', and all the rest of it.  The lie consists in the
suggestion that any sexual act to which you are tempted at the moment is also
healthy and normal.  Now this, on any conceivable view, and quite apart from
Christianity, must be nonsense.  Surrender to all our desires obviously leads to
impotence, disease, jealousies, lies, concealment, and everything that is the
reverse of health, good humour, and frankness.  For any happiness, even in this
world, quite a lot of restraint is going to be necessary; so the claim made by
every desire, when it is strong, to be healthy and reasonable, counts for nothing.
Every sane and civilised man must have some set of principles by which he chooses
to reject some of his desires and to permit others.  One man does this on
Christian principles, another on hygienic principles, another on sociological
principles.  The real conflict is not between Christianity and 'nature', but
between Christian principles and other principles in the control of 'nature'.  For
'nature' (in the sense of natural desire) will have to be controlled anyway,
unless you are going to ruin your whole life.  The Christian principles are,
admittedly, stricter than the others; but then we think you will get help towards
obeying them which you will not get towards obeying the others.

In the second place, many people are deterred from seriously attempting Christian
chastity because they think (before trying) that it is impossible.  But when a
thing has to be attempted, one must never think about possibility or
impossibility.  Faced with an optional question in an examination paper, one
considers whether one can do it or not: faced with a compulsory question, one must
do the best one can.  You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will
certainly get none for leaving the question alone.  Not only in examinations but
in war, in mountain climbing, in learning to skate, or swim, or ride a bicycle,
even in fastening a stiff collar with cold fingers, people quite often do what
seemed impossible before they did it.  It is wonderful what you can do when you
have to.

We may, indeed, be sure that perfect chastity--like perfect charity--will not be
attained by any merely human efforts.  You must ask for God's help.  Even when you
have done so, it may seem to you for a long time that no help, or less help than
you need, is being given.  Never mind.  After each failure, ask forgiveness, pick
yourself up, and try again.  Very often what God first helps us towards is not the
virtue itself but just this power of always trying again.  For however important
chastity (or courage, or truthfulness, or any other virtue) may be, this process
trains us in habits of the soul which are more important still.  It cures our
illusions about ourselves and teaches us to depend on God.  We learn, on the one
hand, that we cannot trust ourselves even in our best moments, and, on the other,
that we need not despair even in our worst, for our failures are forgiven.  The
only fatal thing is to sit down content with anything less than perfection.

Thirdly, people often misunderstand what psychology teaches about 'repressions'.
It teaches us that 'repressed' sex is dangerous.  But 'repressed' is here a
technical term: it does not mean 'suppressed' in the sense of 'denied' or
'resisted'.  A repressed desire or thought is one which has been thrust into the
subconscious (usually at a very early age) and can now come before the mind only
in a disguised and unrecognisable form.  Repressed sexuality does not appear to
the patient to be sexuality at all.  When an adolescent or an adult is engaged in
resisting a conscious desire, he is not dealing with a repression nor is he in the
least danger of creating a repression.  On the contrary, those who are seriously
attempting chastity are more conscious, and soon know a great deal more about
their own sexuality than anyone else.  They come to know their desires as
Wellington knew Napoleon, or as Sherlock Holmes knew Moriarty; as a rat-catcher
knows rats or a plumber knows about leaky pipes.  Virtue--even attempted
virtue--brings light; indulgence brings fog.

Finally, though I have had to speak at some length about sex, I want to make it as
clear as I possibly can that the centre of Christian morality is not here.  If
anyone thinks that Christians regard unchastity as the supreme vice, he is quite
wrong.  The sins of the flesh are bad, but they are the least bad of all sins.
All the worst pleasures are purely spiritual: the pleasure of putting other people
in the wrong, of bossing and patronising and spoiling sport, and back-biting, the
pleasures of power, of hatred.  For there are two things inside me, competing with
the human self which I must try to become.  They are the Animal self, and the
Diabolical self.  The Diabolical self is the worse of the two.  That is why a
cold, self-righteous prig who goes regularly to church may be far nearer to hell
than a prostitute.  But, of course, it is better to be neither.





6


CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE




The last chapter was mainly negative.  I discussed what was wrong with the sexual
impulse in man, but said very little about its right working--in other words,
about Christian marriage.  There are two reasons why I do not particularly want to
deal with marriage.  The first is that the Christian doctrines on this subject are
extremely unpopular.  The second is that I have never been married myself, and,
therefore, can speak only at second hand.  But in spite of that, I feel I can
hardly leave the subject out in an account of Christian morals.

The Christian idea of marriage is based on Christ's words that a man and wife are
to be regarded as a single organism--for that is what the words 'one flesh' would
be in modern English.  And the Christians believe that when He said this He was
not expressing a sentiment but stating a fact--just as one is stating a fact when
one says that a lock and its key are one mechanism, or that a violin and a bow are
one musical instrument.  The inventor of the human machine was telling us that its
two halves, the male and the female, were made to be combined together in pairs,
not simply on the sexual level, but totally combined.  The monstrosity of sexual
intercourse outside marriage is that those who indulge in it are trying to isolate
one kind of union (the sexual) from all the other kinds of union which were
intended to go along with it and make up the total union.  The Christian attitude
does not mean that there is anything wrong about sexual pleasure, any more than
about the pleasure of eating.  It means that you must not isolate that pleasure
and try to get it by itself, any more than you ought to try to get the pleasures
of taste without swallowing and digesting, by chewing things and spitting them out
again.

As a consequence, Christianity teaches that marriage is for life.  There is, of
course, a difference here between different Churches: some do not admit divorce at
all; some allow it reluctantly in very special cases.  It is a great pity that
Christians should disagree about such a question; but for an ordinary layman the
thing to notice is that the Churches all agree with one another about marriage a
great deal more than any of them agrees with the outside world.  I mean, they all
regard divorce as something like cutting up a living body, as a kind of surgical
operation.  Some of them think the operation so violent that it cannot be done at
all; others admit it as a desperate remedy in extreme cases.  They are all agreed
that it is more like having both your legs cut off than it is like dissolving a
business partnership or even deserting a regiment.  What they all disagree with is
the modern view that it is a simple readjustment of partners, to be made whenever
people feel they are no longer in love with one another, or when either of them
falls in love with someone else.

Before we consider this modern view in its relation to chastity, we must not
forget to consider it in relation to another virtue, namely justice.  Justice, as
I said before, includes the keeping of promises.  Now everyone who has been
married in a church has made a public, solemn promise to stick to his (or her)
partner till death.  The duty of keeping that promise has no special connection
with sexual morality: it is in the same position as any other promise.  If, as
modern people are always telling us, the sexual impulse is just like all our other
impulses, then it ought to be treated like all our other impulses; and as their
indulgence is controlled by our promises, so should its be.  If, as I think, it is
not like all our other impulses, but is morbidly inflamed, then we should be
specially careful not to let it lead us into dishonesty.

To this someone may reply that he regarded the promise made in church as a mere
formality and never intended to keep it.  Whom, then, was he trying to deceive
when he made it?  God?  That was really very unwise.  Himself?  That was not very
much wiser.  The bride, or bridegroom, or the 'in-laws'?  That was treacherous.
More often, I think, the couple (or one of them) hoped to deceive the public.
They wanted the respectability that is attached to marriage without intending to
pay the price: that is, they were impostors, they cheated.  If they are still
contented cheats, I have nothing to say to them: who would urge the high and hard
duty of chastity on people who have not yet wished to be merely honest?  If they
have now come to their senses and want to be honest, their promise, already made,
constrains them.  And this, you will see, comes under the heading of justice, not
that of chastity.  If people do not believe in permanent marriage, it is perhaps
better that they should live together unmarried than that they should make vows
they do not mean to keep.  It is true that by living together without marriage
they will be guilty (in Christian eyes) of fornication.  But one fault is not
mended by adding another: unchastity is not improved by adding perjury.

The idea that 'being in love' is the only reason for remaining married really
leaves no room for marriage as a contract or promise at all.  If love is the whole
thing, then the promise can add nothing; and if it adds nothing, then it should
not be made.  The curious thing is that lovers themselves, while they remain
really in love, know this better than those who talk about love.  As Chesterton
pointed out, those who are in love have a natural inclination to bind themselves
by promises.  Love songs all over the world are full of vows of eternal constancy.
The Christian law is not forcing upon the passion of love something which is
foreign to that passion's own nature: it is demanding that lovers should take
seriously something which their passion of itself impels them to do.

And, of course, the promise, made when I am in love and because I am in love, to
be true to the beloved as long as I live, commits me to being true even if I cease
to be in love.  A promise must be about things that I can do, about actions: no
one can promise to go on feeling in a certain way.  He might as well promise never
to have a headache or always to feel hungry.  But what, it may be asked, is the
use of keeping two people together if they are no longer in love?  There are
several sound, social reasons; to provide a home for their children, to protect
the woman (who has probably sacrificed or damaged her own career by getting
married) from being dropped whenever the man is tired of her.  But there is also
another reason of which I am very sure, though I find it a little hard to explain.

It is hard because so many people cannot be brought to realise that when B is
better than C, A may be even better than B. They like thinking in terms of good
and bad, not of good, better, and best, or bad, worse and worst.  They want to
know whether you think patriotism a good thing: if you reply that it is, of
course, far better than individual selfishness, but that it is inferior to
universal charity and should always give way to universal charity when the two
conflict, they think you are being evasive.  They ask what you think of duelling.
If you reply that it is far better to forgive a man than to fight a duel with him,
but that even a duel might be better than a lifelong enmity which expresses itself
in secret efforts to 'do the man down', they go away complaining that you would
not give them a straight answer.  I hope no one will make this mistake about what
I am now going to say.

What we call 'being in love' is a glorious state, and, in several ways, good for
us.  It helps to make us generous and courageous, it opens our eyes not only to
the beauty of the beloved but to all beauty, and it subordinates (especially at
first) our merely animal sexuality; in that sense, love is the great conqueror of
lust.  No one in his senses would deny that being in love is far better than
either common sensuality or cold self-centredness.  But, as I said before, 'the
most dangerous thing you can do is to take any one impulse of our own nature and
set it up as the thing you ought to follow at all costs'.  Being in love is a good
thing, but it is not the best thing.  There are many things below it, but there
are also things above it.  You cannot make it the basis of a whole life.  It is a
noble feeling, but it is still a feeling.  Now no feeling can be relied on to last
in its full intensity, or even to last at all.  Knowledge can last, principles can
last, habits can last; but feelings come and go.  And in fact, whatever people
say, the state called 'being in love' usually does not last.  If the old
fairy-tale ending 'They lived happily ever after' is taken to mean 'They felt for
the next fifty years exactly as they felt the day before they were married', then
it says what probably never was nor ever would be true, and would be highly
undesirable if it were.  Who could bear to live in that excitement for even five
years?  What would become of your work, your appetite, your sleep, your
friendships?  But, of course, ceasing to be 'in love' need not mean ceasing to
love.  Love in this second sense--love as distinct from 'being in love'--is not
merely a feeling.  It is a deep unity, maintained by the will and deliberately
strengthened by habit; reinforced by (in Christian marriages) the grace which both
partners ask, and receive, from God.  They can have this love for each other even
at those moments when they do not like each other; as you love yourself even when
you do not like yourself.  They can retain this love even when each would easily,
if they allowed themselves, be 'in love' with someone else.  'Being in love' first
moved them to promise fidelity: this quieter love enables them to keep the
promise.  It is on this love that the engine of marriage is run: being in love was
the explosion that started it.

If you disagree with me, of course, you will say, 'He knows nothing about it, he
is not married.' You may quite possibly be right.  But before you say that, make
quite sure that you are judging me by what you really know from your own
experience and from watching the lives of your friends, and not by ideas you have
derived from novels and films.  This is not so easy to do as people think.  Our
experience is coloured through and through by books and plays and the cinema, and
it takes patience and skill to disentangle the things we have really learned from
life for ourselves.

People get from books the idea that if you have married the right person you may
expect to go on 'being in love' for ever.  As a result, when they find they are
not, they think this proves they have made a mistake and are entitled to a
change--not realising that, when they have changed, the glamour will presently go
out of the new love just as it went out of the old one.  In this department of
life, as in every other, thrills come at the beginning and do not last.  The sort
of thrill a boy has at the first idea of flying will not go on when he has joined
the R.A.F.  and is really learning to fly.  The thrill you feel on first seeing
some delightful place dies away when you really go to live there.  Does this mean
it would be better not to learn to fly and not to live in the beautiful place?  By
no means.  In both cases, if you go through with it, the dying away of the first
thrill will be compensated for by a quieter and more lasting kind of interest.
What is more (and I can hardly find words to tell you how important I think this),
it is just the people who are ready to submit to the loss of the thrill and settle
down to the sober interest, who are then most likely to meet new thrills in some
quite different direction.  The man who has learned to fly and become a good pilot
will suddenly discover music; the man who has settled down to live in the beauty
spot will discover gardening.

This is, I think, one little part of what Christ meant by saying that a thing will
not really live unless it first dies.  It is simply no good trying to keep any
thrill: that is the very worst thing you can do.  Let the thrill go--let it die
away--go on through that period of death into the quieter interest and happiness
that follow--and you will find you are living in a world of new thrills all the
time.  But if you decide to make thrills your regular diet and try to prolong them
artificially, they will all get weaker and weaker, and fewer and fewer, and you
will be a bored, disillusioned old man for the rest of your life.  It is because
so few people understand this that you find many middle-aged men and women
maundering about their lost youth, at the very age when new horizons ought to be
appearing and new doors opening all round them.  It is much better fun to learn to
swim than to go on endlessly (and hopelessly) trying to get back the feeling you
had when you first went paddling as a small boy.

Another notion we get from novels and plays is that 'falling in love' is something
quite irresistible; something that just happens to one, like measles.  And because
they believe this, some married people throw up the sponge and give in when they
find themselves attracted by a new acquaintance.  But I am inclined to think that
these irresistible passions are much rarer in real life than in books, at any rate
when one is grown up.  When we meet someone beautiful and clever and sympathetic,
of course we ought, in one sense, to admire and love these good qualities.  But is
it not very largely in our own choice whether this love shall, or shall not, turn
into what we call 'being in love'?  No doubt, if our minds are full of novels and
plays and sentimental songs, and our bodies full of alcohol, we shall turn any
love we feel into that kind of love: just as if you have a rut in your path all
the rainwater will run into that rut, and if you wear blue spectacles everything
you see will turn blue.  But that will be our own fault.

Before leaving the question of divorce, I should like to distinguish two things
which are very often confused.  The Christian conception of marriage is one: the
other is the quite different question--how far Christians, if they are voters or
Members of Parliament, ought to try to force their views of marriage on the rest
of the community by embodying them in the divorce laws.  A great many people seem
to think that if you are a Christian yourself you should try to make divorce
difficult for every one.  I do not think that.  At least I know I should be very
angry if the Mohammedans tried to prevent the rest of us from drinking wine.  My
own view is that the Churches should frankly recognise that the majority of the
British people are not Christians and, therefore, cannot be expected to live
Christian lives.  There ought to be two distinct kinds of marriage: one governed
by the State with rules enforced on all citizens, the other governed by the Church
with rules enforced by her on her own members.  The distinction ought to be quite
sharp, so that a man knows which couples are married in a Christian sense and
which are not.

So much for the Christian doctrine about the permanence of marriage.  Something
else, even more unpopular, remains to be dealt with.  Christian wives promise to
obey their husbands.  In Christian marriage the man is said to be the 'head'.  Two
questions obviously arise here.  (1) Why should there be a head at all--why not
equality?  (2) Why should it be the man?

(1) The need for some head follows from the idea that marriage is permanent.  Of
course, as long as the husband and wife are agreed, no question of a head need
arise; and we may hope that this will be the normal state of affairs in a
Christian marriage.  But when there is a real disagreement, what is to happen?
Talk it over, of course; but I am assuming they have done that and still failed to
reach agreement.  What do they do next?  They cannot decide by a majority vote,
for in a council of two there can be no majority.  Surely, only one or other of
two things can happen: either they must separate and go their own ways or else one
or other of them must have a casting vote.  If marriage is permanent, one or other
party must, in the last resort, have the power of deciding the family policy.  You
cannot have a permanent association without a constitution.

(2) If there must be a head, why the man?  Well, firstly is there any very serious
wish that it should be the woman?  As I have said, I am not married myself, but as
far as I can see, even a woman who wants to be the head of her own house does not
usually admire the same state of things when she finds it going on next door.  She
is much more likely to say 'Poor Mr X! Why he allows that appalling woman to boss
him about the way she does is more than I can imagine.' I do not think she is even
very flattered if anyone mentions the fact of her own 'headship'.  There must be
something unnatural about the rule of wives over husbands, because the wives
themselves are half ashamed of it and despise the husbands whom they rule.  But
there is also another reason; and here I speak quite frankly as a bachelor,
because it is a reason you can see from outside even better than from inside.  The
relations of the family to the outer world--what might be called its foreign
policy--must depend, in the last resort, upon the man, because he always ought to
be, and usually is, much more just to the outsiders.  A woman is primarily
fighting for her own children and husband against the rest of the world.
Naturally, almost, in a sense, rightly, their claims override, for her, all other
claims.  She is the special trustee of their interests.  The function of the
husband is to see that this natural preference of hers is not given its head.  He
has the last word in order to protect other people from the intense family
patriotism of the wife.  If anyone doubts this, let me ask a simple question.  If
your dog has bitten the child next door, or if your child has hurt the dog next
door, which would you sooner have to deal with, the master of that house or the
mistress?  Or, if you are a married woman, let me ask you this question.  Much as
you admire your husband, would you not say that his chief failing is his tendency
not to stick up for his rights and yours against the neighbours as vigorously as
you would like?  A bit of an Appeaser?





7


FORGIVENESS




I said in a previous chapter that chastity was the most unpopular of the Christian
virtues.  But I am not sure I was right.  I believe there is one even more
unpopular.  It is laid down in the Christian rule, 'Thou shalt love thy neighbour
as thyself.' Because in Christian morals 'thy neighbour' includes 'thy enemy', and
so we come up against this terrible duty of forgiving our enemies.

Every one says forgiveness is a lovely idea, until they have something to forgive,
as we had during the war.  And then, to mention the subject at all is to be
greeted with howls of anger.  It is not that people think this too high and
difficult a virtue: it is that they think it hateful and contemptible.  'That sort
of talk makes them sick,' they say.  And half of you already want to ask me, 'I
wonder how you'd feel about forgiving the Gestapo if you were a Pole or a Jew?'

So do I. I wonder very much.  Just as when Christianity tells me that I must not
deny my religion even to save myself from death by torture, I wonder very much
what I should do when it came to the point.  I am not trying to tell you in this
book what I could do--I can do precious little--I am telling you what Christianity
is.  I did not invent it.  And there, right in the middle of it, I find 'Forgive
us our sins as we forgive those that sin against us.' There is no slightest
suggestion that we are offered forgiveness on any other terms.  It is made
perfectly clear that if we do not forgive we shall not be forgiven.  There are no
two ways about it.  What are we to do?

