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The
Screwtape Letters
C.S. Lewis
Who
among us has never wondered
if there might not really be
a tempter sitting on our shoulders
or dogging our steps? C.S. Lewis
dispels all doubts. In The Screwtape
Letters, one of his bestselling
works, we are made privy to
the instructional correspondence
between a senior demon, Screwtape,
and his wannabe diabolical nephew
Wormwood. As mentor, Screwtape
coaches Wormwood in the finer
points, tempting his "patient"
away from God.
Each letter is a masterpiece
of reverse theology, giving
the reader an inside look at
the thinking and means of temptation.
Tempters, according to Lewis,
have two motives: the first
is fear of punishment, the second
a hunger to consume or dominate
other beings. On the other hand,
the goal of the Creator is to
woo us unto himself or to transform
us through his love from "tools
into servants and servants into
sons." It is the dichotomy
between being consumed and subsumed
completely into another's identity
or being liberated to be utterly
ourselves that Lewis explores
with his razor-sharp insight
and wit.
The most brilliant feature of
The Screwtape Letters may be
likening hell to a bureaucracy
in which "everyone is perpetually
concerned about his own dignity
and advancement, where everyone
has a grievance, and where everyone
lives the deadly serious passions
of envy, self-importance, and
resentment." We all understand
bureaucracies, be it the Department
of Motor Vehicles, the IRS,
or one of our own making. So
we each understand the temptations
that slowly lure us into hell.
If you've never read Lewis,
The Screwtape Letters is a great
place to start. And if you know
Lewis, but haven't read this,
you've missed one of his core
writings.
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