“You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream.” C.S. Lewis
Today, November 29, 2011, would have been C.S. Lewis’s 113th
birthday. It makes me think of the quote from Bilbo Baggins in the Lord of the
Rings who was 111 when he said, “Alas, eleventy-one years is far too short a
time to live among such excellent and admirable hobbits. I don’t know half of
you half as well as I should like, and I like less than half of you half as
well as you deserve.”
C.S. Lewis is of course famous for his theological
treatises, as well as his fairy tales. What interests me is that late in life,
C.S. Lewis wrote less theological treatises and more “children’s” stories, believing
that lessons are learned better when told in story form. Beyond believing that he was right, it
interests me because many of us as we age tend to move away from fairy tales
and fantasies, exchanging such frivolity for the mundane and serious. I may be fantastic in my belief, but I
suspect that Lewis was more of a child when he died than when he was a young
man.
This is important.
Actually it is, in my mind, of critical importance. Namely, I believe we
must work hard as we age to continue to dream, continue to set goals, some of
which are fantastic. Dreams are what give the soul life; wishful fantasies are
important to bring joy to the mundane drudgery in which we too often live.
Dreaming can become difficult the older we get because we
are afraid of disappointment. Past failures cause us to be afraid to trust… to
trust ourselves or to trust that God will not disappoint. We must learn to dream big, but to hold such
dreams loosely. We need to trust God that He will always fulfill our wildest
fantasies…as long as they are good for us.
In the same way that a parent must temper a child’s desires, God will not
always fulfill every fantasy of ours. But just like a parent who loves her
child, God will fulfill every healthy wish.
In fact, He generally will fulfill far beyond what we could have hoped
and dreamed (cf. Ephesians 3:20).
So in honor of C.S. Lewis’s birthday, dust off some of those
wild ideas, dream big, and set a new, fantastic goal. Put the fear in the backseat and floor the accelerator. Turn the radio up, and let your hair blow in
the wind… no matter how old you are.
Dear Tim, could you please kindly let me where the quote comes from? thanks.
ReplyDeleteI do not recognise it and nor does Wikiquotes. I am suspicious that it reads like many of the quotes found in self improvement manuals, and is propagating on the web without a citation. For somebody who has done a thorough search and found it wanting, see http://merecslewis.blogspot.com/2011/01/new-year-new-goals-new-dreams.html
ReplyDeleteI too have searched and searched for the citation and not found it. You may be right, Paul. It may be wrongly attributed to C.S. Lewis. All the same, I think the message is good.
ReplyDeleteits not c.s.lewis the language is wrong, its nowhere near as theological as the man,s treatises were bound to be and there has been absolutely no source citing c.s lewis as the originator of this quote other than this stupid 'just hang in there, kitten in a tree' Americanism pseudo-motivational psycho babble designed to make office jockeys and repressed low self esteemers feel slightly worse than they would feel if they would only just stop looking to posters and self help gurus to fix their self imposed servitude :-)
ReplyDeleteWikiquotes lists it under misattributions, with the comment:
ReplyDeleteUnknown, but also attributed to Les Brown, a motivational speaker. Commonly attributed to C.S. Lewis, but never with a primary source listed.
Please remove the bogus quote! This article might be the source: http://news.investors.com/management-leaders-in-success/091313-670962-cs-lewis-learned-from-his-critics.htm?p=full
ReplyDeletebut the quote there is from the article's author and not CSL.
actually, keep this thread up .... while looking for a source I found this site. It didn't sound like Lewis's voice and it's nice to have people question it.
ReplyDeleteSeen it attributed to Aristotle, but I bet that's bogus too!
ReplyDeleteBogus quote: CS Lewis did not spout pop psycho-babble!
ReplyDeleteYou may not be too old to dream, but you really do need to wake up sometime.
ReplyDeleteWhether you are having nightmares or completely incredible, idealistic dreams, we all want to understand them better. Dreams are so frequently studied because of their unimaginable and vast potential. Various scientists have sought to understand dreams and sleep patterns including Sigmund Freud. Here are options for dreams, dream moods, field of dreams, how to lucid dream, dream quotes and what do dreams mean.
ReplyDelete