It is going to be hard enough, anyway, but I think there are two things we can do
to make it easier.  When you start mathematics you do not begin with the calculus;
you begin with simple addition.  In the same way, if we really want (but all
depends on really wanting) to learn how to forgive, perhaps we had better start
with something easier than the Gestapo.  One might start with forgiving one's
husband or wife, or parents or children, or the nearest N.C.O., for something they
have done or said in the last week.  That will probably keep us busy for the
moment.  And secondly, we might try to understand exactly what loving your
neighbour as yourself means.  I have to love him as I love myself.  Well, how
exactly do I love myself?

Now that I come to think of it, I have not exactly got a feeling of fondness or
affection for myself, and I do not even always enjoy my own society.  So
apparently 'Love your neighbour' does not mean 'feel fond of him' or 'find him
attractive'.  I ought to have seen that before, because, of course, you cannot
feel fond of a person by trying.  Do I think well of myself, think myself a nice
chap?  Well, I am afraid I sometimes do (and those are, no doubt, my worst
moments) but that is not why I love myself.  In fact it is the other way round: my
self-love makes me think myself nice, but thinking myself nice is not why I love
myself.  So loving my enemies does not apparently mean thinking them nice either.
That is an enormous relief.  For a good many people imagine that forgiving your
enemies means making out that they are really not such bad fellows after all, when
it is quite plain that they are.  Go a step further.  In my most clear-sighted
moments not only do I not think myself a nice man, but I know that I am a very
nasty one.  I can look at some of the things I have done with horror and loathing.
So apparently I am allowed to loathe and hate some of the things my enemies do.
Now that I come to think of it, I remember Christian teachers telling me long ago
that I must hate a bad man's actions, but not hate the bad man: or, as they would
say, hate the sin but not the sinner.

For a long time I used to think this a silly, straw-splitting distinction: how
could you hate what a man did and not hate the man?  But years later it occurred
to me that there was one man to whom I had been doing this all my life--namely
myself.  However much I might dislike my own cowardice or conceit or greed, I went
on loving myself.  There had never been the slightest difficulty about it.  In
fact the very reason why I hated the things was that I loved the man.  Just
because I loved myself, I was sorry to find that I was the sort of man who did
those things.  Consequently, Christianity does not want us to reduce by one atom
the hatred we feel for cruelty and treachery.  We ought to hate them.  Not one
word of what we have said about them needs to be unsaid.  But it does want us to
hate them in the same way in which we hate things in ourselves: being sorry that
the man should have done such things, and hoping, if it is anyway possible, that
somehow, sometime, somewhere he can be cured and made human again.

The real test is this.  Suppose one reads a story of filthy atrocities in the
paper.  Then suppose that something turns up suggesting that the story might not
be quite true, or not quite so bad as it was made out.  Is one's first feeling,
'Thank God, even they aren't quite so bad as that,' or is it a feeling of
disappointment, and even a determination to cling to the first story for the sheer
pleasure of thinking your enemies as bad as possible?  If it is the second then it
is, I am afraid, the first step in a process which, if followed to the end, will
make us into devils.  You see, one is beginning to wish that black was a little
blacker.  If we give that wish its head, later on we shall wish to see grey as
black, and then to see white itself as black.  Finally, we shall insist on seeing
everything--God and our friends and ourselves included--as bad, and not be able to
stop doing it: we shall be fixed for ever in a universe of pure hatred.

Now a step further.  Does loving your enemy mean not punishing him?  No, for
loving myself does not mean that I ought not to subject myself to punishment--even
to death.  If you had committed a murder, the right Christian thing to do would be
to give yourself up to the police and be hanged.  It is, therefore, in my opinion,
perfectly right for a Christian judge to sentence a man to death or a Christian
soldier to kill an enemy.  I always have thought so, ever since I became a
Christian, and long before the war, and I still think so now that we are at peace.
It is no good quoting 'Thou shalt not kill.' There are two Greek words: the
ordinary word to kill and the word to murder.  And when Christ quotes that
commandment He uses the murder one in all three accounts, Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
And I am told there is the same distinction in Hebrew.  All killing is not murder
any more than all sexual intercourse is adultery.  When soldiers came to St John
the Baptist asking what to do, he never remotely suggested that they ought to
leave the army: nor did Christ when He met a Roman sergeant-major--what they
called a centurion.  The idea of the knight--the Christian in arms for the defence
of a good cause--is one of the great Christian ideas.  War is a dreadful thing,
and I can respect an honest pacifist, though I think he is entirely mistaken.
What I cannot understand is this sort of semi-pacifism you get nowadays which
gives people the idea that though you have to fight, you ought to do it with a
long face and as if you were ashamed of it.  It is that feeling that robs lots of
magnificent young Christians in the Services of something they have a right to,
something which is the natural accompaniment of courage--a kind of gaiety and
wholeheartedness.

I have often thought to myself how it would have been if, when I served in the
First World War, I and some young German had killed each other simultaneously and
found ourselves together a moment after death.  I cannot imagine that either of us
would have felt any resentment or even any embarrassment.  I think we might have
laughed over it.

I imagine somebody will say, 'Well, if one is allowed to condemn the enemy's acts,
and punish him, and kill him, what difference is left between Christian morality
and the ordinary view?' All the difference in the world.  Remember, we Christians
think man lives for ever.  Therefore, what really matters is those little marks or
twists on the central, inside part of the soul which are going to turn it, in the
long run, into a heavenly or a hellish creature.  We may kill if necessary, but we
must not hate and enjoy hating.  We may punish if necessary, but we must not enjoy
it.  In other words, something inside us, the feeling of resentment, the feeling
that wants to get one's own back, must be simply killed.  I do not mean that
anyone can decide this moment that he will never feel it any more.  That is not
how things happen.  I mean that every time it bobs its head up, day after day,
year after year, all our lives long, we must hit it on the head.  It is hard work,
but the attempt is not impossible.  Even while we kill and punish we must try to
feel about the enemy as we feel about ourselves--to wish that he were not bad, to
hope that he may, in this world or another, be cured: in fact, to wish his good.
That is what is meant in the Bible by loving him: wishing his good, not feeling
fond of him nor saying he is nice when he is not.

I admit that this means loving people who have nothing lovable about them.  But
then, has oneself anything lovable about it?  You love it simply because it is
yourself.  God intends us to love all selves in the same way and for the same
reason: but He has given us the sum ready worked out in our own case to show us
how it works.  We have then to go on and apply the rule to all the other selves.
Perhaps it makes it easier if we remember that that is how He loves us.  Not for
any nice, attractive qualities we think we have, but just because we are the
things called selves.  For really there is nothing else in us to love: creatures
like us who actually find hatred such a pleasure that to give it up is like giving
up beer or tobacco...





8


THE GREAT SIN




I now come to that part of Christian morals where they differ most sharply from
all other morals.  There is one vice of which no man in the world is free; which
every one in the world loathes when he sees it in someone else; and of which
hardly any people, except Christians, ever imagine that they are guilty
themselves.  I have heard people admit that they are bad-tempered, or that they
cannot keep their heads about girls or drink, or even that they are cowards.  I do
not think I have ever heard anyone who was not a Christian accuse himself of this
vice.  And at the same time I have very seldom met anyone, who was not a
Christian, who showed the slightest mercy to it in others.  There is no fault
which makes a man more unpopular, and no fault which we are more unconscious of in
ourselves.  And the more we have it ourselves, the more we dislike it in others.

The vice I am talking of is Pride or Self-Conceit: and the virtue opposite to it,
in Christian morals, is called Humility.  You may remember, when I was talking
about sexual morality, I warned you that the centre of Christian morals did not
lie there.  Well, now, we have come to the centre.  According to Christian
teachers, the essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride.  Unchastity, anger,
greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere fleabites in comparison: it was through
Pride that the devil became the devil: Pride leads to every other vice: it is the
complete anti-God state of mind.

Does this seem to you exaggerated?  If so, think it over.  I pointed out a moment
ago that the more pride one had, the more one disliked pride in others.  In fact,
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 pa-tronise 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.  The sexual impulse may drive two men into competition if
they both want the same girl.  But that is only by accident; they might just as
likely have wanted two different girls.  But a proud man will take your girl from
you, not because he wants her, but just to prove to himself that he is a better
man than you.  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.

Take it with money.  Greed will certainly make a man want money, for the sake of a
better house, better holidays, better things to eat and drink.  But only up to a
point.  What is it that makes a man with PS10,000 a year anxious to get PS20,000 a
year?  It is not the greed for more pleasure.  PS10,000 will give all the luxuries
that any man can really enjoy.  It is Pride--the wish to be richer than some other
rich man, and (still more) the wish for power.  For, of course, power is what
Pride really enjoys: there is nothing makes a man feel so superior to others as
being able to move them about like toy soldiers.  What makes a pretty girl spread
misery wherever she goes by collecting admirers?  Certainly not her sexual
instinct: that kind of girl is quite often sexually frigid.  It is Pride.  What is
it that makes a political leader or a whole nation go on and on, demanding more
and more?  Pride again.  Pride is competitive by its very nature: that is why it
goes on and on.  If I am a proud man, then, as long as there is one man in the
whole world more powerful, or richer, or cleverer than I, he is my rival and my
enemy.

The Christians are right: it is Pride which has been the chief cause of misery in
every nation and every family since the world began.  Other vices may sometimes
bring people together: you may find good fellowship and jokes and friendliness
among drunken people or unchaste people.  But pride always means enmity--it is
enmity.  And not only enmity between man and man, but enmity to God.

In God you come up against something which is in every respect immeasurably
superior to yourself.  Unless you know God as that--and, therefore, know yourself
as nothing in comparison--you do not know God at all.  As long as you are proud
you cannot know God.  A proud man is always looking down on things and people:
and, of course, as long as you are looking down, you cannot see something that is
above you.

That raises a terrible question.  How is it that people who are quite obviously
eaten up with Pride can say they believe in God and appear to themselves very
religious?  I am afraid it means they are worshipping an imaginary God.  They
theoretically admit themselves to be nothing in the presence of this phantom God,
but are really all the time imagining how He approves of them and thinks them far
better than ordinary people: that is, they pay a pennyworth of imaginary humility
to Him and get out of it a pound's worth of Pride towards their fellow-men.  I
suppose it was of those people Christ was thinking when He said that some would
preach about Him and cast out devils in His name, only to be told at the end of
the world that He had never known them.  And any of us may at any moment be in
this death-trap.  Luckily, we have a test.  Whenever we find that our religious
life is making us feel that we are good--above all, that we are better than
someone else--I think we may be sure that we are being acted on, not by God, but
by the devil.  The real test of being in the presence of God is, that you either
forget about yourself altogether or see yourself as a small, dirty object.  It is
better to forget about yourself altogether.

It is a terrible thing that the worst of all the vices can smuggle itself into the
very centre of our religious life.  But you can see why.  The other, and less bad,
vices come from the devil working on us through our animal nature.  But this does
not come through our animal nature at all.  It comes direct from Hell.  It is
purely spiritual: consequently it is far more subtle and deadly.  For the same
reason, Pride can often be used to beat down the simpler vices.  Teachers, in
fact, often appeal to a boy's Pride, or, as they call it, his self-respect, to
make him behave decently: many a man has overcome cowardice, or lust, or
ill-temper, by learning to think that they are beneath his dignity--that is, by
Pride.  The devil laughs.  He is perfectly content to see you becoming chaste and
brave and self-controlled provided, all the time, he is setting up in you the
Dictatorship of Pride--just as he would be quite content to see your chilblains
cured if he was allowed, in return, to give you cancer.  For Pride is spiritual
cancer: it eats up the very possibility of love, or contentment, or even common
sense.

Before leaving this subject I must guard against some possible misunderstandings:

(1) Pleasure in being praised is not Pride.  The child who is patted on the back
for doing a lesson well, the woman whose beauty is praised by her lover, the saved
soul to whom Christ says 'Well done,' are pleased and ought to be.  For here the
pleasure lies not in what you are but in the fact that you have pleased someone
you wanted (and rightly wanted) to please.  The trouble begins when you pass from
thinking, 'I have pleased him; all is well,' to thinking, 'What a fine person I
must be to have done it.' The more you delight in yourself and the less you
delight in the praise, the worse you are becoming.  When you delight wholly in
yourself and do not care about the praise at all, you have reached the bottom.
That is why vanity, though it is the sort of Pride which shows most on the
surface, is really the least bad and most pardonable sort.  The vain person wants
praise, applause, admiration, too much and is always angling for it.  It is a
fault, but a child-like and even (in an odd way) a humble fault.  It shows that
you are not yet completely contented with your own admiration.  You value other
people enough to want them to look at you.  You are, in fact, still human.  The
real black, diabolical Pride, comes when you look down on others so much that you
do not care what they think of you.  Of course, it is very right, and often our
duty, not to care what people think of us, if we do so for the right reason;
namely, because we care so incomparably more what God thinks.  But the Proud man
has a different reason for not caring.  He says 'Why should I care for the
applause of that rabble as if their opinion were worth anything?  And even if
their opinions were of value, am I the sort of man to blush with pleasure at a
compliment like some chit of a girl at her first dance?  No, I am an integrated,
adult personality.  All I have done has been done to satisfy my own ideals--or my
artistic conscience--or the traditions of my family--or, in a word, because I'm
That Kind of Chap.  If the mob like it, let them.  They're nothing to me.' In this
way real thoroughgoing pride may act as a check on vanity; for, as I said a moment
ago, the devil loves 'curing' a small fault by giving you a great one.  We must
try not to be vain, but we must never call in our Pride to cure our vanity.

(2) We say in English that a man is 'proud' of his son, or his father, or his
school, or regiment, and it may be asked whether 'pride' in this sense is a sin.
I think it depends on what, exactly, we mean by 'proud of'.  Very often, in such
sentences, the phrase 'is proud of' means 'has a warm-hearted admiration for'.
Such an admiration is, of course, very far from being a sin.  But it might,
perhaps, mean that the person in question gives himself airs on the ground of his
distinguished father, or because he belongs to a famous regiment.  This would,
clearly, be a fault; but even then, it would be better than being proud simply of
himself.  To love and admire anything outside yourself is to take one step away
from utter spiritual ruin; though we shall not be well so long as we love and
admire anything more than we love and admire God.

(3) We must not think Pride is something God forbids because He is offended at it,
or that Humility is something He demands as due to His own dignity--as if God
Himself was proud.  He is not in the least worried about His dignity.  The point
is, He wants you to know Him: wants to give you Himself.  And He and you are two
things of such a kind that if you really get into any kind of touch with Him you
will, in fact, be humble--delightedly humble, feeling the infinite relief of
having for once got rid of all the silly nonsense about your own dignity which has
made you restless and unhappy all your life.  He is trying to make you humble in
order to make this moment possible: trying to take off a lot of silly, ugly,
fancy-dress in which we have all got ourselves up and are strutting about like the
little idiots we are.  I wish I had got a bit further with humility myself: if I
had, I could probably tell you more about the relief, the comfort, of taking the
fancy-dress off--getting rid of the false self, with all its 'Look at me' and
'Aren't I a good boy?' and all its posing and posturing.  To get even near it,
even for a moment, is like a drink of cold water to a man in a desert.

(4) Do not imagine that if you meet a really humble man he will be what most
people call 'humble' nowadays: he will not be a sort of greasy, smarmy person, who
is always telling you that, of course, he is nobody.  Probably all you will think
about him is that he seemed a cheerful, intelligent chap who took a real interest
in what you said to him.  If you do dislike him it will be because you feel a
little envious of anyone who seems to enjoy life so easily.  He will not be
thinking about humility: he will not be thinking about himself at all.

If anyone would like to acquire humility, I can, I think, tell him the first step.
The first step is to realise that one is proud.  And a biggish step, too.  At
least, nothing whatever can be done before it.  If you think you are not
conceited, it means you are very conceited indeed.





9


CHARITY




I said in an earlier chapter that there were four 'Cardinal' virtues and three
'Theological' virtues.  The three Theological ones are Faith, Hope, and Charity.
Faith is going to be dealt with in the last two chapters.  Charity was partly
dealt with in Chapter 7, but there I concentrated on that part of Charity which is
called Forgiveness.  I now want to add a little more.

First, as to the meaning of the word.  'Charity' now means simply what used to be
called 'alms'--that is, giving to the poor.  Originally it had a much wider
meaning.  (You can see how it got the modern sense.  If a man has 'charity',
giving to the poor is one of the most obvious things he does, and so people came
to talk as if that were the whole of charity.  In the same way, 'rhyme' is the
most obvious thing about poetry, and so people come to mean by 'poetry' simply
rhyme and nothing more.) Charity means 'Love, in the Christian sense'.  But love,
in the Christian sense, does not mean an emotion.  It is a state not of the
feelings but of the will; that state of the will which we have naturally about
ourselves, and must learn to have about other people.

I pointed out in the chapter on Forgiveness that our love for ourselves does not
mean that we like ourselves.  It means that we wish our own good.  In the same way
Christian Love (or Charity) for our neighbours is quite a different thing from
liking or affection.  We 'like' or are 'fond of' some people, and not of others.
It is important to understand that this natural 'liking' is neither a sin nor a
virtue, any more than your likes and dislikes in food are a sin or a virtue.  It
is just a fact.  But, of course, what we do about it is either sinful or virtuous.

Natural liking or affection for people makes it easier to be 'charitable' towards
them.  It is, therefore, normally a duty to encourage our affections--to 'like'
people as much as we can (just as it is often our duty to encourage our liking for
exercise or wholesome food)--not because this liking is itself the virtue of
charity, but because it is a help to it.  On the other hand, it is also necessary
to keep a very sharp look-out for fear our liking for some one person makes us
uncharitable, or even unfair, to someone else.  There are even cases where our
liking conflicts with our charity towards the person we like.  For example, a
doting mother may be tempted by natural affection to 'spoil' her child; that is,
to gratify her own affectionate impulses at the expense of the child's real
happiness later on.

But though natural likings should normally be encouraged, it would be quite wrong
to think that the way to become charitable is to sit trying to manufacture
affectionate feelings.  Some people are 'cold' by temperament; that may be a
misfortune for them, but it is no more a sin than having a bad digestion is a sin;
and it does not cut them out from the chance, or excuse them from the duty, of
learning charity.  The rule for all of us is perfectly simple.  Do not waste time
bothering whether you 'love' your neighbour; act as if you did.  As soon as we do
this we find one of the great secrets.  When you are behaving as if you loved
someone, you will presently come to love him.  If you injure someone you dislike,
you will find yourself disliking him more.  If you do him a good turn, you will
find yourself disliking him less.  There is, indeed, one exception.  If you do him
a good turn, not to please God and obey the law of charity, but to show him what a
fine forgiving chap you are, and to put him in your debt, and then sit down to
wait for his 'gratitude', you will probably be disappointed.  (People are not
fools: they have a very quick eye for anything like showing off, or patronage.)
But whenever we do good to another self, just because it is a self, made (like us)
by God, and desiring its own happiness as we desire ours, we shall have learned to
love it a little more or, at least, to dislike it less.

