They are experiencing Christianity as joy and hope, having thus become lovers of Christ.

Author: seizedbychrist

  • Christ Lives in Us

    Have you ever thought about what it really means to invite Christ into your life? For many of us, it can feel like something far away—like we are reaching out to someone who is distant. But the truth is far more personal: when we open our hearts to Him, Christ actually comes to live within us.

    This is not just a comforting idea. It’s the very heart of the Christian life. The Son of God, who is holy and perfect, chooses to dwell in people like you and me—imperfect, weak, and still struggling. On our own, we fail. We fall short. But with Christ living in us, His strength begins to shine through our weakness.

    That changes everything. Being a Christian isn’t about trying harder to be “good enough.” If it all depended on us, we would never measure up. Instead, it’s about allowing Christ to transform us from the inside out. As St. Paul said, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.”

    And this truth is both humbling and hopeful. It humbles us, because we can no longer take pride in our good works—they belong to Him. But it also fills us with hope, because even if we feel small, broken, or unworthy, God is still at work in us. Through Him, even the smallest act of love becomes something eternal.

    So when you walk into your day—into your family, your workplace, your community—remember this: you are not just following Christ. You are carrying Him. His presence goes where you go. His light shines where you let it shine.

    But How Do We Know Christ Dwells Within Us?

    This is a question every believer asks. How can we be sure? How do we perceive His presence?

    Christ’s indwelling is not usually seen with our eyes, but it is perceived in the quiet, steady signs of His life at work within us:

    1. Peace beyond circumstances – A calm that remains even when life is difficult.
    2. A gentle inner voice – Nudges to forgive, to turn from sin, to act with mercy.
    3. Hunger for God – Prayer, Scripture, and the sacraments no longer feel like duties but like food for the soul.
    4. Change in desires – Old sins lose their grip; a yearning for goodness grows stronger.
    5. Love that surprises – Patience, kindness, or forgiveness that feels beyond one’s own capacity.
    6. Strength in weakness – Grace that carries us when our own strength fails.
    7. Joy in sacrifice – Even in suffering, meaning and light break through.

    These are the fruits of Christ’s presence, the evidence that faith is not just an idea, but a living reality.

    To perceive Him is to notice how He changes us, often slowly, often quietly, but always surely. If you see even the smallest trace of this new life in yourself, it is not from you alone—it is Christ dwelling within you.

    🙏 Thanks for reading!
    If this reflection made you think, please leave a comment below — even just a word or two!
    👍 If you found it meaningful, click “like” and share it with a friend who needs encouragement.
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  • Jesus: The Perfection of Man

    How Christ embodies the fullness of love, virtue, and unity with God

    When Christians speak of Jesus as the “Son of Man,” it’s not just a title—it’s a truth about who He is for all humanity. Jesus does not merely show us what it means to be human; He is humanity perfected. He reveals in Himself what man was always meant to be, and in doing so, He calls each of us to become fully alive in Him.

    1. The Perfection of Love
    Love is the greatest commandment and the highest calling of humanity. In Jesus, we see love without limit—love that heals, forgives, sacrifices, and redeems. His compassion for the poor, His mercy toward sinners, and His willingness to lay down His life for the undeserving all reveal a love that is not sentimental but costly. This love is not merely an emotion but a total self-giving that fulfills the law and the prophets.

    2. The Perfection of Virtue
    The word “virtue” originally meant “manliness” or “strength of character.” In Jesus, every virtue is present in its fullness—courage, justice, temperance, prudence, humility, fortitude. He is bold before the powerful, gentle with the brokenhearted, and unwavering in the face of temptation. His life shows that true manhood is not domination or pride, but the disciplined strength to serve, protect, and do what is right even when it costs everything.

    3. The Perfection of the Image of God
    Humanity was created in the image and likeness of God, yet sin has distorted that image. Jesus is the perfect and uncorrupted image of the Father. He reflects God’s nature perfectly in His thoughts, words, and actions. To look at Christ is to see what man was meant to be—fully aligned with God’s will, radiating truth, beauty, and goodness.

