From earlier in the year before the rather surprising Conservative electoral tsunami.
By Jerry Salyer
C.S. Lewis was not Catholic, much less a
theologian who teaches with an authority Catholics are obliged to
recognize. As an eloquent proponent of natural law and the close
colleague of important Catholic writers like J.R.R. Tolkien and
Elizabeth Anscombe, however, the Anglican Lewis is surely someone whose
significance we must acknowledge. Unfortunately, among some there is a
tendency to celebrate an imaginary Lewis, a tame conservative
establishmentarian who opposes atheism, abortion, and human cloning but
would otherwise fit nicely into a post-1960s dispensation of
multiculturalism and working mothers. Such sanitizing of Lewis is
unfortunate not because he was always right, but because we cannot
possibly benefit from our conversations with the finest minds of the
past until we are ready to listen to what such minds actually have to
say.
“By learning to drink and smoke and
perhaps to tell risqué stories,” observes Lewis, the supposedly
emancipated modern girl has not really “drawn an inch nearer to the men
than her grandmother.” Moreover, he adds, “her grandmother was far
happier and more realistic. She was at home talking real women’s talk to
other women and perhaps doing so with great charm, sense and even wit.”
There are “sensible women,” but at a mixed party such women are wont to
“gravitate to one end of the room and talk women’s talk to one
another,” for they know full well that “it is only the riff-raff of each
sex that wants to be incessantly hanging on the other.” So much for
co-ed dorms. Or, for that matter, co-ed colleges.
Lewis’s first principles regarding sex
are starkest when he addresses—and unambiguously rejects—the prospective
ordination of women by the Anglican Church. To those who assert “that
the equality of men and women is a Christian principle,” Lewis retorts
as follows: “I do not remember the text in scripture, nor the Fathers,
nor Hooker, nor the Prayer Book which asserts it.” What is pretty plain,
Lewis continues, is the fact that “as the State grows more like a hive
or an ant-hill it needs an increasing number of workers who can be
treated as neuters,” and in his view, this trend toward an androgynous
culture is what drives calls for female clergy. In Lewis’s estimation,
such calls rest upon the unexamined assumption that “sex is something
superficial, irrelevant to the spiritual life.”
No, Lewis would not have denied the
merits of female scholars like his friend Dorothy Sayers, much less
those of the prophetesses we encounter in Scripture. For Lewis the issue
was not the existence of exceptions, but of norms, and it is in light
of this that we read Lewis’s fantasy adventure That Hideous Strength,
wherein the hero Merlin proposes beheading a young married woman
because she has used the witchcraft of Sulva—i.e., birth control—to keep
her academic career from getting derailed by a baby. Even more
indicative, perhaps, is that when one of the more chivalrous
protagonists criticizes Merlin for his “appalling” “bloodthirstiness,”
the ancient wizard doubles down.
Cruelty, rumbles Merlin,
is a charge I never heard before. A third part of my substance I gave to widows and poor men. I never sought the death of any but felons and heathen Saxons. As for the woman, she may live for me. I am not Master in this house. But would it be such a great matter if her head were struck off? Do not queens and ladies who would disdain her as their tire-woman go to the fire for less?
In other words: Relax! It was just a suggestion.
If there is an issue even more fraught
with tension today than that of sex, it is nationality, and here too
Lewis reveals himself as “deplorable.” In his short but brilliant essay
“The Dangers of National Repentance,” Lewis analyzes a phenomenon which
has more than merely political significance: The liberal guilt complex.
“When a man over forty tries to repent the sins of England and to love
her enemies,” Professor Lewis notes, it means something, as “he is
attempting something costly; for he was brought up to certain patriotic
sentiments which cannot be mortified without a struggle. But an educated
man who is now in his twenties usually has no such sentiment to
mortify.” Instead of having traditional patriotic sentiments, the
typical Christian intellectual is an extreme cosmopolitan who has
nothing but “contempt for the manners, pleasures, and enthusiasms of his
less-educated fellow countrymen,” so “the first and fatal charm of
national repentance is the encouragement it gives us to turn from the
bitter task of repenting our own sins to the congenial one of
bewailing—but, first, of denouncing—the conduct of others.”
