Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’
According to the Bible, human history unfolds with the overarching presence of God and the limited presence of the devil. Though the fall of humankind into sin resulted in lasting consequences the Judeao-Christian tradition has had little trouble in identifying this distinction. But it is when th...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | Afrikaans |
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AOSIS
2016-12-01
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Series: | In die Skriflig |
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Online Access: | https://indieskriflig.org.za/index.php/skriflig/article/view/2168 |
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author | Raymond M. Potgieter |
author_facet | Raymond M. Potgieter |
author_sort | Raymond M. Potgieter |
collection | DOAJ |
description | According to the Bible, human history unfolds with the overarching presence of God and the limited presence of the devil. Though the fall of humankind into sin resulted in lasting consequences the Judeao-Christian tradition has had little trouble in identifying this distinction. But it is when the devil (and his followers) seek to challenge God’s dominion that the role of God becomes sullied through the seeming victories of the devil. C.S. Lewis was signally aware of spiritual warfare. He explored this in many of his writings, but it was especially The Screwtape Letters that fired the imagination of personal spiritual warfare. These were in story-like fashion from the perspective of demons in conversation with one another in the attempt to corrupt, dominate and destroy particular human subjects. The wider applicatory value of these letters is manifested in Lewis’s final letter from Screwtape: it is this letter that addresses the education system and shows how, from the devil’s perspective, matters such as the desensitisation of evil, normalising of forms of violence and deceit all bear evidence of the shifting moral adjustments Lewis identified in the education system of his day. The consequence of this has taken on the semblance of normality so that this normalisation constantly adjusts to the on- going progression towards still weirder and deeper forms of evil. |
first_indexed | 2024-04-13T21:54:43Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-7fdb09a65fe547fb8b6ac56e9cba9268 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1018-6441 2305-0853 |
language | Afrikaans |
last_indexed | 2024-04-13T21:54:43Z |
publishDate | 2016-12-01 |
publisher | AOSIS |
record_format | Article |
series | In die Skriflig |
spelling | doaj.art-7fdb09a65fe547fb8b6ac56e9cba92682022-12-22T02:28:17ZafrAOSISIn die Skriflig1018-64412305-08532016-12-01501e1e810.4102/ids.v50i1.21682104Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’Raymond M. Potgieter0Faculty of Theology, North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusAccording to the Bible, human history unfolds with the overarching presence of God and the limited presence of the devil. Though the fall of humankind into sin resulted in lasting consequences the Judeao-Christian tradition has had little trouble in identifying this distinction. But it is when the devil (and his followers) seek to challenge God’s dominion that the role of God becomes sullied through the seeming victories of the devil. C.S. Lewis was signally aware of spiritual warfare. He explored this in many of his writings, but it was especially The Screwtape Letters that fired the imagination of personal spiritual warfare. These were in story-like fashion from the perspective of demons in conversation with one another in the attempt to corrupt, dominate and destroy particular human subjects. The wider applicatory value of these letters is manifested in Lewis’s final letter from Screwtape: it is this letter that addresses the education system and shows how, from the devil’s perspective, matters such as the desensitisation of evil, normalising of forms of violence and deceit all bear evidence of the shifting moral adjustments Lewis identified in the education system of his day. The consequence of this has taken on the semblance of normality so that this normalisation constantly adjusts to the on- going progression towards still weirder and deeper forms of evil.https://indieskriflig.org.za/index.php/skriflig/article/view/2168devilScrewtapeWormwoodEnemyPatient |
spellingShingle | Raymond M. Potgieter Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ In die Skriflig devil Screwtape Wormwood Enemy Patient |
title | Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ |
title_full | Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ |
title_fullStr | Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ |
title_full_unstemmed | Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ |
title_short | Revisiting C.S. Lewis’ <i>Screwtape Letters</i> of 1941 and exploring their relation to ‘Screwtape proposes a toast’ |
title_sort | revisiting c s lewis i screwtape letters i of 1941 and exploring their relation to screwtape proposes a toast |
topic | devil Screwtape Wormwood Enemy Patient |
url | https://indieskriflig.org.za/index.php/skriflig/article/view/2168 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT raymondmpotgieter revisitingcslewisiscrewtapelettersiof1941andexploringtheirrelationtoscrewtapeproposesatoast |