    4. The Perfection of Unity with the Holy Spirit
    From His conception, Jesus was filled with the Holy Spirit. In His baptism, ministry, miracles, and prayer, we see a life completely guided by the Spirit of God. This unity was not partial or occasional—it was constant. His words carried divine authority because they were Spirit-led. His works carried divine power because they were Spirit-filled. In Jesus, humanity is in perfect communion with the Spirit, showing us what it means to walk with God in every moment.

    5. The Invitation to Follow
    If Jesus is the perfection of man, then following Him is not simply a religious act—it is the path to becoming fully human ourselves. He does not remain a distant ideal; He offers His Spirit so that we can share in His life. We are called not just to admire Him, but to be transformed into His likeness.

    In Christ, we see not only the perfection of man, but the perfection of our destiny. To follow Him is to walk toward the fullness of love, virtue, unity, and divine image for which we were created.

    If this reflection stirred something in you, don’t keep it to yourself. Share your thoughts in the comments below—let’s start a conversation on what true humanity looks like in Christ. If you found this post helpful, click “like,” subscribe for more reflections, and share it with someone who needs to be reminded of who they were made to be.

    Written with assistance from ChatGPT–5

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  • 10 REASONS TO SEEK JESUS

    1. Jesus Christ is the perfection of man, because He is the perfection of love. If we wish to be the best we can be, we must aspire to be like Christ. However, we will not be able to achieve this on our own.
    2. When we invite Christ into our lives, He becomes present in and through us. Thus, while we are hopeless sinners, we become carriers of the perfection of man. In fact, there is no place for pride, because all the good we do comes from Him. We cannot take credit for it.
    3. Through His grace we overcome sin, suffering, and death. Our past sins and any future faults have already been paid for by the price of His death and resurrection. Most new sins can be avoided by keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus.The torture of suffering is replaced by loving sacrifice for Christ, our purpose. Suffering only exists in the areas of self that we still cling to. In those areas where we have died to ourselves and surrendered to Him, death no longer has its sting. For many saints this has been simply a step through a veil.
    4. We have the eyes and heart of Christ. We see how much Christ loves everyone around us, and we see where they have been wounded.
    5. Everything we have—skill, effort, motivation, and knowledge—is worthless if it is not in the service of love, of Christ.
    6. We live in true joy, peace, and love. If we are doing His work—the work we were created for—it will be the greatest adventure we could ever have (with the best ending).
    7. We are washed in His love. We appreciate that Jesus loved us so much that He died for our sins. And He who died for us will never abandon us. We can know that when we speak, He hears us. He is always waiting for us in the stillness of our hearts. We gain the understanding that whatever happens to us is His blessing for us. It is the best thing that could happen.                                                                    
    8. Letting Him live through us, we can be better spouses, parents, children, employees, bosses, business owners, salespeople, customers, coworkers, students, teachers, friends, and citizens. By showing respect, being willing to put others first, with honesty, diligence, patience, perseverance, love, mercy, and loyalty, we gain the ideal character in all these areas.
    9. By keeping our eyes fixed on Christ, we can sacrifice to help overcome sin and suffering in the world around us. We can turn the other cheek instead of seeking revenge. Instead of adding to chaos, we can be a source of healing. Christianity has been the origin of showing respect and dignity to all humanity, as well as to animals and the environment. These have been the foundations for most of civilization’s progress since Christ. In areas where Christianity has been eliminated, such as under communist regimes, it is clear what the reign of evil brings.

    …As for the miseries and sins he heard of every day in the world, he was far from reproaching those people. On the contrary, he was surprised there were not more, considering the malice of which sinners were capable. For his part, he prayed for them, but knowing that God can remedy the harm they caused whenever He wishes, he himself did not trouble himself further.

     —Brother Lawrence in Christ

    1. We can help others come to know the love of Christ. It will take a billion martyrs to overcome the evil done in Christ’s name. It will take many more living martyrs to bring Christ to all the hopeless people in this world. If Christianity is a personal encounter with Christ, the Christ people meet must be presented through us.

