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Pride
In our self-indulgent era of self-esteem, self-fulfillment, self-assertion,
and self-righteousness, we need Chesterton to remind us of just where
the danger lies. In fact, he wrote that if he had just one sermon to preach,
it would be a sermon against the sin of pride.
Chesterton defined pride as thinking oneself superior--as Satan thought
when he fell. Chesterton believed that pride was especially dangerous
because, while people fall into the other vices through weakness, pride
attacks us where we are strong--even where we are good. If we are virtuous,
even devoutly pious, we may not realize how proud we are of the fact,
forgetting John Bradford's "There, but for the grace of God, go I." Only
God is the source of His own goodness, Chesterton reminds us.
Chesterton once expressed sympathy for "a certain Cavalier whom some
Puritan had denounced for the immorality of his troopers." The Cavalier's
reply:
"Our men have the sins of men--wine and wenching. Yours have the sins
of devils--spiritual pride and rebellion."
And Chesterton had a ready answer for those who asked or demanded that
he take "the Pledge" (i.e., a vow of total abstinence from intoxicating
drink). He would swear off drinking when the temperance reformer swore
to total abstinence from the sins of pride, spiritual insolence, self-praise,
and the "contempt of common things." And "the wickedest work in this world
is symbolized not by a wine glass but by a looking-glass."
[And for further reading in
Chesterton's works, see "If I Had Only One Sermon to Preach." The Common
Man; "Temperance and The Great Alliance" [pamphlet]; and "Shakespeare
and Milton; Silly Headlines" (Illustrated London News, May 18,
1907)
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