Nineteenth Sunday after
Pentecost
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
30th September 2018
Pride, Vanity and Humility by G.K. Chesterton
Pride is a weakness in the character; it dries up laughter,
it dries up wonder, it dries up chivalry and energy. The
Christian tradition understands this. For the truth is much
stranger even than it appears in the formal doctrine of the
sin of pride. It is not only true that humility is a much
wiser and more vigorous thing than pride. It is also true
that vanity is a much wiser and more vigorous thing than
pride. Vanity is social - it is almost a kind of
comradeship; pride is solitary and uncivilised. Vanity is
active; it desires the applause of infinite multitudes;
pride is passive, desiring only the applause of one person,
which it already has. Vanity is humorous, and can enjoy the
joke even of itself; pride is dull, and cannot even smile.
Humility is so practical a virtue that men think it must be
a vice. Humility is so successful that it is mistaken for
pride. It is mistaken for it all the more easily because it
generally goes with a certain simple love of splendour which
amounts to vanity. Humility will always, by preference, go
clad in scarlet and gold; pride is that which refuses to let
gold and scarlet impress it or please it too much. In a
word, the failure of this virtue actually lies in its
success; it is too successful as an investment to be
believed in as a virtue. Humility is not merely too good for
this world; it is too practical for this world; I had almost
said it is too worldly for this world. It is the humble man
who does the big things. It is the humble man who does the
bold things. It is the humble man who has the sensational
sights vouchsafed to him, and this for three obvious
reasons: first, that he strains his eyes more than any other
men to see them; second, that he is more overwhelmed and
uplifted with them when they come; third, that he records
them more exactly and sincerely and with less adulteration.
This virtue of humility, while being practical enough to win
battles, will always be paradoxical enough to puzzle
pedants. It is at one with the virtue of charity in this
respect. Every generous person will admit that the one kind
of pride which is wholly damnable is the pride of the man
who has something to be proud of. The pride which,
proportionally speaking, does not hurt the character, is the
pride in things which reflect no credit on the person at
all. Thus it does a man no harm to be proud of his country,
and comparatively little harm to be proud of his remote
ancestors. It does him more harm to be proud of having made
money, because in that he has a little more reason for
pride. It does him more harm still to be proud of what is
nobler than money - intellect. And it does him most harm of
all to value himself for the most valuable thing on Earth -
goodness. The man who is proud of what is really creditable
to him is the Pharisee, the man whom Christ Himself could
not forbear to strike.
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