    If You Really Knew Jesus, Then You Would Really Love Jesus

    Share your thoughts in the comments below—let’s start a conversation on what true humanity looks like in Christ. If you found this post helpful, click “like,” subscribe for more reflections, and share it with someone who needs to be reminded of who they were made to be.

  • Valley of the Shadow of Death

    The choice of every lost soul can be expressed in the words: “Better to reign in hell than serve in Heaven”

    In the actual language of the Lost, the words will be different, no doubt. One will say he has always served his country right or wrong; another that he has sacrificed everything to his art; and some that they’ve never been taken in; and some that, thank God, they’ve always looked after Number One; and nearly all, that, at least, they’ve been true to themselves.

    There is always something they insist on keeping, even at the price of misery. There is always something they prefer to Joy – that is, to reality.

    Of some sinful pleasure they say: “Let me but have this, and I’ll take the consequences”, little dreaming how damnation will spread back and back into their past and contaminate the pleasure of the sin. 

    The process begins even before death. The bad man’s past already conforms to his badness and is filled only with dreariness. And that is why the Lost will say: “We were always in hell”

    They are those to whom God says, in the end: “Thy will be done.” 

    All that are in hell choose it. Without that self-choice, there could be no hell.

    Ye can call those sad streets the Valley of the Shadow of Death. if they leave that grey town behind it will not have been hell. To any that leaves it, it is Purgatory.

    For those who remain there it will have been hell even from the beginning.

    C.S. Lewis – The Great Divorce

  • Reimagining the Ten Commandments

    Universal Principles for Meaning, Morality, and Human Flourishing

    There’s been growing controversy over states requiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in public school classrooms. To some, this represents a return to foundational values. To others, it feels like religious overreach in a secular space.

    But what if — instead of framing these ancient rules as religious mandates — we could reframe them as universal psychological and ethical principles, rooted in thousands of years of myth, philosophy, and human experience?

    What if we could recover the wisdom buried beneath the doctrine?

    Let’s explore how the Ten Commandments might be reinterpreted as timeless guidelines for meaning, character, and societal stability — in ways that resonate across faiths, cultures, and even modern science.


    The Ten Commandments, Reimagined for a Secular Age

    Below is a side-by-side comparison: the traditional commandments, and their modern reinterpretation as principles of human flourishing.

    🕊️ Original Commandment🌱 Reframed Principle🧠 Interpretation
    1. No other gods before MeRecognize a higher order beyond the selfWhether it’s truth, nature, or the collective good — acknowledging something greater than ego provides orientation and humility.
    2. No idolsDon’t confuse symbols with realityWorshiping wealth, power, or technology leads to disconnection. Myths and psychology warn us: we become what we idolize.
    3. Don’t take God’s name in vainUse language with integrity and respectWords shape reality. Speaking carelessly — especially about what is sacred or unknown — erodes trust and meaning.
    4. Keep the SabbathHonor the rhythm of rest and reflectionAll life needs cycles of renewal. Rest isn’t laziness — it’s wisdom. Reflection opens space for meaning.
    5. Honor your father and motherRespect your roots, even as you growAcknowledging where we come from — biologically and culturally — grounds us and helps us evolve with integrity.
    6. Don’t murderHonor the sanctity of lifeAt the heart of all ethical systems lies the recognition that each life is sacred and not ours to extinguish.
    7. Don’t commit adulteryBe faithful in your commitmentsTrust is the glue of relationships. Faithfulness sustains bonds that form the bedrock of families and communities.
    8. Don’t stealRespect the boundaries of othersStealing violates autonomy and trust. Flourishing societies depend on mutual respect and fair exchange.
    9. Don’t bear false witnessTell the truthTruth is the foundation of justice, connection, and reality itself. Lies fracture all three.
    10. Don’t covetCultivate gratitude over envyEnvy eats away at inner peace. Gratitude fosters joy, contentment, and stability in both individuals and communities.

