Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Notes on Screwtape, Part I

This Christmas season, I wanted to patch up one of the many holes in my reading and picked up a copy of The Screwtape Letters (for New York readers, there's a theater performance of it in town that I've heard some good things about, but please weigh in if you've caught it).  The book is clever and very enjoyable, and I thought it might be fun to share some passages over the next few weeks with the MOJ community for comment, discussion, remonstration, silently satisfied rumination, etc. 

Here's a passage from the second letter.  Screwtape, a highly placed demon, is describing to his nephew, the novice demon Wormwood, the best way to prey on the sensibilities of the recent Christian convert -- to direct him back to the devil's fold:

Work hard, then, on the disappointment or anticlimax which is certainly coming to the patient during his first few weeks as a churchman.  The Enemy allows this disappointment to occur on the threshold of every endeavour.  It occurs when the boy who has been enchanted in the nursery by Stories From the Odyssey buckles down to really learning Greek.  It occurs when lovers have got married and begin the real task of learning to live together.  In every department of life it marks the transition from dreaming aspiration to laborious doing.

I was reminded of the statement (I can't remember where) that for the convert, the first experience of Christianity is like the first experience of the Post Office.  How marvelous!!  One's mail is picked up and is actually (by some sorcerer's magic?...no...but how, then?) delivered in timely fashion all over the world?  Not to be believed!  For the ordinary church goer, by contrast, the Post Office performs its regular, necessary and vital labor, just as it ever has and ever will.

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DeGirolami, Marc | Permalink

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I must say that I have found disappointment and anticlimax lasts decades, not just weeks. I don't know if everyone experiences that, or only those who went to Catholic school in the 1950s and early 1960s and got their idea of Catholicism from such sources as The Baltimore Catechism. Everything was so simple and straightforward! Unbaptized babies went to Limbo, the Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus, the Church was the True Israel, the great thing about the Church was that you could go anywhere in the world and the Mass would be the same (in Latin, of course), it was a mortal sin to eat meat on Fridays, the story of Adam and Eve was literally true, everything printed in red in the Bible was actually said by Jesus, by going to the Wedding Feast at Cana "Jesus raised marriage to the dignity of a sacrament," the Old Testament was filled with "prophecies" that clearly came true in the Gospels, the Gospels were filled with "proof texts" that only Protestants could deny, the RSV was a Protestant Bible not to be read by Catholics (who had the Douay-Rheims Version -- what more could anybody ask for?), and I found C. S. Lewis to be one of the wisest men on earth. (I still think A Grief Observed is a great book.)