Jesus said to them, My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work. -- John 4:34
I have been reading through Lewis’ Space Trilogy again. About halfway through Out of the Silent Planet, I realized that I am not the same person
who read these books so many years ago.
Back then I rated Out of the
Silent Planet very highly, in part because it is a good science fiction novel
– the best of the three in that regard.
Originally, Perelandra was not
available to me – I was too broke to buy them, and I was getting them from the
library, so I read That Hideous Strength
out of order. I thought it was good and
had a lot of good ideas, but I have come to realize, having since read The Abolition of Man, that I did not
fully appreciate Lewis’ vision. When I
got around to Perelandra, I was
disappointed. It seemed very contrived
and not all that well-written.
I finished OotSP a
couple of weeks ago. The re-reading did
not change my opinion. It is a good
science fiction novel, but I see it now primarily as a setup for what is to
come. It gives us a new perspective on
the war in the heavenlies of which we are a part. I started Perelandra
with some trepidation only to find that I was getting a lot that I had not
gotten before. Thirty or so years have added quite a bit to my experience and
understanding.
Perelandra's plot turns on a temptation that recapitulates
that of Eve by the Serpent in Eden. The
protagonist, philologist Elwin Ransom – modeled, it is thought, onTolkien, is present
during the temptation and observes the process.
He is even able to interject arguments into the debate between the
tempter and the subject of the temptation.
Unlike the biblical presentation of the temptation and fall in Eden, the
subject in Perelandra successfully
resists the tempter repeatedly. However,
the diabolical agent never stops, and the trial wears on over many days. This leads to the climax which, so long ago,
I dismissed as a failure on Lewis’ part.
I was wrong.
Anyway, I wanted to talk about one of the devil’s points in
his attempt to lure the subject into disobedience. He says that the prohibition God had placed
on Perelandra’s version of humanity is unreasonable, and that it really makes
no sense. He then argues that if God has
proclaimed such an irrational ban His intent must be for the subjects to realize the
absurdity of it and disobey. In other
words, God will be pleased if they disobey Him and “think for themselves”. I’m not doing the strand of the debate in the
novel full justice. As is the case in Screwtape, Lewis undermines the devil
best by being his most able advocate.
The subject does not fall for this particular line of reasoning,
seeing, instead, that, as Ransom explains:
In all these other matters what you call obeying Him is but doing what seems good in your own eyes also. Is love content with that? You do them, indeed, because they are His will, but not only because they are His will. Where can you taste the joy of obeying unless He bids you do something for which His bidding is the only reason?
A lot of us will say that we ought to obey God because He
knows best, and that is certainly true.
We can say, like the song, that we’ll understand it better
by-and-by. That is true, too. Yet, love acts all the time not for sense but
for joy. We do silly things to please
the ones we love here on earth. As
children, we obey our parents both because we know they are wiser and because we
want them to know we love them. I can
tell you, too, that, as a grandparent, I sometimes do things, not because they
are particularly wise but solely to see the grandchildren laugh. Sometimes I set them to tasks that will, if
they follow through, make us both laugh.
Imagine making God laugh with our irrational obedience.
3 comments:
That is a lovely thought. And yet, how challenging, too - for we know that radical obedience is sometimes terrible, and it's not always obvious whether something funny or some dreadful suffering (even if for a greater, unknowable good) will be the result.
Which isn't to say that we shouldn't strive to be joyfully obedient, just to acknowledge one of the reasons people sometimes aren't.
And suddenly, Jonah comes to mind...
Jonah is a good one. Thank you.
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