Consequently, though Christian charity sounds a very cold thing to people whose
heads are full of sentimentality, and though it is quite distinct from affection,
yet it leads to affection.  The difference between a Christian and a worldly man
is not that the worldly man has only affections or 'likings' and the Christian has
only 'charity'.  The worldly man treats certain people kindly because he 'likes'
them: the Christian, trying to treat every one kindly, finds himself liking more
and more people as he goes on--including people he could not even have imagined
himself liking at the beginning.

This same spiritual law works terribly in the opposite direction.  The Germans,
perhaps, at first ill-treated the Jews because they hated them: afterwards they
hated them much more because they had ill-treated them.  The more cruel you are,
the more you will hate; and the more you hate, the more cruel you will become--and
so on in a vicious circle for ever.

Good and evil both increase at compound interest.  That is why the little
decisions you and I make every day are of such infinite importance.  The smallest
good act today is the capture of a strategic point from which, a few months later,
you may be able to go on to victories you never dreamed of.  An apparently trivial
indulgence in lust or anger today is the loss of a ridge or railway line or
bridgehead from which the enemy may launch an attack otherwise impossible.

Some writers use the word charity to describe not only Christian love between
human beings, but also God's love for man and man's love for God.  About the
second of these two, people are often worried.  They are told they ought to love
God.  They cannot find any such feeling in themselves.  What are they to do?  The
answer is the same as before.  Act as if you did.  Do not sit trying to
manufacture feelings.  Ask yourself, 'If I were sure that I loved God, what would
I do?' When you have found the answer, go and do it.

On the whole, God's love for us is a much safer subject to think about than our
love for Him.  Nobody can always have devout feelings: and even if we could,
feelings are not what God principally cares about.  Christian Love, either towards
God or towards man, is an affair of the will.  If we are trying to do His will we
are obeying the commandment, 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God.' He will give us
feelings of love if He pleases.  We cannot create them for ourselves, and we must
not demand them as a right.  But the great thing to remember is that, though our
feelings come and go, His love for us does not.  It is not wearied by our sins, or
our indifference; and, therefore, it is quite relentless in its determination that
we shall be cured of those sins, at whatever cost to us, at whatever cost to Him.





10


HOPE




Hope is one of the Theological virtues.  This means that a continual looking
forward to the eternal world is not (as some modern people think) a form of
escapism or wishful thinking, but one of the things a Christian is meant to do.
It does not mean that we are to leave the present world as it is.  If you read
history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were
just those who thought most of the next.  The Apostles themselves, who set on foot
the conversion of the Roman Empire, the great men who built up the Middle Ages,
the English Evangelicals who abolished the Slave Trade, all left their mark on
Earth, precisely because their minds were occupied with Heaven.  It is since
Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become
so ineffective in this.  Aim at Heaven and you will get earth 'thrown in': aim at
earth and you will get neither.  It seems a strange rule, but something like it
can be seen at work in other matters.  Health is a great blessing, but the moment
you make health one of your main, direct objects you start becoming a crank and
imagining there is something wrong with you.  You are only likely to get health
provided you want other things more--food, games, work, fun, open air.  In the
same way, we shall never save civilisation as long as civilisation is our main
object.  We must learn to want something else even more.

Most of us find it very difficult to want 'Heaven' at all--except in so far as
'Heaven' means meeting again our friends who have died.  One reason for this
difficulty is that we have not been trained: our whole education tends to fix our
minds on this world.  Another reason is that when the real want for Heaven is
present in us, we do not recognise it.  Most people, if they had really learned to
look into their own hearts, would know that they do want, and want acutely,
something that cannot be had in this world.  There are all sorts of things in this
world that offer to give it to you, but they never quite keep their promise.  The
longings which arise in us when we first fall in love, or first think of some
foreign country, or first take up some subject that excites us, are longings which
no marriage, no travel, no learning, can really satisfy.  I am not now speaking of
what would be ordinarily called unsuccessful marriages, or holidays, or learned
careers.  I am speaking of the best possible ones.  There was something we grasped
at, in that first moment of longing, which just fades away in the reality.  I
think everyone knows what I mean.  The wife may be a good wife, and the hotels and
scenery may have been excellent, and chemistry may be a very interesting job: but
something has evaded us.  Now there are two wrong ways of dealing with this fact,
and one right one.

(1) The Fool's Way--He puts the blame on the things themselves.  He goes on all
his life thinking that if only he tried another woman, or went for a more
expensive holiday, or whatever it is, then, this time, he really would catch the
mysterious something we are all after.  Most of the bored, discontented, rich
people in the world are of this type.  They spend their whole lives trotting from
woman to woman (through the divorce courts), from continent to continent, from
hobby to hobby, always thinking that the latest is 'the Real Thing' at last, and
always disappointed.

(2) The Way of the Disillusioned 'Sensible Man'--He soon decides that the whole
thing was moonshine.  'Of course,' he says, 'one feels like that when one's young.
But by the time you get to my age you've given up chasing the rainbow's end.' And
so he settles down and learns not to expect too much and represses the part of
himself which used, as he would say, 'to cry for the moon'.  This is, of course, a
much better way than the first, and makes a man much happier, and less of a
nuisance to society.  It tends to make him a prig (he is apt to be rather superior
towards what he calls 'adolescents'), but, on the whole, he rubs along fairly
comfortably.  It would be the best line we could take if man did not live for
ever.  But supposing infinite happiness really is there, waiting for us?
Supposing one really can reach the rainbow's end?  In that case it would be a pity
to find out too late (a moment after death) that by our supposed 'common sense' we
had stifled in ourselves the faculty of enjoying it.

(3) The Christian Way--The Christian says, 'Creatures are not born with desires
unless satisfaction for those desires exists.  A baby feels hunger: well, there is
such a thing as food.  A duckling wants to swim: well, there is such a thing as
water.  Men feel sexual desire: well, there is such a thing as sex.  If I find in
myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable
explanation is that I was made for another world.  If none of my earthly pleasures
satisfy it, that does not prove that the universe is a fraud.  Probably earthly
pleasures were never meant to satisfy it, but only to arouse it, to suggest the
real thing.  If that is so, I must take care, on the one hand, never to despise,
or be unthankful for, these earthly blessings, and on the other, never to mistake
them for the something else of which they are only a kind of copy, or echo, or
mirage.  I must keep alive in myself the desire for my true country, which I shall
not find till after death; I must never let it get snowed under or turned aside; I
must make it the main object of life to press on to that other country and to help
others to do the same.'

There is no need to be worried by facetious people who try to make the Christian
hope of 'Heaven' ridiculous by saying they do not want 'to spend eternity playing
harps'.  The answer to such people is that if they cannot understand books written
for grown-ups, they should not talk about them.  All the scriptural imagery
(harps, crowns, gold, etc.) is, of course, a merely symbolical attempt to express
the inexpressible.  Musical instruments are mentioned because for many people (not
all) music is the thing known in the present life which most strongly suggests
ecstasy and infinity.  Crowns are mentioned to suggest the fact that those who are
united with God in eternity share His splendour and power and joy.  Gold is
mentioned to suggest the timelessness of Heaven (gold does not rust) and the
preciousness of it.  People who take these symbols literally might as well think
that when Christ told us to be like doves, He meant that we were to lay eggs.





11


FAITH




I must talk in this chapter about what the Christians call Faith.  Roughly
speaking, the word Faith seems to be used by Christians in two senses or on two
levels, and I will take them in turn.  In the first sense it means simply
Belief--accepting or regarding as true the doctrines of Christianity.  That is
fairly simple.  But what does puzzle people--at least it used to puzzle me--is the
fact that Christians regard faith in this sense as a virtue.  I used to ask how on
earth it can be a virtue--what is there moral or immoral about believing or not
believing a set of statements?  Obviously, I used to say, a sane man accepts or
rejects any statement, not because he wants to or does not want to, but because
the evidence seems to him good or bad.  If he were mistaken about the goodness or
badness of the evidence that would not mean he was a bad man, but only that he was
not very clever.  And if he thought the evidence bad but tried to force himself to
believe in spite of it, that would be merely stupid.

Well, I think I still take that view.  But what I did not see then--and a good
many people do not see still--was this.  I was assuming that if the human mind
once accepts a thing as true it will automatically go on regarding it as true,
until some real reason for reconsidering it turns up.  In fact, I was assuming
that the human mind is completely ruled by reason.  But that is not so.  For
example, my reason is perfectly convinced by good evidence that anaesthetics do
not smother me and that properly trained surgeons do not start operating until I
am unconscious.  But that does not alter the fact that when they have me down on
the table and clap their horrible mask over my face, a mere childish panic begins
inside me.  I start thinking I am going to choke, and I am afraid they will start
cutting me up before I am properly under.  In other words, I lose my faith in
anaesthetics.  It is not reason that is taking away my faith: on the contrary, my
faith is based on reason.  It is my imagination and emotions.  The battle is
between faith and reason on one side and emotion and imagination on the other.

When you think of it you will see lots of instances of this.  A man knows, on
perfectly good evidence, that a pretty girl of his acquaintance is a liar and
cannot keep a secret and ought not to be trusted: but when he finds himself with
her his mind loses its faith in that bit of knowledge and he starts thinking,
'Perhaps she'll be different this time,' and once more makes a fool of himself and
tells her something he ought not to have told her.  His senses and emotions have
destroyed his faith in what he really knows to be true.  Or take a boy learning to
swim.  His reason knows perfectly well that an unsupported human body will not
necessarily sink in water: he has seen dozens of people float and swim.  But the
whole question is whether he will be able to go on believing this when the
instructor takes away his hand and leaves him unsupported in the water--or whether
he will suddenly cease to believe it and get in a fright and go down.

Now just the same thing happens about Christianity.  I am not asking anyone to
accept Christianity if his best reasoning tells him that the weight of the
evidence is against it.  That is not the point at which Faith comes in.  But
supposing a man's reason once decides that the weight of the evidence is for it.
I can tell that man what is going to happen to him in the next few weeks.  There
will come a moment when there is bad news, or he is in trouble, or is living among
a lot of other people who do not believe it, and all at once his emotions will
rise up and carry out a sort of blitz on his belief.  Or else there will come a
moment when he wants a woman, or wants to tell a lie, or feels very pleased with
himself, or sees a chance of making a little money in some way that is not
perfectly fair: some moment, in fact, at which it would be very convenient if
Christianity were not true.  And once again his wishes and desires will carry out
a blitz.  I am not talking of moments at which any real new reasons against
Christianity turn up.  Those have to be faced and that is a different matter.  I
am talking about moments when a mere mood rises up against it.

Now Faith, in the sense in which I am here using the word, is the art of holding
on to things your reason has once accepted, in spite of your changing moods.  For
moods will change, whatever view your reason takes.  I know that by experience.
Now that I am a Christian I do have moods in which the whole thing looks very
improbable: but when I was an atheist I had moods in which Christianity looked
terribly probable.  This rebellion of your moods against your real self is going
to come anyway.  That is why Faith is such a necessary virtue: unless you teach
your moods 'where they get off', you can never be either a sound Christian or even
a sound atheist, but just a creature dithering to and fro, with its beliefs really
dependent on the weather and the state of its digestion.  Consequently one must
train the habit of Faith.

The first step is to recognise the fact that your moods change.  The next is to
make sure that, if you have once accepted Christianity, then some of its main
doctrines shall be deliberately held before your mind for some time every day.
That is why daily prayers and religious readings and churchgoing are necessary
parts of the Christian life.  We have to be continually reminded of what we
believe.  Neither this belief nor any other will automatically remain alive in the
mind.  It must be fed.  And as a matter of fact, if you examined a hundred people
who had lost their faith in Christianity, I wonder how many of them would turn out
to have been reasoned out of it by honest argument?  Do not most people simply
drift away?

Now I must turn to Faith in the second or higher sense: and this is the most
difficult thing I have tackled yet.  I want to approach it by going back to the
subject of Humility.  You may remember I said that the first step towards humility
was to realise that one is proud.  I want to add now that the next step is to make
some serious attempt to practise the Christian virtues.  A week is not enough.
Things often go swimmingly for the first week.  Try six weeks.  By that time,
having, as far as one can see, fallen back completely or even fallen lower than
the point one began from, one will have discovered some truths about oneself.  No
man knows how bad he is till he has tried very hard to be good.  A silly idea is
current that good people do not know what temptation means.  This is an obvious
lie.  Only those who try to resist temptation know how strong it is.  After all,
you find out the strength of the German army by fighting against it, not by giving
in.  You find out the strength of a wind by trying to walk against it, not by
lying down.  A man who gives in to temptation after five minutes simply does not
know what it would have been like an hour later.  That is why bad people, in one
sense, know very little about badness.  They have lived a sheltered life by always
giving in.  We never find out the strength of the evil impulse inside us until we
try to fight it: and Christ, because He was the only man who never yielded to
temptation, is also the only man who knows to the full what temptation means--the
only complete realist.  Very well, then.  The main thing we learn from a serious
attempt to practise the Christian virtues is that we fail.  If there was any idea
that God had set us a sort of exam.  and that we might get good marks by deserving
them, that has to be wiped out.  If there was any idea of a sort of bargain--any
idea that we could perform our side of the contract and thus put God in our debt
so that it was up to Him, in mere justice, to perform His side--that has to be
wiped out.

I think every one who has some vague belief in God, until he becomes a Christian,
has the idea of an exam.  or of a bargain in his mind.  The first result of real
Christianity is to blow that idea into bits.  When they find it blown into bits,
some people think this means that Christianity is a failure and give up.  They
seem to imagine that God is very simple-minded.  In fact, of course, He knows all
about this.  One of the very things Christianity was designed to do was to blow
this idea to bits.  God has been waiting for the moment at which you discover that
there is no question of earning a pass mark in this exam.  or putting Him in your
debt.

Then comes another discovery.  Every faculty you have, your power of thinking or
of moving your limbs from moment to moment, is given you by God.  If you devoted
every moment of your whole life exclusively to His service you could not give Him
anything that was not in a sense His own already.  So that when we talk of a man
doing anything for God or giving anything to God, I will tell you what it is
really like.  It is like a small child going to its father and saying, 'Daddy,
give me sixpence to buy you a birthday present.' Of course, the father does, and
he is pleased with the child's present.  It is all very nice and proper, but only
an idiot would think that the father is sixpence to the good on the transaction.
When a man has made these two discoveries God can really get to work.  It is after
this that real life begins.  The man is awake now.  We can now go on to talk of
Faith in the second sense.





12


FAITH




I want to start by saying something that I would like every one to notice
carefully.  It is this.  If this chapter means nothing to you, if it seems to be
trying to answer questions you never asked, drop it at once.  Do not bother about
it at all.  There are certain things in Christianity that can be understood from
the outside, before you have become a Christian.  But there are a great many
things that cannot be understood until after you have gone a certain distance
along the Christian road.  These things are purely practical, though they do not
look as if they were.  They are directions for dealing with particular crossroads
and obstacles on the journey and they do not make sense until a man has reached
those places.  Whenever you find any statement in Christian writings which you can
make nothing of, do not worry.  Leave it alone.  There will come a day, perhaps
years later, when you suddenly see what it meant.  If one could understand it now,
it would only do one harm.

Of course, all this tells against me as much as anyone else.  The thing I am going
to try to explain in this chapter may be ahead of me.  I may be thinking I have
got there when I have not.  I can only ask instructed Christians to watch very
carefully, and tell me when I go wrong; and others to take what I say with a grain
of salt--as something offered, because it may be a help, not because I am certain
that I am right.

I am trying to talk about Faith in the second sense, the higher sense.  I said
just now that the question of Faith in this sense arises after a man has tried his
level best to practise the Christian virtues, and found that he fails, and seen
that even if he could he would only be giving back to God what was already God's
own.  In other words, he discovers his bankruptcy.  Now, once again, what God
cares about is not exactly our actions.  What he cares about is that we should be
creatures of a certain kind or quality--the kind of creatures He intended us to
be--creatures related to Himself in a certain way.  I do not add 'and related to
one another in a certain way', because that is included: if you are right with Him
you will inevitably be right with all your fellow-creatures, just as if all the
spokes of a wheel are fitted rightly into the hub and the rim they are bound to be
in the right positions to one another.  And as long as a man is thinking of God as
an examiner who has set him a sort of paper to do, or as the opposite party in a
sort of bargain--as long as he is thinking of claims and counter-claims between
himself and God--he is not yet in the right relation to Him.  He is
misunderstanding what he is and what God is.  And he cannot get into the right
relation until he has discovered the fact of our bankruptcy.

When I say 'discovered', I mean really discovered: not simply said it
parrot-fashion.  Of course, any child, if given a certain kind of religious
education, will soon learn to say that we have nothing to offer to God that is not
already His own and that we find ourselves failing to offer even that without
keeping something back.  But I am talking of really discovering this: really
finding out by experience that it is true.

Now we cannot, in that sense, discover our failure to keep God's law except by
trying our very hardest (and then failing).  Unless we really try, whatever we say
there will always be at the back of our minds the idea that if we try harder next
time we shall succeed in being completely good.  Thus, in one sense, the road back
to God is a road of moral effort, of trying harder and harder.  But in another
sense it is not trying that is ever going to bring us home.  All this trying leads
up to the vital moment at which you turn to God and say, 'You must do this.  I
can't.' Do not, I implore you, start asking yourselves, 'Have I reached that
moment?' Do not sit down and start watching your own mind to see if it is coming
along.  That puts a man quite on the wrong track.  When the most important things
in our life happen we quite often do not know, at the moment, what is going on.  A
man does not always say to himself, 'Hullo!  I'm growing up.' It is often only
when he looks back that he realises what has happened and recognises it as what
people call 'growing up'.  You can see it even in simple matters.  A man who
starts anxiously watching to see whether he is going to sleep is very likely to
remain wide awake.  As well, the thing I am talking of now may not happen to every
one in a sudden flash--as it did to St Paul or Bunyan: it may be so gradual that
no one could ever point to a particular hour or even a particular year.  And what
matters is the nature of the change in itself, not how we feel while it is
happening.  It is the change from being confident about our own efforts to the
state in which we despair of doing anything for ourselves and leave it to God.

I know the words 'leave it to God' can be misunderstood, but they must stay for
the moment.  The sense in which a Christian leaves it to God is that he puts all
his trust in Christ: trusts that Christ will somehow share with him the perfect
human obedience which He carried out from His birth to His crucifixion: that
Christ will make the man more like Himself and, in a sense, make good his
deficiencies.  In Christian language, He will share His 'sonship' with us, will
make us, like Himself, 'Sons of God': in Book IV I shall attempt to analyse the
meaning of those words a little further.  If you like to put it that way, Christ
offers something for nothing: He even offers everything for nothing.  In a sense,
the whole Christian life consists in accepting that very remarkable offer.  But
the difficulty is to reach the point of recognising that all we have done and can
do is nothing.  What we should have liked would be for God to count our good
points and ignore our bad ones.  Again, in a sense, you may say that no temptation
is ever overcome until we stop trying to overcome it--throw up the sponge.  But
then you could not 'stop trying' in the right way and for the right reason until
you had tried your very hardest.  And, in yet another sense, handing everything
over to Christ does not, of course, mean that you stop trying.  To trust Him
means, of course, trying to do all that He says.  There would be no sense in
saying you trusted a person if you would not take his advice.  Thus if you have
really handed yourself over to Him, it must follow that you are trying to obey
Him.  But trying in a new way, a less worried way.  Not doing these things in
order to be saved, but because He has begun to save you already.  Not hoping to
get to Heaven as a reward for your actions, but inevitably wanting to act in a
certain way because a first faint gleam of Heaven is already inside you.

