
Menu 


  • The Bible in a Year
  • The Catechism in a Year
  • Podcasts
    • Let Love
    • Ask Fr. Josh
    • All Things Catholic
    • Catholic Classics
    • Every Knee Shall Bow
    • Girlfriends
    • Sunday Homilies Podcast
    • The Fr. Mike Schmitz Podcast
    • The Jeff Cavins Show
    • The Tightrope
    • La Biblia en un Año
  • Videos
    • Fr. Mike Schmitz
    • Sunday Homilies
    • Fr. Josh Johnson
    • Jackie and Bobby Angel
    • Franciscan Friars of the Renewal (CFRs)
    • The Bible Timeline Show (with Jeff Cavins)
    • The Bible Timeline Show (with Jeff Cavins)
    • Encountering The Word: Year A
  • Articles
  • Prayers
  • Shop

C. S. Lewis on Humility

by Dr. Andrew Swafford | Jan 12, 2017 | Discovery, Ascension’s Core Values | 2 comments

When we hear the word “humility,” many of us think of low self-esteem and self-deprecation: I for one used to envision the ideal as making a concerted effort to disavow the truth of any compliment ever received.

 

The Christian tradition, however, has never quite seen humility this way. In fact, the above is something of a caricature. For St. Thomas Aquinas, humility is about recognizing the truth about oneself, which entails recognizing both our limitations and our gifts. For example, if someone told Lebron James that he is one of the greatest basketball players ever to play—and if Lebron gave credit to his coaches and those who have helped him along the way and ultimately to God—then Lebron could say in all humility, “Thank you” and simply acknowledge the truth of the statement.

Rejoicing in Our Talents

Building upon this framework, C. S. Lewis captures the essence of humility in his Screwtape Letters, writing:

“By this virtue, as by all others, [God] wants to turn [our] attention away from self, to him and [to our] neighbors.”

For Lewis, humility is not a matter of thinking less of ourselves—but less about ourselves, forgetting ourselves and turning outward in love.

He continues:

“[God] wants to bring [us] to a state of mind in which [we] could design the best cathedral in the world and know it to be the best and rejoice in the fact, without being any more (or less) or otherwise glad at having done it than [we] would be if it had been done by another. [God] wants [us], in the end, to be so free from any bias in [our] own favor that we can rejoice in our own talents as frankly and gratefully as in our neighbor’s talents—or in a sunrise, an elephant, or a waterfall. [God] wants each man, in the long run, to be able to recognize all creatures (even ourselves) as glorious and excellent things…. He would rather [us] think ourselves a great architect or a great poet and then forget about it, than that [we] should spend much time and pains trying to think [ourselves] a bad one.”

Self-forgetfulness

Have you ever been in a conversation where it seemed like the other person couldn’t get past what they had going on that day (their tasks, their worries)—where they really weren’t “available,” even though they were right in front of us?

Or, have you ever been in conversation where it almost felt as if you were “watching” yourself have the conversation—wondering almost audibly to yourself: “How did I sound just there? How did they take that? Am I making a good impression?”

Compare this to those wonderful free-flowing conversations, where you really lost yourself in the ebb and flow of the discussion. In these wonderful encounters, we’re not thinking about ourselves—we’re not worried about how we look. Rather, we are truly entering into the world of the other—and this is what humility enables us to do. Humility enables us to forget ourselves and turn outward in love. In this sense, humility liberates us from the self-absorption of our ego, opening up space for a greater communion with God and others.

Pride and vanity are restrictive, turning us inward—ultimately making us sad, insecure, and restless. Humility, on the other hand, is expansive—turning us outward, and making possible an encounter with true joy.

Even of Our Sins

Paradoxically, the “I’m so terrible” attitude can actually undermine humility. Lewis hints at this when he writes: “Even of [our] sins [God] does not want us to think too much: once they are repented, the sooner [we] turn our attention outward, the better [God] is pleased.”

Of course, we must treat sin with utmost seriousness. But when we fall and we’re distraught, we have to ask ourselves why we are so upset. Is it merely because we have offended God, or is it perhaps partly due to the fracturing of the idealized version of ourselves? This is what Lewis is getting at. Jacques Philippe teaches likewise in Searching for and Maintaining Peace:

“[The sadness and discouragement that we feel regarding our failures and our faults are rarely pure; they are not very often the simple pain of having offended God. They are in good part mixed with pride. We are not sad and discouraged so much because God was offended, but because the ideal image that we have of ourselves has been brutally shaken. Our pain is very often that of wounded pride” (for more here, see chapter 7 of my Spiritual Survival in the Modern World: Insights from C. S. Lewis’ Screwtape Letters).

How can we come to God as we are—acknowledging our brokenness and our gifts—trusting confidently in his mercy? How can humility as self-forgetfulness help us grow in communion with God and neighbor?


You May Also Like:

C. S. Lewis on the Difference Between Faith and Emotion

Romans: The Gospel of Salvation

Ephesians: A Letter to the Children of God

 


About Andrew Swafford

Dr. Andrew Swafford

Dr. Andrew Swafford is associate professor of theology at Benedictine College. He is general editor and contributor to The Great Adventure Catholic Bible, published by Ascension. Swafford is author of Nature and Grace, John Paul II to Aristotle and Back Again, and Spiritual Survival in the Modern World. He holds a doctorate in Sacred Theology from the University of St. Mary of the Lake and a master’s degree in Old Testament & Semitic Languages from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature, Academy of Catholic Theology, and a senior fellow at the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology. He lives with his wife Sarah and their four children in Atchison, Kansas.

Dr. Swafford’s latest project with Ascension, Romans: The Gospel of Salvation study is now available for preorder.


2 Comments

  1. Ha Nguyen on July 7, 2024 at 12:04 pm

    This has helped me to understand a little clearer, the true meaning of true humility. Thank you for sharing.

    Reply
  2. Makala Doulos on January 13, 2017 at 2:40 am

    Thank you, brother. Your article came to my attention at a very good moment. So thankful. Peace be with your spirit.

    Reply

Submit a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discovery Ascension’s Core Values
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Praying with Scripture During the Last Days of Advent
Praying with Scripture During the Last Days of Advent

On December 17 the Church begins the second part of Advent, in which she focuses more intensely on the immediate preparation for the Feast of Christmas and the Lord’s Nativity. The Masses and Liturgy of these days are amazingly rich and beautiful in their scriptural...

Five Ways St. John Paul II’s Theology of the Body Can Change the Way You See Your Body
Five Ways St. John Paul II’s Theology of the Body Can Change the Way You See Your Body

Meet Shannon Whitmore, a homeschooling mom with a passion for sharing the truth of God’s love for the human person and the beauty of the vocation to marriage and family life. She is also the Ascension author of See Yourself as God Does: Understanding Holy Body Image...

Virtue in a Modern World
Virtue in a Modern World

Meet Andrew Whitmore, a theology professor, husband, father, and author of Ascension’s Saintly Habits: Aquinas’ 7 Simple Strategies You Can Use to Grow in Virtue. In this blog, Andrew shares his perspective on virtue, why living a virtuous life is worth pursuing, and...

About Us

Careers

Newsroom

Frequently Asked Questions

Fair Use & Licensing

Contact Us

Shipping Policy

Return Policy

Resellers & Distributors

Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
© 2025 Ascension Press. All rights reserved.
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow