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A Mind That Grasped Both Heaven and Hell
NY Times ^ | 11/22/03 | JOSEPH LOCONTE

Posted on 11/22/2003 2:56:08 PM PST by Valin

WASHINGTON Forty years ago today, as the world mourned the assassination of an American president, the passing of the 20th century's most influential Christian writer was hardly noticed: Clive Staples Lewis, professor of English literature at Oxford and Cambridge, died on Nov. 22, 1963. In his ability to nurture the faithful, as well as seduce the skeptic, C. S. Lewis had no peer.

Lewis was an atheist for much of his adult life, an experience that may have helped immunize him from the religious cliché, the reluctance to ask hard questions, the self-righteousness of the zealot. "Mr. Lewis possesses the rare gift," according to an early reviewer, "of being able to make righteousness readable." Lewis was not a theologian, but he expressed even the most difficult religious concepts with bracing clarity. He was not a preacher, yet his essays and novels pierce the heart with their nobility and tenderness.

The lessons found within his writings continue to resonate today. In fact, it's hard to imagine a time when the need for sane thinking about religion was more momentous. Cite an act of terror, from the sniper shootings in Washington to the bombings in Baghdad and Istanbul, and faith is close at hand. Many are now tempted to equate piety with venality — or worse — and it's here that Lewis may have the most to teach us.

Born in 1898, Lewis reached maturity in the 1930's, when Europe was being convulsed by the rise of new tyrannies: communism in Russia and fascism in Spain, Italy and Germany. At the same time, trends in psychology and theology were discrediting Christian doctrines of sin and repentance. The "root causes" of international disorder were said to be social and political arrangements, like runaway capitalism or the flawed Treaty of Versailles. But Lewis, like his friend J. R. R. Tolkien, knew the trouble lay deeper, and marshaled his literary imagination to explore it.

In a harrowing scene from his science fiction novel "Perelandra," the protagonist, Prof. Elwin Ransom, battles a mad scientist horribly disfigured by his lust for power. Lewis writes: "What was before him appeared no longer a creature of corrupted will. It was corruption itself to which will was attached only as an instrument." The Christians, Lewis argued, were right: the mystery of evil was rooted in the tragedy of human nature. Pride, and the poisoned conscience it created, functioned as the engine of the world's woes. Unchallenged, it led to a "ruthless, sleepless, unsmiling concentration upon self, which is the mark of Hell."

Many modern liberals dismiss Lewis's concept of the diabolical as a "medieval" superstition. Yet many religious conservatives seem to make evil the brainchild of God himself. For them, all individual and social sin — including the terror of Sept. 11 — is the perfect will of a Divine Judge (as the Rev. Jerry Falwell claimed at the time). Lewis disagreed: Evil is always man's doing, yet it is never his destiny. The power of choice makes evil possible, but it's also "the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having."

While Oxford agnostics howled, Lewis gave BBC talks on theology that were a national sensation. Even his beloved children's stories, "The Chronicles of Narnia," ring with biblical themes of sin and redemption. No one did more to make "the repellent doctrines" of Christianity plausible to modern ears.

Nevertheless, Lewis acknowledged that religion easily becomes a device to exploit others — sometimes, as in the case of sexually abusive priests, at the very steps of the altar. The pretense of piety, he said, has left a record of violence that should shame every honest believer. "Of all bad men, religious bad men are the worst," he wrote in "Reflections on the Psalms."

Yet, unlike the cynic, Lewis refused to blame the faith itself for the shortcomings of the church. Instead, his writings offer bright glimpses into the moral beauty of divine goodness, what Lewis called "the weight of glory." It is this vision of the Holy, he observed, that has produced many of the masterpieces of art and music. This same vision motivates the faithful to risk everything to relieve the world's suffering: caring for plague victims, defending the rights of children, guiding slaves to freedom, breaching war zones to feed the poor.

"If you read history, you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next," he wrote in "Mere Christianity," one of his best-known works. "It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this." In an era when God himself seems to be on trial, that's a timely message — for the half-hearted pilgrim as well as the devoted doubter. Probably just what C. S. Lewis had in mind.

Joseph Loconte, religion fellow at the Heritage Foundation, is editor of the forthcoming "The End of Illusions: America's Churches and Hitler's Gathering Storm, 1938-41.''


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: anniversary; christianity; cslewis; faith; spiritualjourney; tribute
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To: Valin
THANKS.
MUCH APPRECIATED.

MUCH AGREE.
41 posted on 11/22/2003 6:37:07 PM PST by Quix (WORK NOW to defeat one personal network friend, relative, associate's liberal idiocy now, warmly)
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To: Valin
BUMP for good article.
42 posted on 11/22/2003 6:43:30 PM PST by maxwell (Well I'm sure I'd feel much worse if I weren't under such heavy sedation...)
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To: lavrenti
I always thought Eustace and Jill was a barely masked love story. Perhaps a little reflective of Lewis' life and marriage.

Huh?!

43 posted on 11/22/2003 6:44:57 PM PST by maxwell (Well I'm sure I'd feel much worse if I weren't under such heavy sedation...)
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To: Valin
Anyone who claims to be a christian should read and understand "Mere Christianity"
44 posted on 11/22/2003 6:53:32 PM PST by whipitgood
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To: viaveritasvita
Thanks!
45 posted on 11/22/2003 6:53:52 PM PST by Hebrews 11:6 (Look it up!)
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To: the invisib1e hand; Valin
Til We Have Faces and The Pilgrim's Regress are some more good ones. It's been years since I read either of 'em; didn't understand the former when I read it-- too raw or something, but I think I am ready to read it again soon.