    From Commandments to Common Ground

    By reframing these principles, we shift from a religious mandate to a shared moral vocabulary. These aren’t just rules from one tradition — they’re echoes of ideas found in:

    • 🧘‍♂️ Eastern philosophy (like the Tao or the Eightfold Path)
    • 🏺 Greek Stoicism and virtue ethics
    • 🐺 Indigenous tribal wisdom
    • 📚 psychology and neuroscience
    • 🧬 Evolutionary biology (our moral instincts evolved for group survival)

    They’re not about obedience. They’re about orientation — how to be human, how to live well, and how to avoid unraveling ourselves or society.


    Why This Matters in Schools (and Society)

    The classroom debate isn’t really about tablets on a wall. It’s about what we teach young people to live by. And if the traditional religious framing is too narrow or controversial, this reframed approach might offer a third path — one that:

    • 🏫 Teaches ethical literacy without religious coercion
    • 🧠 Sparks self-reflection and dialogue
    • 🧩 Connects modern life with ancient wisdom
    • 🌍 Builds common ground in a divided culture

    These aren’t commandments carved in stone. They’re living ideas — ones we can still shape, interpret, and grow with.


    Final Thought

    Human beings have always looked for patterns — in stars, in stories, and in laws — to guide their lives. The Ten Commandments were one early attempt to do that. Rather than dismiss them or enforce them dogmatically, perhaps we can rediscover their core meaning and bring them into the present in a way that helps us — and our children — live with greater purpose, compassion, and clarity.

    Because what we put on the classroom wall matters.
    But what we help people understand — and live by — matters even more.

    If this reframing gave you something to think about…
    ✔️ Like the post to let me know it resonated.
    📬 Subscribe to get more reflections on timeless wisdom, modern life, and what it means to live well.
    💬 Leave a comment — I’d love to hear how you would frame a universal principle for the next generation.

    Let’s keep the conversation going.
    Because ideas only come alive when we share them.

    Developed with assistance from ChatGPT

  • 🔥 Can a Few Good People Save a City?

    Reflections on Sodom and Gomorrah

    Reading: Genesis 18:20–32

    This Sunday’s (July 27 2025) first reading tells the story of Abraham praying for mercy on behalf of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. God tells Abraham that the cities have become so full of sin that judgment is coming. But Abraham dares to ask:

    “Will You really sweep away the righteous with the wicked? What if there are 50 innocent people? Or 40? Or 30? Or 10?”

    And God says, again and again:

    “If I find just 10 innocent people, I will not destroy the city.”

    That line stopped me.

    God was willing to spare the entire city if just ten innocent people were found. That shows us something really powerful:


    🙏 The Good Can Hold Back Judgment

    This story tells us that a few good people—those who try to live justly and walk with God—can make a difference for everyone. Abraham’s prayer shows us that our choices matter not only for ourselves, but for our whole community.

    Even in a sinful society, God looks for the faithful, and He listens to their prayers. Sometimes, just a small number of people following God can hold back a much bigger collapse.


    💔 But There Weren’t Ten

    Despite Abraham’s prayer, the cities were destroyed. (Genesis 19:1–25) Why? Because not even ten righteous people could be found. Instead, God rescued Lot and his family, the only ones who hadn’t given in to the evil around them.

    God didn’t ignore Abraham. He did what He said He would do. He showed mercy—but He removed the innocent first, and then let judgment fall.


    🏃‍♂️ A Warning for the Righteous Too

    This part of the story carries a warning:

    Sometimes, even the good must leave, because their presence is no longer enough to save a place that is collapsing. Or, if they stay too long, they might be hurt, or slowly drawn into the same sins.

    Being faithful is no guarantee that life will be easy. But it does mean that God sees you, cares for you, and will act on your behalf—just like He did with Lot.