Christians have often disputed as to whether what leads the Christian home is good
actions, or Faith in Christ.  I have no right really to speak on such a difficult
question, but it does seem to me like asking which blade in a pair of scissors is
most necessary.  A serious moral effort is the only thing that will bring you to
the point where you throw up the sponge.  Faith in Christ is the only thing to
save you from despair at that point: and out of that Faith in Him good actions
must inevitably come.  There are two parodies of the truth which different sets of
Christians have, in the past, been accused by other Christians of believing:
perhaps they may make the truth clearer.  One set were accused of saying, 'Good
actions are all that matters.  The best good action is charity.  The best kind of
charity is giving money.  The best thing to give money to is the Church.  So hand
us over PS10,000 and we will see you through.' The answer to that nonsense, of
course, would be that good actions done for that motive, done with the idea that
Heaven can be bought, would not be good actions at all, but only commercial
speculations.  The other set were accused of saying, 'Faith is all that matters.
Consequently, if you have faith, it doesn't matter what you do.  Sin away, my lad,
and have a good time and Christ will see that it makes no difference in the end.'
The answer to that nonsense is that, if what you call your 'faith' in Christ does
not involve taking the slightest notice of what He says, then it is not Faith at
all--not faith or trust in Him, but only intellectual acceptance of some theory
about Him.

The Bible really seems to clinch the matter when it puts the two things together
into one amazing sentence.  The first half is, 'Work out your own salvation with
fear and trembling'--which looks as if everything depended on us and our good
actions: but the second half goes on, 'For it is God who work-eth in you'--which
looks as if God did everything and we nothing.  I am afraid that is the sort of
thing we come up against in Christianity.  I am puzzled, but I am not surprised.
You see, we are now trying to understand, and to separate into water-tight
compartments, what exactly God does and what man does when God and man are working
together.  And, of course, we begin by thinking it is like two men working
together, so that you could say, 'He did this bit and I did that.' But this way of
thinking breaks down.  God is not like that.  He is inside you as well as outside:
even if we could understand who did what, I do not think human language could
properly express it.  In the attempt to express it different Churches say
different things.  But you will find that even those who insist most strongly on
the importance of good actions tell you you need Faith; and even those who insist
most strongly on Faith tell you to do good actions.  At any rate that is as far as
I can go.

I think all Christians would agree with me if I said that though Christianity
seems at the first to be all about morality, all about duties and rules and guilt
and virtue, yet it leads you on, out of all that, into something beyond.  One has
a glimpse of a country where they do not talk of those things, except perhaps as a
joke.  Every one there is filled full with what we should call goodness as a
mirror is filled with light.  But they do not call it goodness.  They do not call
it anything.  They are not thinking of it.  They are too busy looking at the
source from which it comes.  But this is near the stage where the road passes over
the rim of our world.  No one's eyes can see very far beyond that: lots of
people's eyes can see further than mine.





BOOK FOUR



BEYOND PERSONALITY: OR FIRST STEPS IN THE DOCTRINE OF THE TRINITY





1


MAKING AND BEGETTING




Everyone has warned me not to tell you what I am going to tell you in this last
book.  They all say 'the ordinary reader does not want Theology; give him plain
practical religion'.  I have rejected their advice.  I do not think the ordinary
reader is such a fool.  Theology means 'the science of God', and I think any man
who wants to think about God at all would like to have the clearest and most
accurate ideas about Him which are available.  You are not children: why should
you be treated like children?

In a way I quite understand why some people are put off by Theology.  I remember
once when I had been giving a talk to the R.A.F., an old, hard-bitten officer got
up and said, 'I've no use for all that stuff.  But, mind you, I'm a religious man
too.  I know there's a God.  I've felt Him: out alone in the desert at night: the
tremendous mystery.  And that's just why I don't believe all your neat little
dogmas and formulas about Him.  To anyone who's met the real thing they all seem
so petty and pedantic and unreal!'

Now in a sense I quite agreed with that man.  I think he had probably had a real
experience of God in the desert.  And when he turned from that experience to the
Christian creeds, I think he really was turning from something real to something
less real.  In the same way, if a man has once looked at the Atlantic from the
beach, and then goes and looks at a map of the Atlantic, he also will be turning
from something real to something less real: turning from real waves to a bit of
coloured paper.  But here comes the point.  The map is admittedly only coloured
paper, but there are two things you have to remember about it.  In the first
place, it is based on what hundreds and thousands of people have found out by
sailing the real Atlantic.  In that way it has behind it masses of experience just
as real as the one you could have from the beach; only, while yours would be a
single glimpse, the map fits all those different experiences together.  In the
second place, if you want to go anywhere, the map is absolutely necessary.  As
long as you are content with walks on the beach, your own glimpses are far more
fun than looking at a map.  But the map is going to be more use than walks on the
beach if you want to get to America.

Now, Theology is like the map.  Merely learning and thinking about the Christian
doctrines, if you stop there, is less real and less exciting than the sort of
thing my friend got in the desert.  Doctrines are not God: they are only a kind of
map.  But that map is based on the experience of hundreds of people who really
were in touch with God--experiences compared with which any thrills or pious
feelings you and I are likely to get on our own are very elementary and very
confused.  And secondly, if you want to get any further, you must use the map.
You see, what happened to that man in the desert may have been real, and was
certainly exciting, but nothing comes of it.  It leads nowhere.  There is nothing
to do about it.  In fact, that is just why a vague religion--all about feeling God
in nature, and so on--is so attractive.  It is all thrills and no work: like
watching the waves from the beach.  But you will not get to Newfoundland by
studying the Atlantic that way, and you will not get eternal life by simply
feeling the presence of God in flowers or music.  Neither will you get anywhere by
looking at maps without going to sea.  Nor will you be very safe if you go to sea
without a map.

In other words, Theology is practical: especially now.  In the old days, when
there was less education and discussion, perhaps it was possible to get on with a
very few simple ideas about God.  But it is not so now.  Everyone reads, everyone
hears things discussed.  Consequently, if you do not listen to Theology, that will
not mean that you have no ideas about God.  It will mean that you have a lot of
wrong ones--bad, muddled, out-of-date ideas.  For a great many of the ideas about
God which are trotted out as novelties today are simply the ones which real
Theologians tried centuries ago and rejected.  To believe in the popular religion
of modern England is retrogression--like believing the earth is flat.

For when you get down to it, is not the popular idea of Christianity simply this:
that Jesus Christ was a great moral teacher and that if only we took His advice we
might be able to establish a better social order and avoid another war?  Now, mind
you, that is quite true.  But it tells you much less than the whole truth about
Christianity and it has no practical importance at all.

It is quite true that if we took Christ's advice we should soon be living in a
happier world.  You need not even go as far as Christ.  If we did all that Plato
or Aristotle or Confucius told us, we should get on a great deal better than we
do.  And so what?  We never have followed the advice of the great teachers.  Why
are we likely to begin now?  Why are we more likely to follow Christ than any of
the others?  Because He is the best moral teacher?  But that makes it even less
likely that we shall follow Him.  If we cannot take the elementary lessons, is it
likely we are going to take the most advanced one?  If Christianity only means one
more bit of good advice, then Christianity is of no importance.  There has been no
lack of good advice for the last four thousand years.  A bit more makes no
difference.

But as soon as you look at any real Christian writings, you find that they are
talking about something quite different from this popular religion.  They say that
Christ is the Son of God (whatever that means).  They say that those who give Him
their confidence can also become Sons of God (whatever that means).  They say that
His death saved us from our sins (whatever that means).

There is no good complaining that these statements are difficult.  Christianity
claims to be telling us about another world, about something behind the world we
can touch and hear and see.  You may think the claim false, but if it were true,
what it tells us would be bound to be difficult--at least as difficult as modern
Physics, and for the same reason.

Now the point in Christianity which gives us the greatest shock is the statement
that by attaching ourselves to Christ, we can 'become Sons of God'.  One asks
'Aren't we Sons of God already?  Surely the fatherhood of God is one of the main
Christian ideas?' Well, in a certain sense, no doubt we are sons of God already.
I mean, God has brought us into existence and loves us and looks after us, and in
that way is like a father.  But when the Bible talks of our 'becoming' Sons of
God, obviously it must mean something different.  And that brings us up against
the very centre of Theology.

One of the creeds says that Christ is the Son of God 'begotten, not created'; and
it adds 'begotten by his Father before all worlds'.  Will you please get it quite
clear that this has nothing to do with the fact that when Christ was born on earth
as a man, that man was the son of a virgin?  We are not now thinking about the
Virgin Birth.  We are thinking about something that happened before Nature was
created at all, before time began.  'Before all worlds' Christ is begotten, not
created.  What does it mean?

We don't use the words begetting or begotten much in modern English, but everyone
still knows what they mean.  To beget is to become the father of: to create is to
make.  And the difference is this.  When you beget, you beget something of the
same kind as yourself.  A man begets human babies, a beaver begets little beavers
and a bird begets eggs which turn into little birds.  But when you make, you make
something of a different kind from yourself.  A bird makes a nest, a beaver builds
a dam, a man makes a wireless set--or he may make something more like himself than
a wireless set: say, a statue.  If he is a clever enough carver he may make a
statue which is very like a man indeed.  But, of course, it is not a real man; it
only looks like one.  It cannot breathe or think.  It is not alive.

Now that is the first thing to get clear.  What God begets is God; just as what
man begets is man.  What God creates is not God; just as what man makes is not
man.  That is why men are not Sons of God in the sense that Christ is.  They may
be like God in certain ways, but they are not things of the same kind.  They are
more like statues or pictures of God.

A statue has the shape of a man but is not alive.  In the same way, man has (in a
sense I am going to explain) the 'shape' or likeness of God, but he has not got
the kind of life God has.  Let us take the first point (man's resemblance to God)
first.  Everything God has made has some likeness to Himself.  Space is like Him
in its hugeness: not that the greatness of space is the same kind of greatness as
God's, but it is a sort of symbol of it, or a translation of it into non-spiritual
terms.  Matter is like God in having energy: though, again, of course, physical
energy is a different kind of thing from the power of God.  The vegetable world is
like Him because it is alive, and He is the 'living God'.  But life, in this
biological sense, is not the same as the life there is in God: it is only a kind
of symbol or shadow of it.  When we come on to the animals, we find other kinds of
resemblance in addition to biological life.  The intense activity and fertility of
the insects, for example, is a first dim resemblance to the unceasing activity and
the creativeness of God.  In the higher mammals we get the beginnings of
instinctive affection.  That is not the same thing as the love that exists in God:
but it is like it--rather in the way that a picture drawn on a flat piece of paper
can nevertheless be 'like' a landscape.  When we come to man, the highest of the
animals, we get the completest resemblance to God which we know of.  (There may be
creatures in other worlds who are more like God than man is, but we do not know
about them.) Man not only lives, but loves and reasons: biological life reaches
its highest known level in him.

But what man, in his natural condition, has not got, is Spiritual life--the higher
and different sort of life that exists in God.  We use the same word life for
both: but if you thought that both must therefore be the same sort of thing, that
would be like thinking that the 'greatness' of space and the 'greatness' of God
were the same sort of greatness.  In reality, the difference between Biological
life and Spiritual life is so important that I am going to give them two distinct
names.  The Biological sort which comes to us through Nature, and which (like
everything else in Nature) is always tending to run down and decay so that it can
only be kept up by incessant subsidies from Nature in the form of air, water,
food, etc., is Bios.  The Spiritual life which is in God from all eternity, and
which made the whole natural universe, is Zoe.  Bios has, to be sure, a certain
shadowy or symbolic resemblance to Zoe: but only the sort of resemblance there is
between a photo and a place, or a statue and a man.  A man who changed from having
Bios to having Zoe would have gone through as big a change as a statue which
changed from being a carved stone to being a real man.

And that is precisely what Christianity is about.  This world is a great
sculptor's shop.  We are the statues and there is a rumour going round the shop
that some of us are some day going to come to life.





2


THE THREE-PERSONAL GOD




The last chapter was about the difference between begetting and making.  A man
begets a child, but he only makes a statue.  God begets Christ but He only makes
men.  But by saying that, I have illustrated only one point about God, namely,
that what God the Father begets is God, something of the same kind as Himself.  In
that way it is like a human father begetting a human son.  But not quite like it.
So I must try to explain a little more.

A good many people nowadays say, 'I believe in a God, but not in a personal God.'
They feel that the mysterious something which is behind all other things must be
more than a person.  Now the Christians quite agree.  But the Christians are the
only people who offer any idea of what a being that is beyond personality could be
like.  All the other people, though they say that God is beyond personality,
really think of Him as something impersonal: that is, as something less than
personal.  If you are looking for something super-personal, something more than a
person, then it is not a question of choosing between the Christian idea and the
other ideas.  The Christian idea is the only one on the market.

Again, some people think that after this life, or perhaps after several lives,
human souls will be 'absorbed' into God.  But when they try to explain what they
mean, they seem to be thinking of our being absorbed into God as one material
thing is absorbed into another.  They say it is like a drop of water slipping into
the sea.  But of course that is the end of the drop.  If that is what happens to
us, then being absorbed is the same as ceasing to exist.  It is only the
Christians who have any idea of how human souls can be taken into the life of God
and yet remain themselves--in fact, be very much more themselves than they were
before.

I warned you that Theology is practical.  The whole purpose for which we exist is
to be thus taken into the life of God.  Wrong ideas about what that life is will
make it harder.  And now, for a few minutes, I must ask you to follow rather
carefully.

You know that in space you can move in three ways--to left or right, backwards or
forwards, up or down.  Every direction is either one of these three or a
compromise between them.  They are called the three Dimensions.  Now notice this.
If you are using only one dimension, you could draw only a straight line.  If you
are using two, you could draw a figure: say, a square.  And a square is made up of
four straight lines.  Now a step further.  If you have three dimensions, you can
then build what we call a solid body: say, a cube--a thing like a dice or a lump
of sugar.  And a cube is made up of six squares.

Do you see the point?  A world of one dimension would be a straight line.  In a
two-dimensional world, you still get straight lines, but many lines make one
figure.  In a three-dimensional world, you still get figures but many figures make
one solid body.  In other words, as you advance to more real and more complicated
levels, you do not leave behind you the things you found on the simpler levels:
you still have them, but combined in new ways--in ways you could not imagine if
you knew only the simpler levels.

Now the Christian account of God involves just the same principle.  The human
level is a simple and rather empty level.  On the human level one person is one
being, and any two persons are two separate beings--just as, in two dimensions
(say on a flat sheet of paper) one square is one figure, and any two squares are
two separate figures.  On the Divine level you still find personalities; but up
there you find them combined in new ways which we, who do not live on that level,
cannot imagine.  In God's dimension, so to speak, you find a being who is three
Persons while remaining one Being, just as a cube is six squares while remaining
one cube.  Of course we cannot fully conceive a Being like that: just as, if we
were so made that we perceived only two dimensions in space we could never
properly imagine a cube.  But we can get a sort of faint notion of it.  And when
we do, we are then, for the first time in our lives, getting some positive idea,
however faint, of something super-personal--something more than a person.  It is
something we could never have guessed, and yet, once we have been told, one almost
feels one ought to have been able to guess it because it fits in so well with all
the things we know already.

You may ask, 'if we cannot imagine a three-personal Being, what is the good of
talking about Him?' Well, there isn't any good talking about Him.  The thing that
matters is being actually drawn into that three-personal life, and that may begin
any time--tonight, if you like.

What I mean is this.  An ordinary simple Christian kneels down to say his prayers.
He is trying to get into touch with God.  But if he is a Christian he knows that
what is prompting him to pray is also God: God, so to speak, inside him.  But he
also knows that all his real knowledge of God comes through Christ, the Man who
was God--that Christ is standing beside him, helping him to pray, praying for him.
You see what is happening.  God is the thing to which he is praying--the goal he
is trying to reach.  God is also the thing inside him which is pushing him on--the
motive power.  God is also the road or bridge along which he is being pushed to
that goal.  So that the whole threefold life of the three-personal Being is
actually going on in that ordinary little bedroom where an ordinary man is saying
his prayers.  The man is being caught up into the higher kinds of life--what I
called Zoe or spiritual life: he is being pulled into God, by God, while still
remaining himself.

And that is how Theology started.  People already knew about God in a vague way.
Then came a man who claimed to be God; and yet He was not the sort of man you
could dismiss as a lunatic.  He made them believe Him.  They met Him again after
they had seen Him killed.  And then, after they had been formed into a little
society or community, they found God somehow inside them as well: directing them,
making them able to do things they could not do before.  And when they worked it
all out they found they had arrived at the Christian definition of the
three-personal God.

This definition is not something we have made up; Theology is, in a sense, an
experimental science.  It is simple religions that are the made-up ones.  When I
say it is an experimental science 'in a sense', I mean that it is like the other
experimental sciences in some ways, but not in all.  If you are a geologist
studying rocks, you have to go and find the rocks.  They will not come to you, and
if you go to them they cannot run away.  The initiative lies all on your side.
They cannot either help or hinder.  But suppose you are a zoologist and want to
take photos of wild animals in their native haunts.  That is a bit different from
studying rocks.  The wild animals will not come to you: but they can run away from
you.  Unless you keep very quiet, they will.  There is beginning to be a tiny
little trace of initiative on their side.

Now a stage higher; suppose you want to get to know a human person.  If he is
determined not to let you, you will not get to know him.  You have to win his
confidence.  In this case the initiative is equally divided--it takes two to make
a friendship.

When you come to knowing God, the initiative lies on His side.  If He does not
show Himself, nothing you can do will enable you to find Him.  And, in fact, He
shows much more of Himself to some people than to others--not because He has
favourites, but because it is impossible for Him to show Himself to a man whose
whole mind and character are in the wrong condition.  Just as sunlight, though it
has no favourites, cannot be reflected in a dusty mirror as clearly as in a clean
one.

You can put this another way by saying that while in other sciences the
instruments you use are things external to yourself (things like microscopes and
telescopes), the instrument through which you see God is your whole self.  And if
a man's self is not kept clean and bright, his glimpse of God will be
blurred--like the Moon seen through a dirty telescope.  That is why horrible
nations have horrible religions: they have been looking at God through a dirty
lens.

