"If the devil cannot make us bad, he will make us busy"
About this Quote
The line lands like a trapdoor: it doesn’t flatter you with the drama of “temptation,” it indicts you with the banality of a full calendar. Corrie ten Boom’s genius here is tactical. She shifts evil from the lurid to the logistical. The devil, in her framing, doesn’t need to lure you into obvious vice; he can win by flooding your life with emails, errands, committees, even good causes, until your attention is chopped into confetti.
The subtext is a critique of moral self-confidence. Most people assume they’ll never be “bad” in any headline-grabbing way, so they stop guarding the quieter infrastructure of character: silence, prayer, rest, relationships, the ability to notice need. “Busy” becomes the socially acceptable costume for avoidance. It lets you feel important while slowly eroding what ten Boom, a devout Christian, would call the soul’s orientation toward God and neighbor.
Context matters because ten Boom wasn’t theorizing from a wellness blog. As a Dutch Christian who helped Jews escape the Nazis and survived Ravensbruck, she understood how easily ordinary life can be bent toward complicity through distraction, fear, and routine. Her warning isn’t just personal piety; it’s moral readiness. When crisis arrives, you don’t suddenly invent courage. You draw from whatever you’ve protected while life was “fine.” The line works because it reframes busyness as a spiritual anesthetic: not sin’s opposite, but its most efficient delivery system.
The subtext is a critique of moral self-confidence. Most people assume they’ll never be “bad” in any headline-grabbing way, so they stop guarding the quieter infrastructure of character: silence, prayer, rest, relationships, the ability to notice need. “Busy” becomes the socially acceptable costume for avoidance. It lets you feel important while slowly eroding what ten Boom, a devout Christian, would call the soul’s orientation toward God and neighbor.
Context matters because ten Boom wasn’t theorizing from a wellness blog. As a Dutch Christian who helped Jews escape the Nazis and survived Ravensbruck, she understood how easily ordinary life can be bent toward complicity through distraction, fear, and routine. Her warning isn’t just personal piety; it’s moral readiness. When crisis arrives, you don’t suddenly invent courage. You draw from whatever you’ve protected while life was “fine.” The line works because it reframes busyness as a spiritual anesthetic: not sin’s opposite, but its most efficient delivery system.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Too Small to Ignore (Wess Stafford, 2010) modern compilationISBN: 9780307550439 · ID: Xa6IH9UE7xMC
Evidence: ... Corrie ten Boom , once said , with marvelous insight , " If the devil cannot make us bad , he will make us busy . " Busy is in some ways a four - letter word . It is also a mandatory word in our society ; you have to say it . One modern ... Other candidates (1) I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue (Corrie Ten Boom) compilation37.5% us the empire considers its response barry cryer will somebody shut those bloody |
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