    🔁 The Tytler Cycle and Our Culture

    There’s an old idea called the Tytler Cycle, which says that societies go through repeating stages:

    Faith → Courage → Liberty → Abundance → Complacency → Apathy → Dependence → Bondage

    This lines up with the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. When people forget God and live only for themselves, things start to fall apart. But if even a small group of people keep the faith, there’s still hope.


    🧭 What Does This Mean for Us?

    This story isn’t just about ancient cities—it’s about us. Here are some questions we might ask ourselves:

    • Am I one of the “ten”? Do I live in a way that brings mercy to my community?
    • Do I pray for my city? Like Abraham, am I asking God to spare and help the people around me?

    Am I awake to what’s going on? Am I willing to act, speak up, or leave a bad situation if God calls me to?


    💡 Final Thought

    God is more merciful than we can imagine. He listens to prayers. He searches for the faithful. He saves. But He also warns.

    This story reminds us that even one person trying to live rightly matters. And when there are ten, or twenty, or more—whole families, parishes, or communities—choosing to follow Christ in the middle of a confused world, they can be the very reason God still holds back destruction.

    So… maybe the question isn’t what’s wrong with the world, but:

    “Am I doing my part to be one of the ten?”


    🙏 Thanks for reading!
    If this reflection made you think, please leave a comment below — even just a word or two!
    👍 If you found it meaningful, click “like” and share it with a friend who needs encouragement.
    📬 And if you’d like to receive more simple, thoughtful reflections like this in your inbox, subscribe to the blog!

    Let’s keep the conversation going and help each other be faithful.

    Written with assistance from ChatGPT

  • Praying and Doing

    The Battle We’re Called to Fight

    “You can’t just pray and do nothing. And you can’t just do and forget to pray. Victory requires both.”

    This Sunday, the deacon shared a story that stuck with me. A soldier, preparing for battle, asked a priest:

    “If God already knows the outcome, why do we need to pray? If He wants us to win, we’ll win. And if He wants us to lose, we’ll lose.”

    The priest thought for a moment and asked in return:

    “If the outcome is already determined, why are you putting on your armor and picking up your sword?”

    That hit home.

    Just like the soldier needs armor and a sword to stand a chance in battle, we need the armor of God and the power of prayer to face the spiritual battles in our lives. But it’s not one or the other—it’s both.

    Too often, we fall into one of two traps:

    • We pray, but we don’t act.
    • Or we act, but we forget to pray.

    But true Christian life—true victory—requires both faith and action. We must pray as if everything depends on God… and then go out and live, serve, speak, and love as if everything depends on us.


    A Faith That Moves

    This reminds me of James 2:16:

    “If one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,’ but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it?”

    Prayer should move us to action. It draws us closer to God and closer to those He puts in our lives. When we pray for someone, it’s not just words. It’s a moment of deep connection that should stir us to respond.


    The Armor of God Is for Battle

    We don’t wear spiritual armor to sit in the pew and wait for God to fix things. We wear it because we are in a battle.

    • A battle for truth
    • A battle for love
    • A battle for souls
    • A battle for the broken

    Prayer prepares us. But we must still show up—with courage, sacrifice, and love.


    Summary: Pray. Then Go.

    The message is simple:

    • Don’t pray without doing.
    • Don’t do without praying.
    • God doesn’t need our armor or action—but He chooses to work through them.

    When we pray with faith and act with love, we become part of God’s answer to the world’s cries.


    ✍️ Reflect & Respond:

    • Who are you praying for right now?
    • Is there a way God might be asking you to take action for them?
    • Are there battles in your life where you’ve been waiting—but not fighting?

    🔔 Like what you’re reading?

    Subscribe, share, or comment below—and join the journey of living fully alive in Christ.

    Written with assistance from ChatGPT

  • A Word If Spoken

    I’ve carried this meditation for a while.

    I believe that for every person, there is a word—a message—that, if spoken, would cause them to freely and joyfully choose faith and to live for Christ.

    Everyone I’ve ever known who serves Christ with sincerity has heard this word. Maybe not in the same form, not the same message or tone, but they’ve received a word that reached the core of their heart. Something called them—not by force, but with the unmistakable pull of truth and love.