God can show Himself as He really is only to real men.  And that means not simply
to men who are individually good, but to men who are united together in a body,
loving one another, helping one another, showing Him to one another.  For that is
what God meant humanity to be like; like players in one band, or organs in one
body.

Consequently, the one really adequate instrument for learning about God is the
whole Christian community, waiting for Him together.  Christian brotherhood is, so
to speak, the technical equipment for this science--the laboratory outfit.  That
is why all these people who turn up every few years with some patent simplified
religion of their own as a substitute for the Christian tradition are really
wasting time.  Like a man who has no instrument but an old pair of field glasses
setting out to put all the real astronomers right.  He may be a clever chap--he
may be cleverer than some of the real astronomers, but he is not giving himself a
chance.  And two years later everyone has forgotten all about him, but the real
science is still going on.

If Christianity was something we were making up, of course we could make it
easier.  But it is not.  We cannot compete, in simplicity, with people who are
inventing religions.  How could we?  We are dealing with Fact.  Of course anyone
can be simple if he has no facts to bother about.





3


TIME AND BEYOND TIME




It is a very silly idea that in reading a book you must never 'skip'.  All
sensible people skip freely when they come to a chapter which they find is going
to be no use to them.  In this chapter I am going to talk about something which
may be helpful to some readers, but which may seem to others merely an unnecessary
complication.  If you are one of the second sort of readers, then I advise you not
to bother about this chapter at all but to turn on to the next.

In the last chapter I had to touch on the subject of prayer, and while that is
still fresh in your mind and my own, I should like to deal with a difficulty that
some people find about the whole idea of prayer.  A man put it to me by saying 'I
can believe in God all right, but what I cannot swallow is the idea of Him
attending to several hundred million human beings who are all addressing Him at
the same moment.' And I have found that quite a lot of people feel this.

Now, the first thing to notice is that the whole sting of it comes in the words at
the same moment.  Most of us can imagine God attending to any number of applicants
if only they came one by one and He had an endless time to do it in.  So what is
really at the back of this difficulty is the idea of God having to fit too many
things into one moment of time.

Well that is of course what happens to us.  Our life comes to us moment by moment.
One moment disappears before the next comes along: and there is room for very
little in each.  That is what Time is like.  And of course you and I tend to take
it for granted that this Time series--this arrangement of past, present and
future--is not simply the way life comes to us but the way all things really
exist.  We tend to assume that the whole universe and God Himself are always
moving on from past to future just as we do.  But many learned men do not agree
with that.  It was the Theologians who first started the idea that some things are
not in Time at all: later the Philosophers took it over: and now some of the
scientists are doing the same.

Almost certainly God is not in Time.  His life does not consist of moments
following one another.  If a million people are praying to Him at ten-thirty
tonight, He need not listen to them all in that one little snippet which we call
ten-thirty.  Ten-thirty--and every other moment from the beginning of the
world--is always the Present for Him.  If you like to put it that way, He has all
eternity in which to listen to the split second of prayer put up by a pilot as his
plane crashes in flames.

That is difficult, I know.  Let me try to give something, not the same, but a bit
like it.  Suppose I am writing a novel.  I write 'Mary laid down her work; next
moment came a knock at the door!' For Mary who has to live in the imaginary time
of my story there is no interval between putting down the work and hearing the
knock.  But I, who am Mary's maker, do not live in that imaginary time at all.
Between writing the first half of that sentence and the second, I might sit down
for three hours and think steadily about Mary.  I could think about Mary as if she
were the only character in the book and for as long as I pleased, and the hours I
spent in doing so would not appear in Mary's time (the time inside the story) at
all.

This is not a perfect illustration, of course.  But it may give just a glimpse of
what I believe to be the truth.  God is not hurried along in the Time-stream of
this universe any more than an author is hurried along in the imaginary time of
his own novel.  He has infinite attention to spare for each one of us.  He does
not have to deal with us in the mass.  You are as much alone with Him as if you
were the only being He had ever created.  When Christ died, He died for you
individually just as much as if you had been the only man in the world.

The way in which my illustration breaks down is this.  In it the author gets out
of one Time-series (that of the novel) only by going into another Time-series (the
real one).  But God, I believe, does not live in a Time-series at all.  His life
is not dribbled out moment by moment like ours: with Him it is, so to speak, still
1920 and already 1960.  For His life is Himself.

If you picture Time as a straight line along which we have to travel, then you
must picture God as the whole page on which the line is drawn.  We come to the
parts of the line one by one: we have to leave A behind before we get to B, and
cannot reach C until we leave B behind.  God, from above or outside or all round,
contains the whole line, and sees it all.

The idea is worth trying to grasp because it removes some apparent difficulties in
Christianity.  Before I became a Christian one of my objections was as follows.
The Christians said that the eternal God who is everywhere and keeps the whole
universe going, once became a human being.  Well, then, said I, how did the whole
universe keep going while He was a baby, or while He was asleep?  How could He at
the same time be God who knows everything and also a man asking his disciples 'Who
touched me?' You will notice that the sting lay in the time words: 'While He was a
baby'--How could He at the same time?' In other words I was assuming that Christ's
life as God was in time, and that His life as the man Jesus in Palestine was a
shorter period taken out of that time--just as my service in the army was a
shorter period taken out of my total life.  And that is how most of us perhaps
tend to think about it.  We picture God living through a period when His human
life was still in the future: then coming to a period when it was present: then
going on to a period when He could look back on it as something in the past.  But
probably these ideas correspond to nothing in the actual facts.  You cannot fit
Christ's earthly life in Palestine into any time-relations with His life as God
beyond all space and time.  It is really, I suggest, a timeless truth about God
that human nature, and the human experience of weakness and sleep and ignorance,
are somehow included in His whole divine life.  This human life in God is from our
point of view a particular period in the history of our world (from the year A.D.
one till the Crucifixion).  We therefore imagine it is also a period in the
history of God's own existence.  But God has no history.  He is too completely and
utterly real to have one.  For, of course, to have a history means losing part of
your reality (because it has already slipped away into the past) and not yet
having another part (because it is still in the future) : in fact having nothing
but the tiny little present, which has gone before you can speak about it.  God
forbid we should think God was like that.  Even we may hope not to be always
rationed in that way.

Another difficulty we get if we believe God to be in time is this.  Everyone who
believes in God at all believes that He knows what you and I are going to do
tomorrow.  But if He knows I am going to do so-and-so, how can I be free to do
otherwise?  Well, here once again, the difficulty comes from thinking that God is
progressing along the Time-line like us: the only difference being that He can see
ahead and we cannot.  Well, if that were true, if God foresaw our acts, it would
be very hard to understand how we could be free not to do them.  But suppose God
is outside and above the Time-line.  In that case, what we call 'tomorrow' is
visible to Him in just the same way as what we call 'today'.  All the days are
'Now' for Him.  He does not remember you doing things yesterday; He simply sees
you doing them, because, though you have lost yesterday, He has not.  He does not
'foresee' you doing things tomorrow; He simply sees you doing them: because,
though tomorrow is not yet there for you, it is for Him.  You never supposed that
your actions at this moment were any less free because God knows what you are
doing.  Well, He knows your tomorrow's actions in just the same way--because He is
already in tomorrow and can simply watch you.  In a sense, He does not know your
action till you have done it: but then the moment at which you have done it is
already 'Now' for Him.

This idea has helped me a good deal.  If it does not help you, leave it alone.  It
is a 'Christian idea' in the sense that great and wise Christians have held it and
there is nothing in it contrary to Christianity.  But it is not in the Bible or
any of the creeds.  You can be a perfectly good Christian without accepting it, or
indeed without thinking of the matter at all.





4


GOOD INFECTION




I begin this chapter by asking you to get a certain picture clear in your minds.
Imagine two books lying on a table one on top of the other.  Obviously the bottom
book is keeping the other one up--supporting it.  It is because of the underneath
book that the top one is resting, say, two inches from the surface of the table
instead of touching the table.  Let us call the underneath book A and the top one
B. The position of A is causing the position of B. That is clear?  Now let us
imagine--it could not really happen, of course, but it will do for an
illustration--let us imagine that both books have been in that position for ever
and ever.  In that case B's position would always have been resulting from A's
position.  But all the same, A's position would not have existed before B's
position.  In other words the result does not come after the cause.  Of course,
results usually do: you eat the cucumber first and have the indigestion
afterwards.  But it is not so with all causes and results.  You will see in a
moment why I think this important.

I said a few pages back that God is a Being which contains three Persons while
remaining one Being, just as a cube contains six squares while remaining one body.
But as soon as I begin trying to explain how these Persons are connected I have to
use words which make it sound as if one of them was there before the others.  The
First Person is called the Father and the Second the Son.  We say that the First
begets or produces the second; we call it begetting, not making, because what He
produces is of the same kind as Himself.  In that way the word Father is the only
word to use.  But unfortunately it suggests that He is there first--just as a
human father exists before his son.  But that is not so.  There is no before and
after about it.  And that is why I think it important to make clear how one thing
can be the source, or cause, or origin, of another without being there before it.
The Son exists because the Father exists: but there never was a time before the
Father produced the Son.

Perhaps the best way to think of it is this.  I asked you just now to imagine
those two books, and probably most of you did.  That is, you made an act of
imagination and as a result you had a mental picture.  Quite obviously your act of
imagining was the cause and the mental picture the result.  But that does not mean
that you first did the imagining and then got the picture.  The moment you did it,
the picture was there.  Your will was keeping the picture before you all the time.
Yet that act of will and the picture began at exactly the same moment and ended at
the same moment.  If there were a Being who had always existed and had always been
imagining one thing, his act would always have been producing a mental picture;
but the picture would be just as eternal as the act.

In the same way we must think of the Son always, so to speak, streaming forth from
the Father, like light from a lamp, or heat from a fire, or thoughts from a mind.
He is the self-expression of the Father--what the Father has to say.  And there
never was a time when He was not saying it.  But have you noticed what is
happening?  All these pictures of light or heat are making it sound as if the
Father and Son were two things instead of two Persons.  So that after all, the New
Testament picture of a Father and a Son turns out to be much more accurate than
anything we try to substitute for it.  That is what always happens when you go
away from the words of the Bible.  It is quite right to go away from them for a
moment in order to make some special point clear.  But you must always go back.
Naturally God knows how to describe Himself much better than we know how to
describe Him.  He knows that Father and Son is more like the relation between the
First and Second Persons than anything else we can think of.  Much the most
important thing to know is that it is a relation of love.  The Father delights in
His Son; the Son looks up to His Father.

Before going on, notice the practical importance of this.  All sorts of people are
fond of repeating the Christian statement that 'God is love'.  But they seem not
to notice that the words 'God is love' have no real meaning unless God contains at
least two Persons.  Love is something that one person has for another person.  If
God was a single person, then before the world was made, He was not love.  Of
course, what these people mean when they say that God is love is often something
quite different: they really mean 'Love is God'.  They really mean that our
feelings of love, however and wherever they arise, and whatever results they
produce, are to be treated with great respect.  Perhaps they are: but that is
something quite different from what Christians mean by the statement 'God is
love'.  They believe that the living, dynamic activity of love has been going on
in God forever and has created everything else.

And that, by the way, is perhaps the most important difference between
Christianity and all other religions: that in Christianity God is not a static
thing--not even a person--but a dynamic, pulsating activity, a life, almost a kind
of drama.  Almost, if you will not think me irreverent, a kind of dance.  The
union between the Father and the Son is such a live concrete thing that this union
itself is also a Person.  I know this is almost inconceivable, but look at it
thus.  You know that among human beings, when they get together in a family, or a
club, or a trade union, people talk about the 'spirit' of that family, or club, or
trade union.  They talk about its 'spirit' because the individual members, when
they are together, do really develop particular ways of talking and behaving which
they would not have if they were apart.* It is as if a sort of communal
personality came into existence.  Of course, it is not a real person: it is only
rather like a person.  But that is just one of the differences between God and us.
What grows out of the joint life of the Father and Son is a real Person, is in
fact the Third of the three Persons who are God.

This third Person is called, in technical language, the Holy Ghost or the 'spirit'
of God.  Do not be worried or surprised if you find it (or Him) rather vaguer or
more shadowy in your mind than the other two.  I think there is a reason why that
must be so.  In the Christian life you are not usually looking at Him.  He is
always acting through you.  If you think of the Father as something 'out there',
in front of you, and of the Son as someone standing at your side, helping you to
pray, trying to turn you into another son, then you have to think of the third
Person as something inside you, or behind you.  Perhaps some people might find it
easier to begin with the third Person and work backwards.  God is love, and that
love works through men--especially through the whole community of Christians.  But
this spirit of love is, from all eternity, a love going on between the Father and
the Son.

And now, what does it all matter?  It matters more than anything else in the
world.  The whole dance, or drama, or pattern of this three-Personal life is to be
played out in each one of us: or (putting it the other way round) each one of us
has got to enter that pattern, take his place in that dance.  There is no other
way to the happiness for which we were made.  Good things as well as bad, you
know, are caught by a kind of infection.  If you want to get warm you must stand
near the fire: if you want to be wet you must get into the water.  If you want
joy, power, peace, eternal life, you must get close to, or even into, the thing
that has them.  They are not a sort of prize which God could, if He chose, just
hand out to anyone.  They are a great fountain of energy and beauty spurting up at
the very centre of reality.  If you are close to it, the spray will wet you: if
you are not, you will remain dry.  Once a man is united to God, how could he not
live forever?  Once a man is separated from God, what can he do but wither and
die?

But how is he to be united to God?  How is it possible for us to be taken into the
three-Personal life?

You remember what I said in Chapter I about begetting and making.  We are not
begotten by God, we are only made by Him: in our natural state we are not sons of
God, only (so to speak) statues.  We have not got Zoe or spiritual life: only Bios
or biological life which is presently going to run down and die.  Now the whole
offer which Christianity makes is this: that we can, if we let God have His way,
come to share in the life of Christ.  If we do, we shall then be sharing a life
which was begotten, not made, which always has existed and always will exist.
Christ is the Son of God.  If we share in this kind of life we also shall be sons
of God.  We shall love the Father as He does and the Holy Ghost will arise in us.
He came to this world and became a man in order to spread to other men the kind of
life He has--by what I call 'good infection'.  Every Christian is to become a
little Christ.  The whole purpose of becoming a Christian is simply nothing else.





5


THE OBSTINATE TOY SOLDIERS




The Son of God became a man to enable men to become sons of God.  We do not
know--anyway, I do not know--how things would have worked if the human race had
never rebelled against God and joined the enemy.  Perhaps every man would have
been 'in Christ', would have shared the life of the Son of God, from the moment he
was born.  Perhaps the Bios or natural life would have been drawn up into the Zoe,
the uncreated life, at once and as a matter of course.  But that is guesswork.
You and I are concerned with the way things work now.

And the present state of things is this.  The two kinds of life are now not only
different (they would always have been that) but actually opposed.  The natural
life in each of us is something self-centred, something that wants to be petted
and admired, to take advantage of other lives, to exploit the whole universe.  And
especially it wants to be left to itself: to keep well away from anything better
or stronger or higher than it, anything that might make it feel small.  It is
afraid of the light and air of the spiritual world, just as people who have been
brought up to be dirty are afraid of a bath.  And in a sense it is quite right.
It knows that if the spiritual life gets hold of it, all its self-centredness and
self-will are going to be killed and it is ready to fight tooth and nail to avoid
that.

Did you ever think, when you were a child, what fun it would be if your toys could
come to life?  Well suppose you could really have brought them to life.  Imagine
turning a tin soldier into a real little man.  It would involve turning the tin
into flesh.  And suppose the tin soldier did not like it.  He is not interested in
flesh: all he sees is that the tin is being spoilt.  He thinks you are killing
him.  He will do everything he can to prevent you.  He will not be made into a man
if he can help it.

What you would have done about that tin soldier I do not know.  But what God did
about us was this.  The Second Person in God, the Son, became human Himself: was
born into the world as an actual man--a real man of a particular height, with hair
of a particular colour, speaking a particular language, weighing so many stone.
The Eternal Being, who knows everything and who created the whole universe, became
not only a man but (before that) a baby, and before that a foetus inside a Woman's
body.  If you want to get the hang of it, think how you would like to become a
slug or a crab.

The result of this was that you now had one man who really was what all men were
intended to be: one man in whom the created life, derived from His Mother, allowed
itself to be completely and perfectly turned into the begotten life.  The natural
human creature in Him was taken up fully into the divine Son.  Thus in one
instance humanity had, so to speak, arrived: had passed into the life of Christ.
And because the whole difficulty for us is that the natural life has to be, in a
sense, 'killed', He chose an earthly career which involved the killing of His
human desires at every turn--poverty, misunderstanding from His own family,
betrayal by one of His intimate friends, being jeered at and manhandled by the
Police, and execution by torture.  And then, after being thus killed--killed every
day in a sense--the human creature in Him, because it was united to the divine
Son, came to life again.  The Man in Christ rose again: not only the God.  That is
the whole point.  For the first time we saw a real man.  One tin soldier--real
tin, just like the rest--had come fully and splendidly alive.

And here, of course, we come to the point where my illustration about the tin
soldier breaks down.  In the case of real toy soldiers or statues, if one came to
life, it would obviously make no difference to the rest.  They are all separate.
But human beings are not.  They look separate because you see them walking about
separately.  But then, we are so made that we can see only the present moment.  If
we could see the past, then of course it would look different.  For there was a
time when every man was part of his mother, and (earlier still) part of his father
as well: and when they were part of his grandparents.  If you could see humanity
spread out in time, as God sees it, it would not look like a lot of separate
things dotted about.  It would look like one single growing thing--rather like a
very complicated tree.  Every individual would appear connected with every other.
And not only that.  Individuals are not really separate from God any more than
from one another.  Every man, woman, and child all over the world is feeling and
breathing at this moment only because God, so to speak, is 'keeping him going'.

Consequently, when Christ becomes man it is not really as if you could become one
particular tin soldier.  It is as if something which is always affecting the whole
human mass begins, at one point, to affect the whole human mass in a new way.
From that point the effect spreads through all mankind.  It makes a difference to
people who lived before Christ as well as to people who lived after Him.  It makes
a difference to people who have never heard of Him.  It is like dropping into a
glass of water one drop of something which gives a new taste or a new colour to
the whole lot.  But, of course, none of these illustrations really works
perfectly.  In the long run God is no one but Himself and what He does is like
nothing else.  You could hardly expect it to be otherwise.

What, then, is the difference which He has made to the whole human mass?  It is
just this; that the business of becoming a son of God, of being turned from a
created thing into a begotten thing, of passing over from the temporary biological
life into timeless 'spiritual' life, has been done for us.  Humanity is already
'saved' in principle.  We individuals have to appropriate that salvation.  But the
really tough work--the bit we could not have done for ourselves--has been done for
us.  We have not got to try to climb up into spiritual life by our own efforts; it
has already come down into the human race.  If we will only lay ourselves open to
the one Man in whom it was fully present, and who, in spite of being God, is also
a real man, He will do it in us and for us.  Remember what I said about 'good
infection'.  One of our own race has this new life: if we get close to Him we
shall catch it from Him.

