C. S. Lewis Kindness Quotations
C. S. Lewis Quotes about:
Kindness Quotes from:
- All Kindness Quotes
- Dalai Lama
- Samuel Johnson
- Mother Teresa
- Wayne Dyer
- Confucius
- George Saunders
- Mark Twain
- Sharon Salzberg
- Henry David Thoreau
- Pema Chodron
- William Shakespeare
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Rumi
- Albert Schweitzer
- Khalil Gibran
- Charles Spurgeon
- Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Nhat Hanh
- Sherrilyn Kenyon
- C S Lewis
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Hurt Quotes
The real trouble is that 'kindness' is a quality fatally easy to attribute to ourselves on quite inadequate grounds. Everyone feels benevolent if nothing happens to be annoying him at the moment. Thus a man easily comes to console himself for all his other vices by a conviction that 'his heart's in the right place' and 'he wouldn't hurt a fly,' though in fact he has never made the slightest sacrifice for a fellow creature. We think we are kind when we are only happy: it is not so easy, on the same grounds, to imagine oneself temperate, chaste, or humble.
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Definitions Quotes
If God is Love, He is, by definition, something more than mere kindness. And it appears, from all the records, that though He has often rebuked us and condemned us, He has never regarded us with contempt. He has paid us the intolerable compliment of loving us, in the deepest, most tragic, most inexorable sense.
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Giving Quotes
You can be good for the mere sake of goodness; you cannot be bad for the mere sake of badness. You can do a kind action when you are not feeling kind and when it gives you no pleasure, simply because kindness is right; but no one ever did a cruel action simply because cruelty is wrong - only because cruelty is pleasant or useful to him, In other words, badness cannot succeed even in being bad in the same way in which goodness is good. Goodness is, so to speak, itself: badness is only spoiled goodness. And there must be something good first before it can be spoiled.
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Animal Quotes
Kindness consents very readily to the removal of its object – we have all met people whose kindness to animals is constantly leading them to kill animals lest they should suffer. Kindness, merely as such, cares not whether its object becomes good or bad, provided only that it escapes suffering.