| The Screwtape Letters:
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.
--Patricia Klein
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