Of course, you can express this in all sorts of different ways.  You can say that
Christ died for our sins.  You may say that the Father has forgiven us because
Christ has done for us what we ought to have done.  You may say that we are washed
in the blood of the Lamb.  You may say that Christ has defeated death.  They are
all true.  If any of them do not appeal to you, leave it alone and get on with the
formula that does.  And, whatever you do, do not start quarrelling with other
people because they use a different formula from yours.





6


TWO NOTES




In order to avoid misunderstanding I here add notes on two points arising out of
the last chapter.

(1) One sensible critic wrote asking me why, if God wanted sons instead of 'toy
soldiers', He did not beget many sons at the outset instead of first making toy
soldiers and then bringing them to life by such a difficult and painful process.
One part of the answer to this question is fairly easy: the other part is probably
beyond all human knowledge.  The easy part is this.  The process of being turned
from a creature into a son would not have been difficult or painful if the human
race had not turned away from God centuries ago.  They were able to do this
because He gave them free will: He gave them free will because a world of mere
automata could never love and therefore never know infinite happiness.  The
difficult part is this.  All Christians are agreed that there is, in the full and
original sense, only one 'Son of God'.  If we insist on asking 'But could there
have been many?' we find ourselves in very deep water.  Have the words 'Could have
been' any sense at all when applied to God?  You can say that one particular
finite thing 'could have been' different from what it is, because it would have
been different if something else had been different, and the something else would
have been different if some third thing had been different, and so on.  (The
letters on this page would have been red if the printer had used red ink, and he
would have used red ink if he had been instructed to, and so on.) But when you are
talking about God--i.e.  about the rock bottom, irreducible Fact on which all
other facts depend--it is nonsensical to ask if it could have been otherwise.  It
is what it is, and there is an end of the matter.  But quite apart from this, I
find a difficulty about the very idea of the Father begetting many sons from all
eternity.  In order to be many they would have to be somehow different from one
another.  Two pennies have the same shape.  How are they two?  By occupying
different places and containing different atoms.  In other words, to think of them
as different, we have had to bring in space and matter; in fact we have had to
bring in 'Nature' or the created universe.  I can understand the distinction
between the Father and the Son without bringing in space or matter, because the
one begets and the other is begotten.  The Father's relation to the Son is not the
same as the Son's relation to the Father.  But if there were several sons they
would all be related to one another and to the Father in the same way.  How would
they differ from one another?  One does not notice the difficulty at first, of
course.  One thinks one can form the idea of several 'sons'.  But when I think
closely, I find that the idea seemed possible only because I was vaguely imagining
them as human forms standing about together in some kind of space.  In other
words, though I pretended to be thinking about something that exists before any
universe was made, I was really smuggling in the picture of a universe and putting
that something inside it.  When I stop doing that and still try to think of the
Father begetting many sons 'before all worlds' I find I am not really thinking of
anything.  The idea fades away into mere words.  (Was Nature--space and time and
matter--created precisely in order to make many-ness possible?  Is there perhaps
no other way of getting many eternal spirits except by first making many natural
creatures, in a universe, and then spiritualising them?  But of course all this is
guesswork.)

(2) The idea that the whole human race is, in a sense, one thing--one huge
organism, like a tree--must not be confused with the idea that individual
differences do not matter or that real people, Tom and Nobby and Kate, are somehow
less important than collective things like classes, races, and so forth.  Indeed
the two ideas are opposites.  Things which are parts of a single organism may be
very different from one another: things which are not, may be very alike.  Six
pennies are quite separate and very alike: my nose and my lungs are very different
but they are only alive at all because they are parts of my body and share its
common life.  Christianity thinks of human individuals not as mere members of a
group or items in a list, but as organs in a body--different from one another and
each contributing what no other could.  When you find yourself wanting to turn
your children, or pupils, or even your neighbours, into people exactly like
yourself, remember that God probably never meant them to be that.  You and they
are different organs, intended to do different things.  On the other hand, when
you are tempted not to bother about someone else's troubles because they are 'no
business of yours', remember that though he is different from you he is part of
the same organism as you.  If you forget that he belongs to the same organism as
yourself you will become an Individualist.  If you forget that he is a different
organ from you, if you want to suppress differences and make people all alike, you
will become a Totalitarian.  But a Christian must not be either a Totalitarian or
an Individualist.

I feel a strong desire to tell you--and I expect you feel a strong desire to tell
me--which of these two errors is the worse.  That is the devil getting at us.  He
always sends errors into the world in pairs--pairs of opposites.  And he always
encourages us to spend a lot of time thinking which is the worse.  You see why, of
course?  He relies on your extra dislike of the one error to draw you gradually
into the opposite one.  But do not let us be fooled.  We have to keep our eyes on
the goal and go straight through between both errors.  We have no other concern
than that with either of them.





7


LET'S PRETEND




May I once again start by putting two pictures, or two stories rather, into your
minds?  One is the story you have all read called Beauty and the Beast.  The girl,
you remember, had to marry a monster for some reason.  And she did.  She kissed it
as if it were a man.  And then, much to her relief, it really turned into a man
and all went well.  The other story is about someone who had to wear a mask; a
mask which made him look much nicer than he really was.  He had to wear it for
years.  And when he took it off he found his own face had grown to fit it.  He was
now really beautiful.  What had begun as disguise had become a reality.  I think
both these stories may (in a fanciful way, of course) help to illustrate what I
have to say in this chapter.  Up till now, I have been trying to describe
facts--what God is and what He has done.  Now I want to talk about practice--what
do we do next?  What difference does all this theology make?  It can start making
a difference tonight.  If you are interested enough to have read thus far you are
probably interested enough to make a shot at saying your prayers: and, whatever
else you say, you will probably say the Lord's Prayer.

Its very first words are Our Father.  Do you now see what those words mean?  They
mean quite frankly, that you are putting yourself in the place of a son of God.
To put it bluntly, you are dressing up as Christ.  If you like, you are
pretending.  Because, of course, the moment you realise what the words mean, you
realise that you are not a son of God.  You are not a being like The Son of God,
whose will and interests are at one with those of the Father: you are a bundle of
self-centred fears, hopes, greeds, jealousies, and self-conceit, all doomed to
death.  So that, in a way, this dressing up as Christ is a piece of outrageous
cheek.  But the odd thing is that He has ordered us to do it.

Why?  What is the good of pretending to be what you are not?  Well, even on the
human level, you know, there are two kinds of pretending.  There is a bad kind,
where the pretence is there instead of the real thing; as when a man pretends he
is going to help you instead of really helping you.  But there is also a good
kind, where the pretence leads up to the real thing.  When you are not feeling
particularly friendly but know you ought to be, the best thing you can do, very
often, is to put on a friendly manner and behave as if you were a nicer person
than you actually are.  And in a few minutes, as we have all noticed, you will be
really feeling friendlier than you were.  Very often the only way to get a quality
in reality is to start behaving as if you had it already.  That is why children's
games are so important.  They are always pretending to be grown-ups--playing
soldiers, playing shop.  But all the time, they are hardening their muscles and
sharpening their wits so that the pretence of being grown-up helps them to grow up
in earnest.

Now, the moment you realise 'Here I am, dressing up as Christ,' it is extremely
likely that you will see at once some way in which at that very moment the
pretence could be made less of a pretence and more of a reality.  You will find
several things going on in your mind which would not be going on there if you were
really a son of God.  Well, stop them.  Or you may realise that, instead of saying
your prayers, you ought to be downstairs writing a letter, or helping your wife to
wash-up.  Well, go and do it.

You see what is happening.  The Christ Himself, the Son of God who is man (just
like you) and God (just like His Father) is actually at your side and is already
at that moment beginning to turn your pretence into a reality.  This is not merely
a fancy way of saying that your conscience is telling you what to do.  If you
simply ask your conscience, you get one result; if you remember that you are
dressing up as Christ, you get a different one.  There are lots of things which
your conscience might not call definitely wrong (specially things in your mind)
but which you will see at once you cannot go on doing if you are seriously trying
to be like Christ.  For you are no longer thinking simply about right and wrong;
you are trying to catch the good infection from a Person.  It is more like
painting a portrait than like obeying a set of rules.  And the odd thing is that
while in one way it is much harder than keeping rules, in another way it is far
easier.

The real Son of God is at your side.  He is beginning to turn you into the same
kind of thing as Himself.  He is beginning, so to speak, to 'inject' His kind of
life and thought, His Zoe, into you; beginning to turn the tin soldier into a live
man.  The part of you that does not like it is the part that is still tin.

Some of you may feel that this is very unlike your own experience.  You may say
'I've never had the sense of being helped by an invisible Christ, but I often have
been helped by other human beings.' That is rather like the woman in the first war
who said that if there were a bread shortage it would not bother her house because
they always ate toast.  If there is no bread there will be no toast.  If there
were no help from Christ, there would be no help from other human beings.  He
works on us in all sorts of ways: not only through what we think our 'religious
life'.  He works through Nature, through our own bodies, through books, sometimes
through experiences which seem (at the time) anti-Christian.  When a young man who
has been going to church in a routine way honestly realises that he does not
believe in Christianity and stops going--provided he does it for honesty's sake
and not just to annoy his parents--the spirit of Christ is probably nearer to him
then than it ever was before.  But above all, He works on us through each other.

Men are mirrors, or 'carriers' of Christ to other men.  Sometimes unconscious
carriers.  This 'good infection' can be carried by those who have not got it
themselves.  People who were not Christians themselves helped me to Christianity.
But usually it is those who know Him that bring Him to others.  That is why the
Church, the whole body of Christians showing Him to one another, is so important.
You might say that when two Christians are following Christ together there is not
twice as much Christianity as when they are apart, but sixteen times as much.

But do not forget this.  At first it is natural for a baby to take its mother's
milk without knowing its mother.  It is equally natural for us to see the man who
helps us without seeing Christ behind him.  But we must not remain babies.  We
must go on to recognise the real Giver.  It is madness not to.  Because, if we do
not, we shall be relying on human beings.  And that is going to let us down.  The
best of them will make mistakes; all of them will die.  We must be thankful to all
the people who have helped us, we must honour them and love them.  But never,
never pin your whole faith on any human being: not if he is the best and wisest in
the whole world.  There are lots of nice things you can do with sand: but do not
try building a house on it.

And now we begin to see what it is that the New Testament is always talking about.
It talks about Christians 'being born again'; it talks about them 'putting on
Christ'; about Christ 'being formed in us'; about our coming to 'have the mind of
Christ'.

Put right out of your head the idea that these are only fancy ways of saying that
Christians are to read what Christ said and try to carry it out--as a man may read
what Plato or Marx said and try to carry it out.  They mean something much more
than that.  They mean that a real Person, Christ, here and now, in that very room
where you are saying your prayers, is doing things to you.  It is not a question
of a good man who died two thousand years ago.  It is a living Man, still as much
a man as you, and still as much God as He was when He created the world, really
coming and interfering with your very self; killing the old natural self in you
and replacing it with the kind of self He has.  At first, only for moments.  Then
for longer periods.  Finally, if all goes well, turning you permanently into a
different sort of thing; into a new little Christ, a being which, in its own small
way, has the same kind of life as God; which shares in His power, joy, knowledge
and eternity.  And soon we make two other discoveries.

(1) We begin to notice, besides our particular sinful acts, our sinfulness; begin
to be alarmed not only about what we do, but about what we are.  This may sound
rather difficult, so I will try to make it clear from my own case.  When I come to
my evening prayers and try to reckon up the sins of the day, nine times out of ten
the most obvious one is some sin against charity; I have sulked or snapped or
sneered or snubbed or stormed.  And the excuse that immediately springs to my mind
is that the provocation was so sudden and unexpected; I was caught off my guard, I
had not time to collect myself.  Now that may be an extenuating circumstance as
regards those particular acts: they would obviously be worse if they had been
deliberate and premeditated.  On the other hand, surely what a man does when he is
taken off his guard is the best evidence for what sort of a man he is?  Surely
what pops out before the man has time to put on a disguise is the truth?  If there
are rats in a cellar you are most likely to see them if you go in very suddenly.
But the suddenness does not create the rats: it only prevents them from hiding.
In the same way the suddenness of the provocation does not make me an ill-tempered
man; it only shows me what an ill-tempered man I am.  The rats are always there in
the cellar, but if you go in shouting and noisily they will have taken cover
before you switch on the light.  Apparently the rats of resentment and
vindictiveness are always there in the cellar of my soul.  Now that cellar is out
of reach of my conscious will.  I can to some extent control my acts: I have no
direct control over my temperament.  And if (as I said before) what we are matters
even more than what we do--if, indeed, what we do matters chiefly as evidence of
what we are--then it follows that the change which I most need to undergo is a
change that my own direct, voluntary efforts cannot bring about.  And this applies
to my good actions too.  How many of them were done for the right motive?  How
many for fear of public opinion, or a desire to show off?  How many from a sort of
obstinacy or sense of superiority which, in different circumstances, might equally
have led to some very bad act?  But I cannot, by direct moral effort, give myself
new motives.  After the first few steps in the Christian life we realise that
everything which really needs to be done in our souls can be done only by God.
And that brings us to something which has been very misleading in my language up
to now.

(2) I have been talking as if it were we who did everything.  In reality, of
course, it is God who does everything.  We, at most, allow it to be done to us.
In a sense you might even say it is God who does the pretending.  The
Three-Personal God, so to speak, sees before Him in fact a self-centred, greedy,
grumbling, rebellious human animal.  But He says 'Let us pretend that this is not
a mere creature, but our Son.  It is like Christ in so far as it is a Man, for He
became Man.  Let us pretend that it is also like Him in Spirit.  Let us treat it
as if it were what in fact it is not.  Let us pretend in order to make the
pretence into a reality.' God looks at you as if you were a little Christ: Christ
stands beside you to turn you into one.  I daresay this idea of a divine
make-believe sounds rather strange at first.  But, is it so strange really?  Is
not that how the higher thing always raises the lower?  A mother teaches her baby
to talk by talking to it as if it understood long before it really does.  We treat
our dogs as if they were 'almost human': that is why they really become 'almost
human' in the end.





8


IS CHRISTIANITY HARD OR EASY?




In the previous chapter we were considering the Christian idea of 'putting on
Christ', or first 'dressing up' as a son of God in order that you may finally
become a real son.  What I want to make clear is that this is not one among many
jobs a Christian has to do; and it is not a sort of special exercise for the top
class.  It is the whole of Christianity.  Christianity offers nothing else at all.
And I should like to point out how it differs from ordinary ideas of 'morality'
and 'being good'.

The ordinary idea which we all have before we become Christians is this.  We take
as starting point our ordinary self with its various desires and interests.  We
then admit that something else--call it 'morality' or 'decent behaviour', or 'the
good of society'--has claims on this self: claims which interfere with its own
desires.  What we mean by 'being good' is giving in to those claims.  Some of the
things the ordinary self wanted to do turn out to be what we call 'wrong': well,
we must give them up.  Other things, which the self did not want to do, turn out
to be what we call 'right': well, we shall have to do them.  But we are hoping all
the time that when all the demands have been met, the poor natural self will still
have some chance, and some time, to get on with its own life and do what it likes.
In fact, we are very like an honest man paying his taxes.  He pays them all right,
but he does hope that there will be enough left over for him to live on.  Because
we are still taking our natural self as the starting point.

As long as we are thinking that way, one or other of two results is likely to
follow.  Either we give up trying to be good, or else we become very unhappy
indeed.  For, make no mistake: if you are really going to try to meet all the
demands made on the natural self, it will not have enough left over to live on.
The more you obey your conscience, the more your conscience will demand of you.
And your natural self, which is thus being starved and hampered and worried at
every turn, will get angrier and angrier.  In the end, you will either give up
trying to be good, or else become one of those people who, as they say, 'live for
others' but always in a discontented, grumbling way--always wondering why the
others do not notice it more and always making a martyr of yourself.  And once you
have become that you will be a far greater pest to anyone who has to live with you
than you would have been if you had remained frankly selfish.

The Christian way is different: harder, and easier.  Christ says 'Give me All.  I
don't want so much of your time and so much of your money and so much of your
work: I want You.  I have not come to torment your natural self, but to kill it.
No half-measures are any good.  I don't want to cut off a branch here and a branch
there, I want to have the whole tree down.  I don't want to drill the tooth, or
crown it, or stop it, but to have it out.  Hand over the whole natural self, all
the desires which you think innocent as well as the ones you think wicked--the
whole outfit.  I will give you a new self instead.  In fact, I will give you
Myself: my own will shall become yours.'

Both harder and easier than what we are all trying to do.  You have noticed, I
expect, that Christ Himself sometimes describes the Christian way as very hard,
sometimes as very easy.  He says, 'Take up your Cross'--in other words, it is like
going to be beaten to death in a concentration camp.  Next minute he says, 'My
yoke is easy and my burden light.' He means both.  And one can just see why both
are true.

Teachers will tell you that the laziest boy in the class is the one who works
hardest in the end.  They mean this.  If you give two boys, say, a proposition in
geometry to do, the one who is prepared to take trouble will try to understand it.
The lazy boy will try to learn it by heart because, for the moment, that needs
less effort.  But six months later, when they are preparing for an exam, that lazy
boy is doing hours and hours of miserable drudgery over things the other boy
understands, and positively enjoys, in a few minutes.  Laziness means more work in
the long run.  Or look at it this way.  In a battle, or in mountain climbing,
there is often one thing which it takes a lot of pluck to do; but it is also, in
the long run, the safest thing to do.  If you funk it, you will find yourself,
hours later, in far worse danger.  The cowardly thing is also the most dangerous
thing.

It is like that here.  The terrible thing, the almost impossible thing, is to hand
over your whole self--all your wishes and precautions--to Christ.  But it is far
easier than what we are all trying to do instead.  For what we are trying to do is
to remain what we call 'ourselves', to keep personal happiness as our great aim in
life, and yet at the same time be 'good'.  We are all trying to let our mind and
heart go their own way--centred on money or pleasure or ambition--and hoping, in
spite of this, to behave honestly and chastely and humbly.  And that is exactly
what Christ warned us you could not do.  As He said, a thistle cannot produce
figs.  If I am a field that contains nothing but grass-seed, I cannot produce
wheat.  Cutting the grass may keep it short: but I shall still produce grass and
no wheat.  If I want to produce wheat, the change must go deeper than the surface.
I must be ploughed up and re-sown.

That is why the real problem of the Christian life comes where people do not
usually look for it.  It comes the very moment you wake up each morning.  All your
wishes and hopes for the day rush at you like wild animals.  And the first job
each morning consists simply in shoving them all back; in listening to that other
voice, taking that other point of view, letting that other larger, stronger,
quieter life come flowing in.  And so on, all day.  Standing back from all your
natural fussings and frettings; coming in out of the wind.

