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The
Screwtape Letters
By
way of introduction, I think the reader should know that I have
been asked to write this brief piece
on C. S. Lewis’s The
Screwtape Letters on the basis of a rather odd qualification:
I’ve
memorized it. It isn’t that I go around memorizing things all
the time (except as it was necessary in medical training). I memorized
the Letters because I found I couldn’t really ponder
what Lewis was saying without being able to hold a whole letter,
or at least
a big chunk of one, in my mind all at once. It’s
that sort of book. You are utterly dazzled by the intelligence of
it, and yet
after reading it, you can only remember a snippet or two.
Perhaps it will be useful to explain how this memorizing project
got started.
Like many people, I had been familiar with Lewis’s Narnia series—I
was introduced to it when my wife, who had been enchanted by The Lion, The
Witch
and The Wardrobe as a child, read it, in turn, to our children. Later, I
came
across and became equally enchanted with Lewis’s science-fiction trilogy
(why has no one made Out of the Silent Planet and the others into a
film?). Of
The Screwtape Letters, and, for that matter, the rest of Lewis’s more
overtly
Christian writings, I knew nothing.
Then
a friend, with whom I had collaborated on a translation, showed
me a copy of the audio recording by John Cleese. I borrowed
it (permanently, as it turned out) and began listening. And listening. And
listening. Each time I heard things I hadn’t heard the time before. Then, after having
gone through them perhaps 50 times, I began, without really intending to, trying
to quote some of the more pithy, stand-alone, passages to friends—and
failing miserably. So, what alternative was there but to commit them to memory?
In time, it became a spectacularly productive way to use time otherwise wasted
during the daily commute (for example, listening to the “news”).
Not only did it enable me to grapple with Lewis’s thought, it strengthened
my mind generally, and even made me a better driver—imagine looking forward
to a traffic jam in order to finish another page!
For
those who don’t know the book, the setup is this: Screwtape
himself is a senior devil in the “lowerarchy of Our Father
Below.” The letters
are directed to his nephew Wormwood, a Junior Tempter on Earth, working on
one of us— whom they call a “patient.” The letters
themselves follow Wormwood’s efforts to tempt the patient,
who has (to Screwtape’s “grave
displeasure”) by the second letter, become a Christian. The goal of
damnation is to “secure his soul forever” — to turn him
against God (to Screwtape, “the Enemy” and “our Oppressor”)
so that on entering Eternity, the man will become “a brimfull living
chalice of despair and horror and astonishment which you can raise to your
lips as often as you
please.” It turns out that to the devils, we humans are “primarily
food.”
I would not, “Hell forbid,” give away the ending of the book,
but it will do no harm to say that along the way, the course of temptations
recommended
by Screwtape follows the three great sources of corruption we humans fall
prey to—the World, the Flesh, and finally, the Spirit itself. Cowardice,
vanity, lust, ambition, gluttony, spiritual pride—they’re all
here, and all in the context of one human being’s search for knowledge
of God’s
will in the midst of the horror of World War II.
An
apparently profoundly impressed reader once intimated that the
Letters must represent “the
ripe fruit of many years’ study in moral and ascetic
theology.” I imagine Lewis laughing heartily when he responded to
this suggestion as follows: “. . . there is an equally reliable,
though less creditable, way of learning how temptation works. ‘My
heart’—I
need no other’s—showeth me the wickedness of the ungodly.’ ”
The
great lesson Lewis is trying to smuggle into our minds (camouflaged
in humor to get around all the defenses erected by Screwtape and
his cohorts)
is the essential
Christian doctrine—what he called elsewhere “mere” Christianity. Chiefly, it is that God is very much alive, that He loves us in ways we
do not understand, and that He wants us to act from our own wills in accordance
with
His. As always, His Abysmal Sublimity, Undersecretary Screwtape, says it
horribly:
We
can drag our patients along by continual tempting, because
we design them only for the table and the more their wills
are interfered
with the better. He cannot ‘tempt’ to virtue as we do to
vice. He wants them to learn to walk and must therefore take away his
hand; and if
only the will to walk is
really there He is pleased even with their stumbles.
And again, in a later letter:
.
. . our aim is the absorption of its will into ours, the
increase of our own area of selfhood at its expense. But
the obedience
which the Enemy demands of man is quite a different thing.
One must face the fact that all the talk about His love for
men, and His service
being perfect freedom, is not (as one would gladly believe)
mere propaganda, but an appalling truth. He really does want
to fill the
universe with a lot of loathsome little replicas of Himself – creatures
whose life, on its miniature scale, will be qualitatively
like his own, not because He has absorbed them but because
their wills freely
conform to His. We want cattle who can finally become food;
He wants servants who can finally become sons.
I
see I’ve begun making use of more extensive quotes
than a commentary calls for. I hope I may be forgiven.
It seems entirely likely to me that as
the years pass and the need for a clear voice, plainly speaking great truths
becomes more and more important, the significance of Lewis’s thought
will become much more widely known and appreciated. A video, a feature film
(Shadowlands), and a PBS special (The Question
of God: C. S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud) already exist. All have their
points, but none substitutes for one’s own efforts to take on the difficult
job of seeing Screwtape at work in oneself and trying not to let him have his
way.
A
final personal note. I found out only after his death that my
wife’s
father, The Right Reverend J. Brooke Mosley, had been a great admirer of
C. S. Lewis, and that he had owned a nearly first edition copy
of the Screwtape
Letters. A few years ago, his widow, Betty, gave it to me and, thus came
the great delight of reading on the dust jacket this brief comment
by Dr. George
A. Buttrick of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City, “I
have been carrying the book with me; and, like a pest, reading it to anyone
who will listen.”
Me
too. It’s that sort of book.
copyright ©2005 Richard S. Sandor
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