Also enjoyed The Dark Tower and other unfinished stories or whatever that compendium of his unfinished work is. Loved his notes on an idea for a story about Agamemnon and Helen of Troy, twenty years after her mug launched the Trojan War. Will warn ya though, it's very disappointing to get to the end of the few pages he had scribbled, and figure out that that's all there is...

46 posted on 11/22/2003 6:54:12 PM PST by maxwell (Well I'm sure I'd feel much worse if I weren't under such heavy sedation...)
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To: viaveritasvita
Than you so much for giving me the wonderful gift of these quotes. I think I'll ask for one of his books for Christmas.

Everyones walk is so different, amazingly so. Almost like each believer is a thread in a beautiful tapestry being woven by His hand.

47 posted on 11/22/2003 7:26:17 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: maxwell
Huh? Well, here goes.

1) Eustace's spiritual development.

2) Jill and Eustace feel isolated, but empathic.

3) Slowly develops in the course of two novels.

4) Eustace's reaction to Jill tossed into the tent with Tash.

5) Remember, they're teenagers--and Jack was, well, English...
48 posted on 11/22/2003 8:37:38 PM PST by lavrenti ("Tell your momma and your poppa, sometimes good guys don't wear white." The Standells)
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To: Walkin Man
I ought to post the story some time about those nights coming up from near Ground Zero to my daughter still awake at midnight, clutching her doll in darkness.

Reading those books to her changed my life, too.
49 posted on 11/22/2003 8:40:08 PM PST by lavrenti ("Tell your momma and your poppa, sometimes good guys don't wear white." The Standells)
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To: Valin
The film Shadowlands with Anthony Hopkins and Debra Winger is an insightful (though a little slow) recounting of Lewis's surprise - to him - romance and marriage to an American writer. Hopkins portrays well his reticence and wariness in becoming involved, and the film captures touchingly the irony of Lewis lecturing about the ennobling power of suffering until he has to face the terminal illness of his wife and finds in real life nothing noble in the experience. Eventually Lewis resolves his pain by ackowledging that after a lifetime of running from love he finally had opened himself to it. He finds solace in something his wife had told him when they were confronting her illness: "the pain now is part of the happiness then - that's the bargain" - a sentiment I'm finding more and more meaningful as I grow older.....
50 posted on 11/22/2003 9:47:23 PM PST by Intolerant in NJ
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To: Valin
"If you take your stand on the 'prevalent' view, how long do you suppose it will prevail? . . . All you can really say about my taste is that it is old-fashioned; yours will soon be the same." C.S. Lewis
51 posted on 11/22/2003 11:07:58 PM PST by beckett
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To: viaveritasvita
great quotes, thanks
52 posted on 11/22/2003 11:18:15 PM PST by Tribune7 (It's not like he let his secretary drown in his car or something.)
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To: viaveritasvita
Thanks for posting. Great quotes.
53 posted on 11/23/2003 5:04:45 AM PST by Right_in_Virginia
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To: VOA
...I've heard one of his stepsons say that Lewis faithfully attended church services...but often had the habit of sitting in a certain pew by which his view of the pulpit was obscured.

How frustrated would he be in one of these horrid modern day round churches that have been foisted upon us?

54 posted on 11/23/2003 6:00:46 AM PST by iconoclast
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To: Walkin Man
Same here. Mere Christianity led me back to a deeper faith. I've read most of Lewis' material, and highly recommend it.

-- Joe
55 posted on 11/23/2003 6:03:09 AM PST by Joe Republc
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To: Sabertooth
I finally got around to listening to the audio verion of "Between Heaven and Hell," by Peter Kreeft.

A theoretical discussion between Lewis, Huxley, and Kennedy just after their death. Lewis defends Christianity, Kennedy secular humanism, and Huxley the current new age / relativism / eastern mysticim.

Kreeft is a Christian, and although the arguments on both sides are deep, I do suspect the dialogue is slanted towards Christianity. Not that I minded much, though ;)

Anyway, another recommend read (or listen in the car.)

-- Joe
56 posted on 11/23/2003 6:07:08 AM PST by Joe Republc
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To: Preech1
One of my favorites has always been The Great Divorce, his (as always) super-imaginative fable/vision of damned souls, heaven, and hell.
57 posted on 11/23/2003 6:18:41 AM PST by iconoclast
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To: iconoclast
modern day round churches

?
58 posted on 11/23/2003 8:24:49 AM PST by Valin (We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
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To: Walkin Man
that picture is now my background wallpaper. thx.
59 posted on 11/23/2003 8:27:10 AM PST by the invisib1e hand
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To: Valin
Scared? Of Rome? I guess you'll find this a zinger....

“I have written this book for those who share my love for Lewis, regardless of whether they share my love for the Catholic Church,” says Pearce, who converted to Catholicism in 1989, and adds that, Lewis’ role in that conversion “was not insignificant.”

60 posted on 11/23/2003 8:39:40 AM PST by the invisib1e hand
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