We can only do it for moments at first.  But from those moments the new sort of
life will be spreading through our system: because now we are letting Him work at
the right part of us.  It is the difference between paint, which is merely laid on
the surface, and a dye or stain which soaks right through.  He never talked vague,
idealistic gas.  When He said, 'Be perfect,' He meant it.  He meant that we must
go in for the full treatment.  It is hard; but the sort of compromise we are all
hankering after is harder--in fact, it is impossible.  It may be hard for an egg
to turn into a bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to learn to fly while
remaining an egg.  We are like eggs at present.  And you cannot go on indefinitely
being just an ordinary, decent egg.  We must be hatched or go bad.

May I come back to what I said before?  This is the whole of Christianity.  There
is nothing else.  It is so easy to get muddled about that.  It is easy to think
that the Church has a lot of different objects--education, building, missions,
holding services.  Just as it is easy to think the State has a lot of different
objects--military, political, economic, and what not.  But in a way things are
much simpler than that.  The State exists simply to promote and to protect the
ordinary happiness of human beings in this life.  A husband and wife chatting over
a fire, a couple of friends having a game of darts in a pub, a man reading a book
in his own room or digging in his own garden--that is what the State is there for.
And unless they are helping to increase and prolong and protect such moments, all
the laws, parliaments, armies, courts, police, economics, etc., are simply a waste
of time.  In the same way the Church exists for nothing else but to draw men into
Christ, to make them little Christs.  If they are not doing that, all the
cathedrals, clergy, missions, sermons, even the Bible itself, are simply a waste
of time.  God became Man for no other purpose.  It is even doubtful, you know,
whether the whole universe was created for any other purpose.  It says in the
Bible that the whole universe was made for Christ and that everything is to be
gathered together in Him.  I do not suppose any of us can understand how this will
happen as regards the whole universe.  We do not know what (if anything) lives in
the parts of it that are millions of miles away from this Earth.  Even on this
Earth we do not know how it applies to things other than men.  After all, that is
what you would expect.  We have been shown the plan only in so far as it concerns
ourselves.

I sometimes like to imagine that I can just see how it might apply to other
things.  I think I can see how the higher animals are in a sense drawn into Man
when he loves them and makes them (as he does) much more nearly human than they
would otherwise be.  I can even see a sense in which the dead things and plants
are drawn into Man as he studies them and uses and appreciates them.  And if there
were intelligent creatures in other worlds they might do the same with their
worlds.  It might be that when intelligent creatures entered into Christ they
would, in that way, bring all the other things in along with them.  But I do not
know: it is only a guess.

What we have been told is how we men can be drawn into Christ--can become part of
that wonderful present which the young Prince of the universe wants to offer to
His Father--that present which is Himself and therefore us in Him.  It is the only
thing we were made for.  And there are strange, exciting hints in the Bible that
when we are drawn in, a great many other things in Nature will begin to come
right.  The bad dream will be over: it will be morning.





9


COUNTING THE COST




I find a good many people have been bothered by what I said in the previous
chapter about Our Lord's words, 'Be ye perfect'.  Some people seem to think this
means 'Unless you are perfect, I will not help you'; and as we cannot be perfect,
then, if He meant that, our position is hopeless.  But I do not think He did mean
that.  I think He meant 'The only help I will give is help to become perfect.  You
may want something less: but I will give you nothing less.'

Let me explain.  When I was a child I often had toothache, and I knew that if I
went to my mother she would give me something which would deaden the pain for that
night and let me get to sleep.  But I did not go to my mother--at least, not till
the pain became very bad.  And the reason I did not go was this.  I did not doubt
she would give me the aspirin; but I knew she would also do something else.  I
knew she would take me to the dentist next morning.  I could not get what I wanted
out of her without getting something more, which I did not want.  I wanted
immediate relief from pain: but I could not get it without having my teeth set
permanently right.  And I knew those dentists: I knew they started fiddling about
with all sorts of other teeth which had not yet begun to ache.  They would not let
sleeping dogs lie, if you gave them an inch they took an ell.

Now, if I may put it that way, Our Lord is like the dentists.  If you give Him an
inch, He will take an ell.  Dozens of people go to Him to be cured of some one
particular sin which they are ashamed of (like masturbation or physical cowardice)
or which is obviously spoiling daily life (like bad temper or drunkenness).  Well,
He will cure it all right: but He will not stop there.  That may be all you asked;
but if once you call Him in, He will give you the full treatment.

That is why He warned people to 'count the cost' before becoming Christians.
'Make no mistake,' He says, 'if you let me, I will make you perfect.  The moment
you put yourself in My hands, that is what you are in for.  Nothing less, or
other, than that.  You have free will, and if you choose, you can push Me away.
But if you do not push Me away, understand that I am going to see this job
through.  Whatever suffering it may cost you in your earthly life, whatever
inconceivable purification it may cost you after death, whatever it costs Me, I
will never rest, nor let you rest, until you are literally perfect--until my
Father can say without reservation that He is well pleased with you, as He said He
was well pleased with me.  This I can do and will do.  But I will not do anything
less.'

And yet--this is the other and equally important side of it--this Helper who will,
in the long run, be satisfied with nothing less than absolute perfection, will
also be delighted with the first feeble, stumbling effort you make tomorrow to do
the simplest duty.  As a great Christian writer (George MacDonald) pointed out,
every father is pleased at the baby's first attempt to walk: no father would be
satisfied with anything less than a firm, free, manly walk in a grown-up son.  In
the same way, he said, 'God is easy to please, but hard to satisfy.'

The practical upshot is this.  On the one hand, God's demand for perfection need
not discourage you in the least in your present attempts to be good, or even in
your present failures.  Each time you fall He will pick you up again.  And He
knows perfectly well that your own efforts are never going to bring you anywhere
near perfection.  On the other hand, you must realise from the outset that the
goal towards which He is beginning to guide you is absolute perfection; and no
power in the whole universe, except you yourself, can prevent Him from taking you
to that goal.  That is what you are in for.  And it is very important to realise
that.  If we do not, then we are very likely to start pulling back and resisting
Him after a certain point.  I think that many of us, when Christ has enabled us to
overcome one or two sins that were an obvious nuisance, are inclined to feel
(though we do not put it into words) that we are now good enough.  He has done all
we wanted Him to do, and we should be obliged if He would now leave us alone.  As
we say 'I never expected to be a saint, I only wanted to be a decent ordinary
chap.' And we imagine when we say this that we are being humble.

But this is the fatal mistake.  Of course we never wanted, and never asked, to be
made into the sort of creatures He is going to make us into.  But the question is
not what we intended ourselves to be, but what He intended us to be when He made
us.  He is the inventor, we are only the machine.  He is the painter, we are only
the picture.  How should we know what He means us to be like?  You see, He has
already made us something very different from what we were.  Long ago, before we
were born, when we were inside our mothers' bodies, we passed through various
stages.  We were once rather like vegetables, and once rather like fish: it was
only at a later stage that we became like human babies.  And if we had been
conscious at those earlier stages, I daresay we should have been quite contented
to stay as vegetables or fish--should not have wanted to be made into babies.  But
all the time He knew His plan for us and was determined to carry it out.
Something the same is now happening at a higher level.  We may be content to
remain what we call 'ordinary people': but He is determined to carry out a quite
different plan.  To shrink back from that plan is not humility: it is laziness and
cowardice.  To submit to it is not conceit or megalomania; it is obedience.

Here is another way of putting the two sides of the truth.  On the one hand we
must never imagine that our own unaided efforts can be relied on to carry us even
through the next twenty-four hours as 'decent' people.  If He does not support us,
not one of us is safe from some gross sin.  On the other hand, no possible degree
of holiness or heroism which has ever been recorded of the greatest saints is
beyond what He is determined to produce in every one of us in the end.  The job
will not be completed in this life; but He means to get us as far as possible
before death.

That is why we must not be surprised if we are in for a rough time.  When a man
turns to Christ and seems to be getting on pretty well (in the sense that some of
his bad habits are now corrected) he often feels that it would now be natural if
things went fairly smoothly.  When troubles come along--ill-nesses, money
troubles, new kinds of temptation--he is disappointed.  These things, he feels,
might have been necessary to rouse him and make him repent in his bad old days;
but why now?  Because God is forcing him on, or up, to a higher level: putting him
into situations where he will have to be very much braver, or more patient, or
more loving, than he ever dreamed of being before.  It seems to us all
unnecessary: but that is because we have not yet had the slightest notion of the
tremendous thing He means to make of us.

I find I must borrow yet another parable from George MacDonald.  Imagine yourself
as a living house.  God comes in to rebuild that house.  At first, perhaps, you
can understand what He is doing.  He is getting the drains right and stopping the
leaks in the roof and so on: you knew that those jobs needed doing and so you are
not surprised.  But presently he starts knocking the house about in a way that
hurts abominably and does not seem to make sense.  What on earth is He up to?  The
explanation is that He is building quite a different house from the one you
thought of--throwing out a new wing here, putting on an extra floor there, running
up towers, making courtyards.  You thought you were going to be made into a decent
little cottage: but He is building a palace.  He intends to come and live in it
Himself.

The command Be ye perfect is not idealistic gas.  Nor is it a command to do the
impossible.  He is going to make us into creatures that can obey that command.  He
said (in the Bible) that we were 'gods' and He is going to make good His words.
If we let Him--for we can prevent Him, if we choose--He will make the feeblest and
filthiest of us into a god or goddess, a dazzling, radiant, immortal creature,
pulsating all through with such energy and joy and wisdom and love as we cannot
now imagine, a bright stainless mirror which reflects back to God perfectly
(though, of course, on a smaller scale) His own boundless power and delight and
goodness.  The process will be long and in parts very painful, but that is what we
are in for.  Nothing less.  He meant what He said.





10


NICE PEOPLE OR NEW MEN




He meant what He said.  Those who put themselves in His hands will become perfect,
as He is perfect--perfect in love, wisdom, joy, beauty, and immortality.  The
change will not be completed in this life, for death is an important part of the
treatment.  How far the change will have gone before death in any particular
Christian is uncertain.

I think this is the right moment to consider a question which is often asked: If
Christianity is true why are not all Christians obviously nicer than all
non-Christians?  What lies behind that question is partly something very
reasonable and partly something that is not reasonable at all.  The reasonable
part is this.  If conversion to Christianity makes no improvement in a man's
outward actions--if he continues to be just as snobbish or spiteful or envious or
ambitious as he was before--then I think we must suspect that his 'conversion' was
largely imaginary; and after one's original conversion, every time one thinks one
has made an advance, that is the test to apply.  Fine feelings, new insights,
greater interest in 'religion' mean nothing unless they make our actual behaviour
better; just as in an illness 'feeling better' is not much good if the thermometer
shows that your temperature is still going up.  In that sense the outer world is
quite right to judge Christianity by its results.  Christ told us to judge by
results.  A tree is known by its fruit; or, as we say, the proof of the pudding is
in the eating.  When we Christians behave badly, or fail to behave well, we are
making Christianity unbelievable to the outside world.  The war-time posters told
us that Careless Talk costs Lives.  It is equally true that Careless Lives cost
Talk.  Our careless lives set the outer world talking; and we give them grounds
for talking in a way that throws doubt on the truth of Christianity itself.

But there is another way of demanding results in which the outer world may be
quite illogical.  They may demand not merely that each man's life should improve
if he becomes a Christian: they may also demand before they believe in
Christianity that they should see the whole world neatly divided into two
camps--Christian and non-Christian--and that all the people in the first camp at
any given moment should be obviously nicer than all the people in the second.
This is unreasonable on several grounds.

(1) In the first place the situation in the actual world is much more complicated
than that.  The world does not consist of 100 per cent.  Christians and 100 per
cent.  non-Christians.  There are people (a great many of them) who are slowly
ceasing to be Christians but who still call themselves by that name: some of them
are clergymen.  There are other people who are slowly becoming Christians though
they do not yet call themselves so.  There are people who do not accept the full
Christian doctrine about Christ but who are so strongly attracted by Him that they
are His in a much deeper sense than they themselves understand.  There are people
in other religions who are being led by God's secret influence to concentrate on
those parts of their religion which are in agreement with Christianity, and who
thus belong to Christ without knowing it.  For example, a Buddhist of good will
may be led to concentrate more and more on the Buddhist teaching about mercy and
to leave in the background (though he might still say he believed) the Buddhist
teaching on certain other points.  Many of the good Pagans long before Christ's
birth may have been in this position.  And always, of course, there are a great
many people who are just confused in mind and have a lot of inconsistent beliefs
all jumbled up together.  Consequently, it is not much use trying to make
judgments about Christians and non-Christians in the mass.  It is some use
comparing cats and dogs, or even men and women, in the mass, because there one
knows definitely which is which.  Also, an animal does not turn (either slowly or
suddenly) from a dog into a cat.  But when we are comparing Christians in general
with non-Christians in general, we are usually not thinking about real people whom
we know at all, but only about two vague ideas which we have got from novels and
newspapers.  If you want to compare the bad Christian and the good Atheist, you
must think about two real specimens whom you have actually met.  Unless we come
down to brass tacks in that way, we shall only be wasting time.

(2) Suppose we have come down to brass tacks and are now talking not about an
imaginary Christian and an imaginary non-Christian, but about two real people in
our own neighbourhood.  Even then we must be careful to ask the right question.
If Christianity is true then it ought to follow (a) That any Christian will be
nicer than the same person would be if he were not a Christian.  (b) That any man
who becomes a Christian will be nicer than he was before.  Just in the same way,
if the advertisements of Whitesmile's toothpaste are true it ought to follow (a)
That anyone who uses it will have better teeth than the same person would have if
he did not use it.  (b) That if anyone begins to use it his teeth will improve.
But to point out that I, who use Whitesmile's (and also have inherited bad teeth
from both my parents) have not got as fine a set as some healthy young negro who
never used any toothpaste at all, does not, by itself, prove that the
advertisements are untrue.  Christian Miss Bates may have an unkinder tongue than
unbelieving Dick Firkin.  That, by itself, does not tell us whether Christianity
works.  The question is what Miss Bates's tongue would be like if she were not a
Christian and what Dick's would be like if he became one.  Miss Bates and Dick, as
a result of natural causes and early upbringing, have certain temperaments:
Christianity professes to put both temperaments under new management if they will
allow it to do so.  What you have a right to ask is whether that management, if
allowed to take over, improves the concern.  Everyone knows that what is being
managed in Dick Firkin's case is much 'nicer' than what is being managed in Miss
Bates's.  That is not the point.  To judge the management of a factory, you must
consider not only the output but the plant.  Considering the plant at Factory A it
may be a wonder that it turns out anything at all; considering the first-class
outfit at Factory B its output, though high, may be a great deal lower than it
ought to be.  No doubt the good manager at Factory A is going to put in new
machinery as soon as he can, but that takes time.  In the meantime low output does
not prove that he is a failure.

(3) And now, let us go a little deeper.  The manager is going to put in new
machinery: before Christ has finished with Miss Bates, she is going to be very
'nice' indeed.  But if we left it at that, it would sound as though Christ's only
aim was to pull Miss Bates up to the same level on which Dick had been all along.
We have been talking, in fact, as if Dick were all right; as if Christianity was
something nasty people needed and nice ones could afford to do without; and as if
niceness was all that God demanded.  But this would be a fatal mistake.  The truth
is that in God's eyes Dick Firkin needs 'saving' every bit as much as Miss Bates.
In one sense (I will explain what sense in a moment) niceness hardly comes into
the question.

You cannot expect God to look at Dick's placid temper and friendly disposition
exactly as we do.  They result from natural causes which God Himself creates.
Being merely temperamental, they will all disappear if Dick's digestion alters.
The niceness, in fact, is God's gift to Dick, not Dick's gift to God.  In the same
way, God has allowed natural causes, working in a world spoiled by centuries of
sin, to produce in Miss Bates the narrow mind and jangled nerves which account for
most of her nastiness.  He intends, in His own good time, to set that part of her
right.  But that is not, for God, the critical part of the business.  It presents
no difficulties.  It is not what He is anxious about.  What He is watching and
waiting and working for is something that is not easy even for God, because, from
the nature of the case, even He cannot produce it by a mere act of power.  He is
waiting and watching for it both in Miss Bates and in Dick Firkin.  It is
something they can freely give Him or freely refuse to Him.  Will they, or will
they not, turn to Him and thus fulfil the only purpose for which they were
created?  Their free will is trembling inside them like the needle of a compass.
But this is a needle that can choose.  It can point to its true North; but it need
not.  Will the needle swing round, and settle, and point to God?

He can help it to do so.  He cannot force it.  He cannot, so to speak, put out His
own hand and pull it into the right position, for then it would not be free will
any more.  Will it point North?  That is the question on which all hangs.  Will
Miss Bates and Dick offer their natures to God?  The question whether the natures
they offer or withhold are, at that moment, nice or nasty ones, is of secondary
importance.  God can see to that part of the problem.

Do not misunderstand me.  Of course God regards a nasty nature as a bad and
deplorable thing.  And, of course, He regards a nice nature as a good thing--good
like bread, or sunshine, or water.  But these are the good things which He gives
and we receive.  He created Dick's sound nerves and good digestion, and there is
plenty more where they came from.  It costs God nothing, so far as we know, to
create nice things: but to convert rebellious wills cost His crucifixion.  And
because they are wills they can--in nice people just as much as in nasty
ones--refuse His request.  And then, because that niceness in Dick was merely part
of nature, it will all go to pieces in the end.  Nature herself will all pass
away.  Natural causes come together in Dick to make a pleasant psychological
pattern, just as they come together in a sunset to make a pleasant pattern of
colours.  Presently (for that is how nature works) they will fall apart again and
the pattern in both cases will disappear.  Dick has had the chance to turn (or
rather, to allow God to turn) that momentary pattern into the beauty of an eternal
spirit: and he has not taken it.

There is a paradox here.  As long as Dick does not turn to God, he thinks his
niceness is his own, and just as long as he thinks that, it is not his own.  It is
when Dick realises that his niceness is not his own but a gift from God, and when
he offers it back to God--it is just then that it begins to be really his own.
For now Dick is beginning to take a share in his own creation.  The only things we
can keep are the things we freely give to God.  What we try to keep for ourselves
is just what we are sure to lose.

We must, therefore, not be surprised if we find among the Christians some people
who are still nasty.  There is even, when you come to think it over, a reason why
nasty people might be expected to turn to Christ in greater numbers than nice
ones.  That was what people objected to about Christ during His life on earth: He
seemed to attract 'such awful people'.  That is what people still object to and
always will.  Do you not see why?  Christ said 'Blessed are the poor' and 'How
hard it is for the rich to enter the Kingdom,' and no doubt He primarily meant the
economically rich and economically poor.  But do not His words also apply to
another kind of riches and poverty?  One of the dangers of having a lot of money
is that you may be quite satisfied with the kinds of happiness money can give and
so fail to realise your need for God.  If everything seems to come simply by
signing cheques, you may forget that you are at every moment totally dependent on
God.  Now quite plainly, natural gifts carry with them a similar danger.  If you
have sound nerves and intelligence and health and popularity and a good
upbringing, you are likely to be quite satisfied with your character as it is.
'Why drag God into it?' you may ask.  A certain level of good conduct comes fairly
easily to you.  You are not one of those wretched creatures who are always being
tripped up by sex, or dipsomania, or nervousness, or bad temper.  Everyone says
you are a nice chap and (between ourselves) you agree with them.  You are quite
likely to believe that all this niceness is your own doing: and you may easily not
feel the need for any better kind of goodness.  Often people who have all these
natural kinds of goodness cannot be brought to recognise their need for Christ at
all until, one day, the natural goodness lets them down and their
self-satisfaction is shattered.  In other words, it is hard for those who are
'rich' in this sense to enter the Kingdom.

