Christianity will do you good--a great deal more good than you ever
wanted or expected. And the first bit of good it will do you is to
hammer into your head (you won't enjoy that!) the fact that what you
have hitherto called 'good'--all that about 'leading a decent life' and
'being kind'--isn't quite the magnificent and all-important affair you
supposed. It will teach you that in fact you can't be 'good' (not for 24
hours) on your own moral efforts. And then it will teach you
that even if you were, you still wouldn't have achieved the purpose for
which you were created. Mere morality is not the end of your life. You
were made for something quite different than that. . . . Confucius
simply didn't know what life is about. The people who keep on asking if
they can't lead a decent life without Christ, don't know what life is
about. . . .
Morality is indispensable: but the Divine Life, which
gives itself to us and which calls us to be gods, intends for us
something in which morality will be swallowed up. We are to be re-made.
All the rabbit in us is to disappear--the worried, conscientious,
ethical rabbit as well as the cowardly and sensual rabbit. We shall
bleed and squeal as the handfuls of fur come out; and then,
surprisingly, we shall find underneath it all a thing we have never yet
imagined: a real Man, an ageless god, a son of God, strong, radiant,
wise, beautiful, and drenched in joy.
C. S. Lewis, 'Man or Rabbit?' in God in the Dock (Eerdmans repr., 2002), 112
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