The Screwtape Letters

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Book by C.S Lewis - The Screwtape Letters, page 9

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very pages of the dossier. It drives me mad, the way the world has worsened.
We'd have had her to the arena in the old days. That's what her sort is made
for. Not that she'd do much good there, either. A two-faced little cheat (I know
the sort) who looks as if she'd faint at the sight of blood and then dies with a
smile. A cheat every way. Looks as if butter wouldn't melt in her mouth and yet
has a satirical wit. The sort of creature who'd find ME funny! Filthy insipid
little prude—and yet ready to fall into this booby's arms like any other
breeding animal. Why doesn't the Enemy blast her for it, if He's so moonstruck
by virginity—instead of looking on there, grinning?
He's a hedonist at heart. All those fasts and vigils and stakes and crosses are
only a façade. Or only like foam on the sea shore. Out at sea, out in His sea,
there is pleasure, and more pleasure. He makes no secret of it; at His right
hand are "pleasures for evermore". Ugh! I don't think He has the least inkling
of that high and austere mystery to which we rise in the Miserific Vision. He's
vulgar, Wormwood. He has a bourgeois mind. He has filled His world full of
pleasures. There are things for humans to do all day long without His minding in
the least—sleeping, washing, eating, drinking, making love, playing, praying,
working, Everything has to be twisted before it's any use to us. We fight under
cruel disadvantages. Nothing is naturally on our side. (Not that that excuses
you. I'll settle with you presently. You have always hated me and been insolent
when you dared.)
Then, of course, he gets to know this woman's family and whole circle. Could you
not see that the very house she lives in is one that he ought never to have
entered? The whole place reeks of that deadly odour. The very gardener, though
he has only been there five years, is beginning to acquire it. Even guests,
after a week-end visit, carry some of the smell away with them. The dog and the
cat are tainted with it. And a house full of the impenetrable mystery. We are
certain (it is a matter of first principles) that each member of the family must
in some way be making capital out of the others—but we can't find out how. They
guard as jealously as the Enemy Himself the secret of what really lies behind
this pretence of disinterested love. The whole house and garden is one vast
obscenity. It bears a sickening resemblance to the description one human writer
made of Heaven; "the regions where there is only life and therefore all that is
not music is silence"
Music and silence—how I detest them both! How thankful we should be that ever
since our Father entered Hell—though longer ago than humans, reckoning in light
years, could express—no square inch of infernal space and no moment of infernal
time has been surrendered to either of those abominable forces, but all has been
occupied by Noise—Noise, the grand dynamism, the audible expression of all that
is exultant, ruthless, and virile—Noise which alone defends us from silly
qualms, despairing scruples, and impossible desires. We will make the whole
universe a noise in the end. We have already made great strides in this
direction as regards the Earth. The melodies and silences of Heaven will be
shouted down in the end. But I admit we are not yet loud enough, or anything
like it. Research is in progress. Meanwhile you, disgusting little——
[Here the MS. breaks off and is resumed in a different hand.]
In the heat of composition I find that I have inadvertently allowed myself to
assume the form of a large centipede. I am accordingly dictating the rest to my
secretary. Now that the transformation is complete I recognise it as a
periodical phenomenon. Some rumour of it has reached the humans and a distorted
account of it appears in the poet Milton, with the ridiculous addition that such
changes of shape are a "punishment" imposed on us by the Enemy. A more modern
writer—someone with a name like Pshaw—has, however, grasped the truth.
Transformation proceeds from within and is a glorious manifestation of that Life
Force which Our Father would worship if he worshipped anything but himself. In
my present form I feel even more anxious to see you, to unite you to myself in
an indissoluble embrace,
(Signed) TOADPIPE
For his Abysmal Sublimity Under Secretary
Screwtape, T.E., B.S., etc.
