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.
C S Lewis in Mere Christianity
C S Lewis in Mere Christianity
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