It is very different for the nasty people--the little, low, timid, warped,
thin-blooded, lonely people, or the passionate, sensual, unbalanced people.  If
they make any attempt at goodness at all, they learn, in double quick time, that
they need help.  It is Christ or nothing for them.  It is taking up the cross and
following--or else despair.  They are the lost sheep; He came specially to find
them.  They are (in one very real and terrible sense) the 'poor': He blessed them.
They are the 'awful set' He goes about with--and of course the Pharisees say
still, as they said from the first, 'If there were anything in Christianity those
people would not be Christians.'

There is either a warning or an encouragement here for every one of us.  If you
are a nice person--if virtue comes easily to you--beware!  Much is expected from
those to whom much is given.  If you mistake for your own merits what are really
God's gifts to you through nature, and if you are contented with simply being
nice, you are still a rebel: and all those gifts will only make your fall more
terrible, your corruption more complicated, your bad example more disastrous.  The
Devil was an archangel once; his natural gifts were as far above yours as yours
are above those of a chimpanzee.

But if you are a poor creature--poisoned by a wretched upbringing in some house
full of vulgar jealousies and senseless quarrels--saddled, by no choice of your
own, with some loathsome sexual perversion--nagged day in and day out by an
inferiority complex that makes you snap at your best friends--do not despair.  He
knows all about it.  You are one of the poor whom He blessed.  He knows what a
wretched machine you are trying to drive.  Keep on.  Do what you can.  One day
(perhaps in another world, but perhaps far sooner than that) He will fling it on
the scrap-heap and give you a new one.  And then you may astonish us all--not
least yourself: for you have learned your driving in a hard school.  (Some of the
last will be first and some of the first will be last).

'Niceness'--wholesome, integrated personality--is an excellent thing.  We must try
by every medical, educational, economic, and political means in our power to
produce a world where as many people as possible grow up 'nice'; just as we must
try to produce a world where all have plenty to eat.  But we must not suppose that
even if we succeeded in making everyone nice we should have saved their souls.  A
world of nice people, content in their own niceness, looking no further, turned
away from God, would be just as desperately in need of salvation as a miserable
world--and might even be more difficult to save.

For mere improvement is not redemption, though redemption always improves people
even here and now and will, in the end, improve them to a degree we cannot yet
imagine.  God became man to turn creatures into sons: not simply to produce better
men of the old kind but to produce a new kind of man.  It is not like teaching a
horse to jump better and better but like turning a horse into a winged creature.
Of course, once it has got its wings, it will soar over fences which could never
have been jumped and thus beat the natural horse at its own game.  But there may
be a period, while the wings are just beginning to grow, when it cannot do so: and
at that stage the lumps on the shoulders--no one could tell by looking at them
that they are going to be wings--may even give it an awkward appearance.

But perhaps we have already spent too long on this question.  If what you want is
an argument against Christianity (and I well remember how eagerly I looked for
such arguments when I began to be afraid it was true) you can easily find some
stupid and unsatisfactory Christian and say, 'So there's your boasted new man!
Give me the old kind.' But if once you have begun to see that Christianity is on
other grounds probable, you will know in your heart that this is only evading the
issue.  What can you ever really know of other people's souls--of their
temptations, their opportunities, their struggles?  One soul in the whole creation
you do know: and it is the only one whose fate is placed in your hands.  If there
is a God, you are, in a sense, alone with Him.  You cannot put Him off with
speculations about your next door neighbours or memories of what you have read in
books.  What will all that chatter and hearsay count (will you even be able to
remember it?) when the anaesthetic fog which we call 'nature' or 'the real world'
fades away and the Presence in which you have always stood becomes palpable,
immediate, and unavoidable?





11


THE NEW MEN




In the last chapter I compared Christ's work of making New Men to the process of
turning a horse into a winged creature.  I used that extreme example in order to
emphasise the point that it is not mere improvement but Transformation.  The
nearest parallel to it in the world of nature is to be found in the remarkable
transformations we can make in insects by applying certain rays to them.  Some
people think this is how Evolution worked.  The alterations in creatures on which
it all depends may have been produced by rays coming from outer space.  (Of course
once the alterations are there, what they call 'Natural Selection' gets to work on
them: i.e.  the useful alterations survive and the other ones get weeded out.)

Perhaps a modern man can understand the Christian idea best if he takes it in
connection with Evolution.  Everyone now knows about Evolution (though, of course,
some educated people disbelieve it) : everyone has been told that man has evolved
from lower types of life.  Consequently, people often wonder 'What is the next
step?  When is the thing beyond man going to appear?' Imaginative writers try
sometimes to picture this next step--the 'Superman' as they call him; but they
usually only succeed in picturing someone a good deal nastier than man as we know
him and then try to make up for that by sticking on extra legs or arms.  But
supposing the next step was to be something even more different from the earlier
steps than they ever dreamed of?  And is it not very likely it would be?
Thousands of centuries ago huge, very heavily armoured creatures were evolved.  If
anyone had at that time been watching the course of Evolution he would probably
have expected that it was going to go on to heavier and heavier armour.  But he
would have been wrong.  The future had a card up its sleeve which nothing at that
time would have led him to expect.  It was going to spring on him little, naked,
unarmoured animals which had better brains: and with those brains they were going
to master the whole planet.  They were not merely going to have more power than
the prehistoric monsters, they were going to have a new kind of power.  The next
step was not only going to be different, but different with a new kind of
difference.  The stream of Evolution was not going to flow on in the direction in
which he saw it flowing: it was in fact going to take a sharp bend.

Now it seems to me that most of the popular guesses at the Next Step are making
just the same sort of mistake.  People see (or at any rate they think they see)
men developing great brains and getting greater mastery over nature.  And because
they think the stream is flowing in that direction, they imagine it will go on
flowing in that direction.  But I cannot help thinking that the Next Step will be
really new; it will go off in a direction you could never have dreamed of.  It
would hardly be worth calling a New Step unless it did.  I should expect not
merely difference but a new kind of difference.  I should expect not merely change
but a new method of producing the change.  Or, to make an Irish bull, I should
expect the next stage in Evolution not to be a stage in Evolution at all: should
expect that Evolution itself as a method of producing change will be superseded.
And finally, I should not be surprised if, when the thing happened, very few
people noticed that it was happening.

Now, if you care to talk in these terms, the Christian view is precisely that the
Next Step has already appeared.  And it is really new.  It is not a change from
brainy men to brainier men: it is a change that goes off in a totally different
direction--a change from being creatures of God to being sons of God.  The first
instance appeared in Palestine two thousand years ago.  In a sense, the change is
not 'Evolution' at all, because it is not something arising out of the natural
process of events but something coming into nature from outside.  But that is what
I should expect.  We arrived at our idea of 'Evolution' from studying the past.
If there are real novelties in store then of course our idea, based on the past,
will not really cover them.  And in fact this New Step differs from all previous
ones not only in coming from outside nature but in several other ways as well.

(1) It is not carried on by sexual reproduction.  Need we be surprised at that?
There was a time before sex had appeared; development used to go on by different
methods.  Consequently, we might have expected that there would come a time when
sex disappeared, or else (which is what is actually happening) a time when sex,
though it continued to exist, ceased to be the main channel of a development.

(2) At the earlier stages living organisms have had either no choice or very
little choice about taking the new step.  Progress was, in the main, something
that happened to them, not something that they did.  But the new step, the step
from being creatures to being sons, is voluntary.  At least, voluntary in one
sense.  It is not voluntary in the sense that we, of ourselves, could have chosen
to take it or could even have imagined it; but it is voluntary in the sense that
when it is offered to us, we can refuse it.  We can, if we please, shrink back; we
can dig in our heels and let the new Humanity go on without us.

(3) I have called Christ the 'first instance' of the new man.  But of course He is
something much more than that.  He is not merely a new man, one specimen of the
species, but the new man.  He is the origin and centre and life of all the new
men.  He came into the created universe, of His own will, bringing with Him the
Zoe, the new life.  (I mean new to us, of course: in its own place Zoe has existed
for ever and ever.) And He transmits it not by heredity but by what I have called
'good infection'.  Everyone who gets it gets it by personal contact with Him.
Other men become 'new' by being 'in Him'.

(4) This step is taken at a different speed from the previous ones.  Compared with
the development of man on this planet, the diffusion of Christianity over the
human race seems to go like a flash of lightning--for two thousand years is almost
nothing in the history of the universe.  (Never forget that we are all still 'the
early Christians'.  The present wicked and wasteful divisions between us are, let
us hope, a disease of infancy: we are still teething.  The outer world, no doubt,
thinks just the opposite.  It thinks we are dying of old age.  But it has thought
that very often before.  Again and again it has thought Christianity was dying,
dying by persecutions from without and corruptions from within, by the rise of
Mohammedanism, the rise of the physical sciences, the rise of great anti-Christian
revolutionary movements.  But every time the world has been disappointed.  Its
first disappointment was over the crucifixion.  The Man came to life again.  In a
sense--and I quite realise how frightfully unfair it must seem to them--that has
been happening ever since.  They keep on killing the thing that He started: and
each time, just as they are patting down the earth on its grave, they suddenly
hear that it is still alive and has even broken out in some new place.  No wonder
they hate us.)

(5) The stakes are higher.  By falling back at the earlier steps a creature lost,
at the worst, its few years of life on this earth: very often it did not lose even
that.  By falling back at this step we lose a prize which is (in the strictest
sense of the word) infinite.  For now the critical moment has arrived.  Century by
century God has guided nature up to the point of producing creatures which can (if
they will) be taken right out of nature, turned into 'gods'.  Will they allow
themselves to be taken?  In a way, it is like the crisis of birth.  Until we rise
and follow Christ we are still parts of Nature, still in the womb of our great
mother.  Her pregnancy has been long and painful and anxious, but it has reached
its climax.  The great moment has come.  Everything is ready.  The Doctor has
arrived.  Will the birth 'go off all right'?  But of course it differs from an
ordinary birth in one important respect.  In an ordinary birth the baby has not
much choice: here it has.  I wonder what an ordinary baby would do if it had the
choice.  It might prefer to stay in the dark and warmth and safety of the womb.
For of course it would think the womb meant safety.  That would be just where it
was wrong; for if it stays there it will die.

On this view the thing has happened: the new step has been taken and is being
taken.  Already the new men are dotted here and there all over the earth.  Some,
as I have admitted, are still hardly recognisable: but others can be recognised.
Every now and then one meets them.  Their very voices and faces are different from
ours: stronger, quieter, happier, more radiant.  They begin where most of us leave
off.  They are, I say, recognisable; but you must know what to look for.  They
will not be very like the idea of 'religious people' which you have formed from
your general reading.  They do not draw attention to themselves.  You tend to
think that you are being kind to them when they are really being kind to you.
They love you more than other men do, but they need you less.  (We must get over
wanting to be needed: in some goodish people, specially women, that is the hardest
of all temptations to resist.) They will usually seem to have a lot of time: you
will wonder where it comes from.  When you have recognised one of them, you will
recognise the next one much more easily.  And I strongly suspect (but how should I
know?) that they recognise one another immediately and infallibly, across every
barrier of colour, sex, class, age, and even of creeds.  In that way, to become
holy is rather like joining a secret society.  To put it at the very lowest, it
must be great fun.

But you must not imagine that the new men are, in the ordinary sense, all alike.
A good deal of what I have been saying in this last book might make you suppose
that that was bound to be so.  To become new men means losing what we now call
'ourselves'.  Out of our selves, into Christ, we must go.  His will is to become
ours and we are to think His thoughts, to 'have the mind of Christ' as the Bible
says.  And if Christ is one, and if He is thus to be 'in' us all, shall we not be
exactly the same?  It certainly sounds like it; but in fact it is not so.

It is difficult here to get a good illustration; because, of course, no other two
things are related to each other just as the Creator is related to one of His
creatures.  But I will try two very imperfect illustrations which may give a hint
of the truth.  Imagine a lot of people who have always lived in the dark.  You
come and try to describe to them what light is like.  You might tell them that if
they come into the light that same light would fall on them all and they would all
reflect it and thus become what we call visible.  Is it not quite possible that
they would imagine that, since they were all receiving the same light, and all
reacting to it in the same way (i.e.  all reflecting it), they would all look
alike?  Whereas you and I know that the light will in fact bring out, or show up,
how different they are.  Or again, suppose a person who knew nothing about salt.
You give him a pinch to taste and he experiences a particular strong, sharp taste.
You then tell him that in your country people use salt in all their cookery.
Might he not reply 'In that case I suppose all your dishes taste exactly the same:
because the taste of that stuff you have just given me is so strong that it will
kill the taste of everything else.' But you and I know that the real effect of
salt is exactly the opposite.  So far from killing the taste of the egg and the
tripe and the cabbage, it actually brings it out.  They do not show their real
taste till you have added the salt.  (Of course, as I warned you, this is not
really a very good illustration, because you can, after all, kill the other tastes
by putting in too much salt, whereas you cannot kill the taste of a human
personality by putting in too much Christ.  I am doing the best I can.)

It is something like that with Christ and us.  The more we get what we now call
'ourselves' out of the way and let Him take us over, the more truly ourselves we
become.  There is so much of Him that millions and millions of 'little Christs',
all different, will still be too few to express Him fully.  He made them all.  He
invented--as an author invents characters in a novel--all the different men that
you and I were intended to be.  In that sense our real selves are all waiting for
us in Him.  It is no good trying to 'be myself' without Him.  The more I resist
Him and try to live on my own, the more I become dominated by my own heredity and
upbringing and surroundings and natural desires.  In fact what I so proudly call
'Myself' becomes merely the meeting place for trains of events which I never
started and which I cannot stop.  What I call 'My wishes' become merely the
desires thrown up by my physical organism or pumped into me by other men's
thoughts or even suggested to me by devils.  Eggs and alcohol and a good night's
sleep will be the real origins of what I flatter myself by regarding as my own
highly personal and discriminating decision to make love to the girl opposite to
me in the railway carriage.  Propaganda will be the real origin of what I regard
as my own personal political ideas.  I am not, in my natural state, nearly so much
of a person as I like to believe: most of what I call 'me' can be very easily
explained.  It is when I turn to Christ, when I give myself up to His Personality,
that I first begin to have a real personality of my own.

At the beginning I said there were Personalities in God.  I will go further now.
There are no real personalities anywhere else.  Until you have given up your self
to Him you will not have a real self.  Sameness is to be found most among the most
'natural' men, not among those who surrender to Christ.  How monotonously alike
all the great tyrants and conquerors have been: how gloriously different are the
saints.

But there must be a real giving up of the self.  You must throw it away 'blindly'
so to speak.  Christ will indeed give you a real personality: but you must not go
to Him for the sake of that.  As long as your own personality is what you are
bothering about you are not going to Him at all.  The very first step is to try to
forget about the self altogether.  Your real, new self (which is Christ's and also
yours, and yours just because it is His) will not come as long as you are looking
for it.  It will come when you are looking for Him.  Does that sound strange?  The
same principle holds, you know, for more everyday matters.  Even in social life,
you will never make a good impression on other people until you stop thinking
about what sort of impression you are making.  Even in literature and art, no man
who bothers about originality will ever be original: whereas if you simply try to
tell the truth (without caring twopence how often it has been told before) you
will, nine times out of ten, become original without ever having noticed it.  The
principle runs through all life from top to bottom.  Give up yourself, and you
will find your real self.  Lose your life and you will save it.  Submit to death,
death of your ambitions and favourite wishes every day and death of your whole
body in the end: submit with every fibre of your being, and you will find eternal
life.  Keep back nothing.  Nothing that you have not given away will be really
yours.  Nothing in you that has not died will ever be raised from the dead.  Look
for yourself, and you will find in the long run only hatred, loneliness, despair,
rage, ruin, and decay.  But look for Christ and you will find Him, and with Him
everything else thrown in.



THE END





About the Author


CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS (1898-1963) was one of the intellectual giants of the
twentieth century and arguably the most influential Christian writer of his day.
He was a Fellow and tutor in English literature at Oxford University until 1954
when he was unanimously elected to the Chair of Medieval and Renaissance English
at Cambridge University, a position he held until his retirement.  He wrote more
than thirty books, allowing him to reach a vast audience, and his works continue
to attract thousands of new readers every year.  His most distinguished and
popular accomplishments include The Chronicles of Narnia, Out of the Silent
Planet, The Four Loves, The Screwtape Letters, and Mere Christianity.  To learn
more about C. S. Lewis, visit www.cslewis.com.

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BOOKS BY C. S. LEWIS


A Grief Observed

George MacDonald: An Anthology

Mere Christianity

Miracles

The Abolition of Man

The Great Divorce

The Problem of Pain

The Screwtape Letters (with "Screwtape Proposes a Toast")

The Weight of Glory





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Prince Caspian

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The Silver Chair

The Last Battle





Credits


Cover design: The Designworksgroup, Jason Gabbert

Illustration: Antar Dayal





Copyright




The Case for Christianity (aka Broadcast Talks).  Copyright (c) 1942, C. S. Lewis
Pte.  Ltd.  Copyright restored (c) 1996, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.

Christian Behavior.  Copyright (c) 1943, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.  Copyright renewed
(c) 1971, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.

Beyond Personality.  Copyright (c) 1944, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.  Copyright renewed
(c) 1972, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.

MERE CHRISTIANITY.  Copyright (c) 1952, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.  Copyright renewed
(c) 1980, C. S. Lewis Pte.  Ltd.  All rights reserved under International and
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1 Information on the blitz and Royal Air Force pilots by William Griffin, Clive
Staples Lewis: A Dramatic Life; sections on the years 1941 & 1942.  Holt &
Rinehart, 1986.





* This corporate behaviour may, of course, be either better or worse than their
individual behaviour.





2 "The longest way round," quoted from Mere Christianity.





3 "An amateur," from January 11, 1942, radio broadcast; cited in Clive Staples
Lewis: A Dramatic Life.





4 "There are no ordinary people," quoted from "The Weight of Glory," a C. S. Lewis
sermon delivered June 8, 1941.





5 "Poisoned by a wretched upbringing," quoted from Mere Christianity.





6 "How monotonously alike," quoted from Mere Christianity.





* I do not think it is the whole story, as you will see later.  I mean that, as
far as the argument has gone up to date, it may be.





* See Note at end of this chapter.





* One listener complained of the word damned as frivolous swearing.  But I mean
exactly what I say--nonsense that is damned is under God's curse, and will (apart
from God's grace) lead those who believe it to eternal death.