Link to buy book: On Resistance to Evil by Force
Another great chapter, but a little shorter and a bit easier to read, mostly because I already understood this concept and knew all the Scripture he referenced.
Resisting evil is ONLY meaningful if it is done on behalf of good. In other words, only the virtuous can recognize the evil and resist it from a stance of wanting to do good. When evil happens to oppose some other evil, it is usually in service of it's own evil ideas, rather than a desire to do good. At best, it is a collision of evil intentions between two others. This means that us, as the virtuous, have to fight evil on two fronts, rather than just one. This gives lie to the idea that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend"; no, he is still your enemy and you'll have to fight him too, as soon as your paths diverge from the current same direction. As Ilyin quoted in the book, if one snake eats the other snake, there is still a snake to deal with.
Ilyin points out that resisting evil is a net good and thus stems from spritual love.
Love without a spiritual component is risky. That leads to temptation and the potential to do evil under the guise of advancing love. It becomes blind and self-defeating. The spiritual component is what compels us to be willing to die for something other than ourselves.
Ilyin points out the truth in Matthew 22:38 (Jesus replied, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind - this the First and Greatest Commandment", you heathens). We must love God first in order to love our neighbors and see them in a new light. Only then can we truly "Love thy neighbor." Loving God is required and is inseparable from loving your neighbor. This means that you see the Holy Spirit in others, just as it is in you.
The movie The Road comes to mind. In it, the father keeps telling the boy that they are "carrying the fire". When the father dies and the boy meets a new family, he first asks them if they are "carrying the fire". I think this is the same idea.
According to Ilyin, you must be a Son (or Daughter) of God to see anyone else as a Son of God. This loves gives you a feeling of connection to something bigger than yourself. These include: God, Church, homeland, your leaders, the other people. This connects you to a cause that you would be willing to die for.
Ilyin writes that those who lack spiritual love usually put usefulness and equality above divinity (sound familiar?). They say that everyone is equal and the no one is right or wrong. This is where "living their truth" comes from. They see events as destined to happen or inevitable. They believe that everyone's happiness is more important than anything else.
On the other hand, those with spiritual love generally put divinity and goodness above all else, especially over usefulness or happiness. Spiritual love knows that all are not equal. This is where Ilyin drops the BANGER quote of the day: There are those "who are better off being killed than allowed to do evil." WOW. This is truly loving thy neighbor. It's saying I love you too much to let you destroy your soul with an evil act, so I will stop you. In this section, we see Ilyin quote the three eyewitness accounts of Jesus laying it down with the millstone quote (Matthew 18:6, Mark 9:42, and Luke 17:1-2). One with spiritual love also knows the danger of letting "happiness" be the standard, because most people are perfectly happy with sin.
Another great Ilyin quote is in the chapter's closing:
"Noble death is always better than shameful life."
SIde note, in this chapter Ilyin leaves a footnote that references Heraclitus, fragment 49:
"To me, one man is worth 10,000 if he is first rate."
This means that a man with wisdom and courage is better than 10,000 without. Strive to be the one man. Be worthy of each other.
Let me know your thoughts below.