Give up your self, and you will find your real self. Lose your life  and you will save it. Submit to death, death of your ambitions and  favourite wishes every day and death of your whole body in the end:  submit with every fibre of your being, and you will find eternal life.  Keep back nothing. Nothing that you have not given away will ever be  really yours. Nothing in you that has not died will ever be raised from  the dead. Look for yourself, and you will find in the long run only  hatred, loneliness, despair, rage, ruin, and decay. But look for Christ  and you will find Him, and with Him everything else thrown in.
– C.S. Lewis 
The Christian way is different: harder, and easier. Christ says,  “Give me ALL. I don’t want so much of your time and so much of your  money and so much of your work: I want YOU. I have not come to torment  your natural self, but to kill it. No half-measures are any good. I  don’t want to cut off a branch here and a branch there, I want to have  the whole tree down. I don’t want to drill the tooth, or crown it, or  stop it, but to have it out. Hand over the whole natural self, all the  desires which you think innocent as well as the ones you think wicked –  the whole outfit. I will give you a new self instead. In fact, I will  give you Myself: My own will shall become yours.”
It is like that here. The terrible thing, the almost impossible  thing, is to hand over your whole self – all your wishes and precautions  – to Christ. But it is far easier than what we are all trying to do  instead. For what we are trying to do is to remain what we call  “ourselves,” to keep personal happiness as our great aim in life, and  yet at the same time be “good.” We are all trying to let our mind and  heart go their own way-centered on money or pleasure or ambition-and  hoping, in spite of this, to behave honestly and chastely and humbly.  And that is exactly what Christ warned us you could not do. As He said, a  thistle cannot produce figs. If I am a field that contains nothing but  grass-seed, I cannot produce wheat. Cutting the grass may keep it short:  but I shall still produce grass and no wheat. If I want to produce  wheat, the change must go deeper than the surface. I must be ploughed up  and re-sown.
-Mere Christianity, by C.S. Lewis

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