Such remarks are apropos to many of
today’s controversies, from the tearing down of Confederate monuments to
attacks on the legacy of Christopher Columbus. To what extent the Old
South or the Admiral of the Ocean Sea warrant criticism is beside the
point, which is that it is sheer knavery to pass off as noble,
self-sacrificing, and penitential the act of censuring people who mean
little or nothing to us. When Christian intellectuals profess their
commitment to “reconciliation” vis-à-vis imperialism or slavery
or prejudice, it often looks very much as if all they are actually
doing is throwing someone else—long-dead historical figures, their own
ancestors, their redneck neighbors next door—under the bus of
unconditional condemnation.
In any event, patriotism really is a virtue, contends Lewis in The Four Loves, a virtue best expressed by
love of home, of the place we grew up in or the places, perhaps many, which have been our homes; and of all places fairly near these and fairly like them; love of old acquaintances, of familiar sights, sounds and smells. Note that at its largest this is, for us, a love of England, Wales, Scotland, or Ulster. Only foreigners and politicians talk about ‘Britain.’ […] With this love for the place there goes a love for the way of life; for beer and tea and open fires, trains with compartments in them and an unarmed police force and all the rest of it; for the local dialect and (a shade less) for our native language.
Such simple patriotism, adds Lewis,
“asks only to be let alone” and “only becomes militant to protect what
it loves.” So “it would be hard to find any legitimate point of view
from which this feeling could be condemned.”
He goes on to observe that when
patriotic sentiment declines, politicians are more inclined to invoke
“justice, or civilization, or humanity” rather than national interest.
According to Lewis, such hyperbolic idealism “is a step-down, not up,”
for while the basic recognition of justice and other high principles is
surely necessary, it is “insufferable” nonsense to pretend that we
operate in the world as “some neutral Don Quixote.” And “nonsense draws
evil after it. If our country’s cause is the cause of God, wars must be
wars of annihilation.” In short, Lewis contends that the most humane and
sane policy would put England first, instead of waging war on behalf of
Democracy or Freedom. It is also worth noting that until 2016, the
American two-party system was more or less hardwired to exclude from the
political process precisely those “nativist” impulses which Lewis
commends as being almost beyond reproach.
Although candidly put forth by Lewis in
his day, most of the preceding views can now be expressed in the public
square only with the most careful delicacy, lest uncharitable
misrepresentation, ostracism, and career-ending sanctions ensue. And
ironically enough, those who help marginalize as untouchable views like
Lewis’s are often the very people who purport to regard Lewis as a kind
of Christian Socrates. If self-identified Lewis-admirers such as Bradley
Birzer of Hillsdale give any weight to Lewis’s views on either sex or
patriotism, or share his fear of “enslavement” to an “omnicompetent
global technocracy,” I find little evidence for it in their de
facto endorsements of globalism.*
For better or for worse the current,
supposedly extremist occupant of the Oval Office has never critiqued
female police and military service by declaring that “battles are ugly
when women fight.” Nor has he advocated the dismantlement of the welfare
state, much less dared voice “the horrible suspicion that our only
choice is between societies with few freemen and societies with none.”
Compared to today’s decidedly pragmatic US President, the
tradition-minded Cambridge medievalist proves to be more exclusive and more provincial,
for it is the creator of the beloved Narnia series who would resist
tenaciously any attempt to flood his country with Norwegians, however
law-abiding and productive. So before preaching the Benedict Option or
crusading for pro-life feminism, let the Christian intelligentsia first
admit one inconvenient fact, which is that Professor Lewis stands
several degrees to the right of Donald J. Trump.
*See Dr. Birzer’s essays, “The Inklings and Northern Myth,” and “Bring on the Conservative Debate for Immigration.”
Republished with gracious permission from Crisis Magazine (March 2018).
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