Wednesday, May 24, 2006

When I Don't Desire God

Have you every read something and the lightbulb in your head simply clicked on? Suddenly, you understand. I found this quote in a book I started reading yesterday by John Piper (for all you who asked, I like John Piper. Of course, I disagree in some points, but his books and sermons have helped to illuminate truth for my soul), When I Don't Desire God. The quote is actually by C.S. Lewis (an incredible man) and is originally found in his biography Surprised by Joy. When I Don't Desire God has moved me in a great way already, and am excited in anticipation of the impact it will have on my life. The subtitle of the book is How to Fight for Joy. Piper warns against pursuing joy, not Christ, and he places this quote by Lewis who wrote his whole biography around his mistakes. Here is the quote:

"You cannot hope and also think about hoping at the same moment;
for in hope we look to hope’s object and we interrupt this by (so to
speak) turning round to look at the hope itself. . . . The surest means
of disarming an anger or a lust was to turn your attention from the
girl or the insult and start examining the passion itself. The surest way of spoiling a pleasure was to start examining your satisfaction. . . . I perceived (and this was the wonder of wonders) that . . . I had been equally wrong in supposing that I desired Joy itself. Joy itself,
considered simply as an event in my own mind, turned out to be of
no value at all. All the value lay in that of which Joy was the desiring.
And that object, quite clearly, was no state of my own mind or
body at all. . . . I asked if Joy itself was what I wanted; and, labeling
it “aesthetic experience,” had pretended I could answer Yes. But that
answer too had broken down. Inexorably Joy proclaimed, “You
want—I myself am your want of—something other, outside, not you
nor any state of you.”

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks bro. C.S. Lewis is one of my all-time favorite authors. Not sure how to explain it--his writing "clicks" with me. Explains what I've always been thinking but never knew how to express. Anyway, great quote! I liked the part about disarming lust or anger by examining the passion itself. How true. One week buddy!

Noah said...

I remember reading that book. Not an easy read, by any stretch of the imagination. I hear that is a good book. I haven't read it, yet, though I am (still) finishing Desiring God. That is a good book.

Jason Harrison said...

More from When I Don’t Desire God… Reading today (Friday, May 26, 2006) I came across a truth or a statement by another writer, and I found it in the center of his chapter focusing on joy as a gift. Piper cites N.P. Williams who contends, “The ordinary man (me) may feel ashamed of doing wrong: but the saint, endowed with a superior refinement of moral sensibility, and keener powers of introspection, is ashamed of being the kind of man who is liable to do wrong.” A lustful thought or a slashing word generates guilt and shame in my life, but I cannot recall the last time I felt ashamed that I am a sinner. Don’t get me wrong. I know I am a sinner and sin is apart of me. This fact is definitely a realization in my life, but I am more likely humiliated by a sinful act rather than by my sinful nature.

Johny V said...

hey cutie . u r a great testimony keep it up. even though i wanted to kill u one time in the dorms i still love u. have fun at camp! lata

Dave Marriott said...

jason, the book is a free download at piper's site. www.desiringgod.org Hey I'm praying for you at camp!

jules said...

just wanted to thank you for posting that grace song on your sidebar. that was encouraging tonight. i love that song.

Anonymous said...

Hey jason, hope all is going well up at Northland.. If my eyes ever get better, I too would love to read that book.. thanks for the inspiration.. Jan-from H20town-(Upper Krust)