    And because I believe Jesus came that all might be saved, I also believe such a word exists for every person. A message capable of lighting up the heart.

    The only problem?
    I don’t know what that word is.


    The Work-Around

    So here’s what I try instead.

    I tell people: I know there’s a word that, if you heard it, would make you want to seek God with everything in you. I don’t know the word itself. But I’m asking you to assume that maybe it has not yet been spoken to you. 

    And if that’s true, then the most logical response is to begin seeking. Listening. Asking.

    Because if you can believe that at some point the door will be opened, … now it’s just a matter of stepping through.


    What This Says About Grace and Free Will

    This meditation walks a fine line between two deep truths of the faith:

    • That God desires all to be saved (1 Timothy 2:4),
    • And that faith comes by hearing (Romans 10:17).

    Why This Matters to Me

    This belief gives me two things:

    • Hope: That no one is beyond the reach of grace.
    • Humility: That I don’t have to be the one to say the perfect thing. I just have to point toward the Word, however I can.

    In some cases, I believe people are simply too “high up”—too successful, too secure, too self-assured—to look up. They haven’t been brought low enough to feel the need for God. But if they become curious now,… perhaps it will prevent that fall. Or prepare them for it.

    How About You?

    Have you ever had a moment where something clicked—a word, a thought, a memory—that stirred something deeper in you?

    Or maybe you’re still waiting for your word to be spoken?I’d love to hear your reflections, questions, or stories.

    You can leave a comment below. I’d love to hear your reflections, questions, or stories.

    Written with assistance from ChatGPT

  • Jordan Peterson on Evil, the Devil, and the Adversary

    This question gets to the heart of Jordan Peterson’s symbolic theology—where psychology, myth, and moral action converge.

    While he doesn’t always use theological language in a traditional way, Peterson treats the figures of the Adversary, the Devil, and evil itself as deeply connected. For him, they are not only real in myth or metaphor—they’re real in action, consequence, and the shaping of the human soul.

    Here’s how Peterson understands the relationship between evil and the Adversary:


    🔥 The Devil = The Adversary = The Embodiment of Evil


    1. The Adversary (Satan as “the Accuser”)

    Peterson draws from the original Hebrew word for Satan: ha-satan — meaning the adversary, or the accuser.

    In this role, Satan is:

    • The one who challenges God’s creation,
    • The voice that sows doubt and despair,
    • The force that tempts people to betray what is true and good.

    For Peterson, this isn’t just an external figure. It’s an inner voice:

    “The adversary is the spirit that accuses Being itself. It says: ‘This is all worthless. This is all terrible. Life is suffering. And the best thing you could do is bring it all to ruin.’”

    This is the psychological root of nihilism, cynicism, and destructive resentment.


    2. Evil as Participation with the Adversary

    Evil, in Peterson’s framework, is not just a passive condition. It’s a choice to align with the Adversary.

    This alignment happens when a person:

    • Willfully lies (especially to themselves),
    • Resents life and refuses responsibility,
    • Intentionally harms others—out of spite, ideology, or envy.

    He often uses the story of Cain and Abel to illustrate this:

    Cain doesn’t just kill Abel—he kills him because he resents God, resents goodness, and blames reality itself. Cain acts like the Adversary.


    3. The Devil as Psychological and Metaphysical Reality

    Peterson doesn’t insist on a literal horned being. But he insists the Devil is real enough—as a pattern of thought and behavior that can possess individuals, movements, and nations.

    “You can act like the Devil. And if enough people do that at once, then something like the Devil emerges.”

    The Devil, then, is the archetype of:

    • The destroyer of meaning,
    • The father of lies,
    • The voice that says: “Tear it down. Burn it all.”
    • The spirit behind genocide, cruelty, and totalitarianism.

    This makes evil both a personal and cultural force—something we resist in ourselves and in the world around us.


    4. Christ as the Antidote

    For Peterson, the figure of Christ stands in radical opposition to the Adversary.