XXIII
MY DEAR WORMWOOD,
Through this girl and her disgusting family the patient is now getting to know
more Christians every day, and very intelligent Christians too. For a long time
it will be quite impossible to remove spirituality from his life. Very well
then; we must corrupt it. No doubt you have often practised transforming
yourself into an angel of light as a parade-ground exercise. Now is the time to
do it in the face of the Enemy. The World and the Flesh have failed us; a third
Power remains. And success of this third kind is the most glorious of all. A
spoiled saint, a Pharisee, an inquisitor, or a magician, makes better sport in
Hell than a mere common tyrant or debauchee.
Looking round your patient's new friends I find that the best point of attack
would be the border-line between theology and politics. Several of his new
friends are very much alive to the social implications of their religion. That,
in itself, is a bad thing; but good can be made out of it.
You will find that a good many Christian-political writers think that
Christianity began going wrong, and departing from the doctrine of its Founder,
at a very early stage. Now this idea must be used by us to encourage once again
the conception of a "historical Jesus" to be found by clearing away later
"accretions and perversions" and then to be contrasted with the whole Christian
tradition. In the last generation we promoted the construction of such a
"historical Jesus" on liberal and humanitarian lines; we are now putting forward
a new "historical Jesus" on Marxian, catastrophic, and revolutionary lines. The
advantages of these constructions, which we intend to change every thirty years
or so, are manifold. In the first place they all tend to direct men's devotion
to something which does not exist, for each "historical Jesus" is unhistorical.
The documents say what they say and cannot be added to; each new "historical
Jesus" therefore has to be got out of them by suppression at one point and
exaggeration at another, and by that sort of guessing (brilliant is the
adjective we teach humans to apply to it) on which no one would risk ten
shillings in ordinary life, but which is enough to produce a crop of new
Napoleons, new Shakespeares, and new Swifts, in every publisher's autumn list.
In the second place, all such constructions place the importance of their
Historical Jesus in some peculiar theory He is supposed to have promulgated. He
has to be a "great man" in the modern sense of the word—one standing at the
terminus of some centrifugal and unbalanced line of thought—a crank vending a
panacea. We thus distract men's minds from Who He is, and what He did. We first
make Him solely a teacher, and then conceal the very substantial agreement
between His teachings and those of all other great moral teachers. For humans
must not be allowed to notice that all great moralists are sent by the Enemy not
to inform men but to remind them, to restate the primeval moral platitudes
against our continual concealment of them. We make the Sophists: He raises up a
Socrates to answer them. Our third aim is, by these constructions, to destroy
the devotional life. For the real presence of the Enemy, otherwise experienced
by men in prayer and sacrament, we substitute a merely probable, remote,
shadowy, and uncouth figure, one who spoke a strange language and died a long
time ago. Such an object cannot in fact be worshipped. Instead of the Creator
adored by its creature, you soon have merely a leader acclaimed by a partisan,
and finally a distinguished character approved by a judicious historian. And
fourthly, besides being unhistorical in the Jesus it depicts, religion of this
kind is false to history in another sense.
No nation, and few individuals, are really brought into the Enemy's camp by the
historical study of the biography of Jesus, simply as biography. Indeed
materials for a full biography have been withheld from men. The earliest
converts were converted by a single historical fact (the Resurrection) and a
single theological doctrine (the Redemption) operating on a sense of sin which
they already had—and sin, not against some new fancy-dress law produced as a
novelty by a "great man", but against the old, platitudinous, universal moral
law which they had been taught by their nurses and mothers. The "Gospels" come
later and were written not to make Christians but to edify Christians already
made.
The "Historical Jesus" then, however dangerous he may seem to be to us at some
particular point, is always to be encouraged. About the general connection
between Christianity and politics, our position is more delicate. Certainly we
do not want men to allow their Christianity to flow over into their political
life, for the establishment of anything like a really just society would be a
major disaster. On the other hand we do want, and want very much, to make men
treat Christianity as a means; preferably, of course, as a means to their own
advancement, but, failing that, as a means to anything—even to social justice.
