Are You Attached to God?
Lewis to Joyce Pearce in Collected Letters Volume 2, July 20, 1943: It is to me inconceivable that Nature as we see it is either what God intended or merely evil: it looks like a good thing spoiled.
The doctrine of the Fall... is the only satisfactory explanation. Evil begins, in a universe were all was good, from free will, which was permitted because it makes possible the greatest good of all. The corruption of the first sinner consists not in choosing some evil thing... but in preferring a lesser good (himself) before a greater (God).
The Fall is, in fact, Pride.
The possibility of this wrong preference is inherent in the very fact of having, or being, a self at all. But though freedom is real it is not infinite. Every choice reduces a little ones freedom to choose the next time. There therefore comes a time when the creature is fully built, irrevocably attached to either God or to itself.
This irrevocableness is what we call Heaven or Hell.
Every conscious agent is finally committed in the long run: i.e. it rises above freedom into willed, but henceforth unalterable, union with God, or else sinks below freedom into the black fire of self-imprisonment.
That is why the universe (as even the physicists now admit) has a real history, a fifth act with a finale in which the good characters 'live happily ever after' and the bad ones are cast out.
At least that is how I see it.
Yours sincerely,
C. S. Lewis
Lewis to Joyce Pearce in Collected Letters Volume 2, July 20, 1943: It is to me inconceivable that Nature as we see it is either what God intended or merely evil: it looks like a good thing spoiled.
The doctrine of the Fall... is the only satisfactory explanation. Evil begins, in a universe were all was good, from free will, which was permitted because it makes possible the greatest good of all. The corruption of the first sinner consists not in choosing some evil thing... but in preferring a lesser good (himself) before a greater (God).
The Fall is, in fact, Pride.
The possibility of this wrong preference is inherent in the very fact of having, or being, a self at all. But though freedom is real it is not infinite. Every choice reduces a little ones freedom to choose the next time. There therefore comes a time when the creature is fully built, irrevocably attached to either God or to itself.
This irrevocableness is what we call Heaven or Hell.
Every conscious agent is finally committed in the long run: i.e. it rises above freedom into willed, but henceforth unalterable, union with God, or else sinks below freedom into the black fire of self-imprisonment.
That is why the universe (as even the physicists now admit) has a real history, a fifth act with a finale in which the good characters 'live happily ever after' and the bad ones are cast out.
At least that is how I see it.
Yours sincerely,
C. S. Lewis
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