    Christ is:

    • Truth instead of lies,
    • Voluntary suffering instead of resentment,
    • Redemption instead of destruction,
    • The one who “carries the cross” rather than curse the world.

    In this sense, Peterson views the story of Christ not only as religious truth, but as an existential guide for resisting evil—within the self and in society.


    🧭 In Summary

    TermPeterson’s Meaning
    The Adversary / SatanThe archetype of rebellion against Being; the accuser, the destroyer of meaning.
    EvilThe conscious choice to align with the Adversary; rooted in resentment and lies.
    The DevilThe psychological and spiritual force that embodies malevolent destruction.

    💬 What Do You Think?

    Do you agree with Peterson’s view that evil begins with self-deception and resentment?
    Can “the Devil” be real—even without being literal?

    Leave a comment below. I’d love to hear your thoughts.

    And if you found this reflection meaningful, feel free to subscribe or share it with someone who might appreciate a deeper look at good, evil, and the battle between them.

    Written with assistance of ChatGPT

  • What Is Evil?

    Jordan Peterson’s Deep Definition

    Jordan Peterson doesn’t define evil with a single dictionary-style sentence. Instead, he builds a complex picture across his lectures and books—especially Maps of Meaning and 12 Rules for Life. His view of evil is psychological, moral, existential—and personal.

    At its core, Peterson sees evil as this:


    🔥 Peterson’s Core View of Evil

    Evil is the conscious, malevolent infliction of suffering—especially for its own sake.


    ✍️ Expanded Definition

    Evil is knowing that what you’re doing is wrong, knowing it will cause unnecessary suffering, and choosing to do it anyway—often because it causes suffering. It’s the willful use of your voice, choices, and actions to distort truth, destroy meaning, and harm others—especially the innocent.


    🔎 Four Key Ideas from Peterson’s Understanding of Evil

    1. Voluntary Infliction of Unnecessary Suffering

    “Evil is the production of suffering for its own sake.”

    This includes torture, cruelty, totalitarian violence, and abuse. Peterson often draws on real historical examples—like Auschwitz, the Soviet Gulags, or Columbine—to show how evil grows from resentment, envy, and self-deception.


    2. The Lie Is the Path to Evil

    Peterson believes evil is rooted in deception—especially self-deception.

    “When you betray yourself, when you say untrue things, when you act out a lie, you weaken your character. You move away from God.”

    When people lie about what they’re doing—and why—they become corrupted. The lie, repeated often enough, becomes a foundation for deeper harm.


    3. Resentment, Envy, and the Rejection of Responsibility

    Peterson often links evil to resentment toward being itself—a deep bitterness about life’s unfairness, combined with a desire to strike back.

    This is why he emphasizes personal responsibility. Choosing meaning over resentment is, for Peterson, a way to resist the seeds of evil within ourselves.


    4. Auschwitz as the Ultimate Symbol of Evil

    Peterson frequently returns to the Holocaust as the darkest manifestation of human evil. What happened there wasn’t accidental. It was planned, intentional, and often joyfully committed.

    “You have to understand the Holocaust if you want to understand yourself.”

    The worst atrocities were committed not by monsters, but by ordinary people—step by step, decision by decision.


    🧭 A Moral Compass: Evil Is in Us, Not Just “Out There”

    Peterson’s warning is not about abstract philosophy—it’s about confronting our own potential for evil.

    He often quotes Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who wrote:

    “The line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being.”

    Evil isn’t just something others do. It’s something any of us could do, if we let resentment, deceit, and self-betrayal take root.


    👣 Final Thought

    Peterson doesn’t just ask us to “not be evil.”
    He asks us to take up the burden of truth, meaning, and responsibility—to resist evil by choosing to live honestly, act justly, and carry what is ours to carry.


    💬 What Do You Think?

    Have you seen this kind of evil—or its beginnings—in everyday life?
    Do you agree with Peterson’s take?
    Leave a comment below—I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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    Developed with assistance of ChatGPT