The thing to do is to get a man at first to value social justice as a thing
which the Enemy demands, and then work him on to the stage at which he values
Christianity because it may produce social justice. For the Enemy will not be
used as a convenience. Men or nations who think they can revive the Faith in
order to make a good society might just as well think they can use the stairs of
Heaven as a short cut to the nearest chemist's shop. Fortunately it is quite
easy to coax humans round this little corner. Only today I have found a passage
in a Christian writer where he recommends his own version of Christianity on the
ground that "only such a faith can outlast the death of old cultures and the
birth of new civilisations". You see the little rift? "Believe this, not because
it is true, but for some other reason." That's the game,
Your affectionate uncle
SCREWTAPE
XXIV
MY DEAR WORMWOOD,
I have been in correspondence with Slumtrimpet who is in charge of your
patient's young woman, and begin to see the chink in her armour. It is an
unobtrusive little vice which she shares with nearly all women who have grown up
in an intelligent circle united by a clearly defined belief; and it consists in
a quite untroubled assumption that the outsiders who do not share this belief
are really too stupid and ridiculous. The males, who habitually meet these
outsiders, do not feel that way; their confidence, if they are confident, is of
a different kind. Hers, which she supposes to be due to Faith, is in reality
largely due to the mere colour she has taken from her surroundings. It is not,
in fact, very different from the conviction she would have felt at the age of
ten that the kind of fish-knives used in her father's house were the proper or
normal or "real" kind, while those of the neighbouring families were "not real
fish-knives" at all. Now the element of ignorance and naïvety in all this is so
large, and the element of spiritual pride so small, that it gives us little hope
of the girl herself. But have you thought of how it can be made to influence
your own patient?
It is always the novice who exaggerates. The man who has risen in society is
over-refined, the young scholar is pedantic. In this new circle your patient is
a novice. He is there daily meeting Christian life of a quality he never before
imagined and seeing it all through an enchanted glass because he is in love. He
is anxious (indeed the Enemy commands him) to imitate this quality. Can you get
him to imitate this defect in his mistress and to exaggerate it until what was
venial in her becomes in him the strongest and most beautiful of the
vices—Spiritual Pride?
The conditions seem ideally favourable. The new circle in which he finds himself
is one of which he is tempted to be proud for many reasons other than its
Christianity. It is a better educated, more intelligent, more agreeable society
than any he has yet encountered. He is also under some degree of illusion as to
his own place in it. Under the influence of "love" he may still think himself
unworthy of the girl, but he is rapidly ceasing to think himself unworthy of the
others. He has no notion how much in him is forgiven because they are charitable
and made the best of because he is now one of the family. He does not dream how
much of his conversation, how many of his opinions, are recognised by them all
as mere echoes of their own. Still less does he suspect how much of the delight
he takes in these people is due to the erotic enchantment which the girl, for
him, spreads over all her surroundings. He thinks that he likes their talk and
way of life because of some congruity between their spiritual state and his,
when in fact they are so far beyond him that if he were not in love he would be
merely puzzled and repelled by much which he now accepts. He is like a dog which
should imagine it understood fire-arms because its hunting instinct and love for
its master enable it to enjoy a day's shooting!
Here is your chance. While the Enemy, by means of sexual love and of some very
agreeable people far advanced in His service, is drawing the young barbarian up
to levels he could never otherwise have reached, you must make him feel that he
is finding his own level—that these people are "his sort" and that, coming among
them, he has come home. When he turns from them to other society he will find it
dull; partly because almost any society within his reach is, in fact, much less
entertaining, but still more because he will miss the enchantment of the young
woman. You must teach him to mistake his contrast between the circle that
delights and the circle that bores him for the contrast between Christians and
unbelievers. He must be made to feel (he'd better not put it into words) "how
different we Christians are"; and by "we Christians" he must really, but
unknowingly, mean "my set"; and by "my set" he must mean not "The people who, in
their charity and humility, have accepted me", but "The people with whom I
associate by right".
Success here depends on confusing him. If you try to make him explicitly and

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   Friday 05 September, 2008