By Meir Y. Soloveichik
Sunday, September 22, 2024
In 1942, with the world at war, an Oxford tutor wrote a
book about traditional faith unlike any other ever published. It consists of
missives from a senior devil in a demonic bureaucracy who is guiding a junior
devil tasked with tempting one specific soul to achieve that man’s damnation.
The senior devil is named Screwtape, and his letters are addressed to his
nephew, Wormwood. C.S. Lewis’s brilliant conceit is that every one of
Screwtape’s letters serves as a sort of mirror in which all moral categories are
inverted. Thus Screwtape refers to God as “our Enemy above,” and to Satan as
“our father below.” For this bureaucratic demon, Hell is a source of
admiration, Heaven an object of horror. Damnation is desired, and eternal life
with God is disdained. By experiencing an instinctive horror at these moral
reversals, the reader is to intuit the right and the good.
Many decades later, in September 2024, America was
treated to a Screwtape Letter of its own. Tucker Carlson, one of the most
popular podcasters in America, hosted a “historian” on his show whose
description of World War II involved a reversal of all obvious moral categories
and historical facts. In this vile revisionist retelling of the war, Winston
Churchill was cast as the “chief villain” of the episode and a “psychopath,”
while Hitler was portrayed as a reasonable statesman who sought peace and understanding
with England. Carlson’s interlocutor attributed the death of countless
multitudes in German camps to an unfortunate lack of preparation on the part of
Germany, and an overpopulation of POWs. Carlson, in turn, enthusiastically
agreed with his guest’s characterization of Churchill and said his intention
was to ensure that the guest would come to be seen as “the most important
historian in the United States.” Unlike Lewis’s satire, this was done in all
seriousness: Evil was really good, the heroes of history were actually
villains, and the Holocaust, we are informed, never happened.
Screwtape lives.
The entire episode was horrifying. But it is worth
noting, in this context, what the very inspiration for The Screwtape Letters
might have been. According to some accounts, C.S. Lewis got
the idea by listening to a boring sermon and apparently began to wonder what it
would be like to hear a speech advocating evil. He wrote the following to his
brother:
Before the service was over—one cd.
wish these things came more seasonably—I was struck by an idea for a book wh. I
think might be both useful and entertaining. It wd. be called As one Devil to
Another and would consist of letters from an elderly retired devil to a young
devil who has just started work on his first “patient.” The idea wd. be to give
all the psychology of temptation from the other point of view.
But there was another possible source of inspiration, and
that was hearing Hitler himself, and the evil, execrable, and eloquent way in
which the chancellor made the case for his cause. A blog known as A Pilgrim in
Narnia by a dedicated Lewis fan named Brenton Dickieson points to an earlier
passage in that same letter: “I don’t know if I’m weaker than other people: but
it is a positive revelation to me how while [Hitler’s] speech lasts it is
impossible not to waver just a little. I should be useless as a schoolmaster or
a policeman. Statements which I know to be untrue all but convince me, at any
rate for the moment, if only the man says them unflinchingly.’”
Lewis began to ponder how Hitler utilized his rhetorical
gifts to frame the most horrific position imaginable as something entirely
reasonable. Dickieson found the speech by Hitler to which Lewis was referring.
It was delivered on July 19, 1940, and was called “My Last Appeal to Great
Britain: A Great Empire Will Be Destroyed.” Dickieson writes: “The entire
speech is an exercise in turning the conversation on its head. England is the
aggressor; Germany the victim. England is dictatorial; Germany is democratic.
The British are weak; the Germans and Italians are strong. Churchill is a
madman without reason; Hitler and Mussolini are reasoned men of the world. The
logic is, to me, very much like Screwtape’s.”
For those who have watched the course of Carlson’s
career, the recent showcasing of a Nazi defender and Holocaust denier is not a
surprise, but it is, unquestionably, a new low. And it is a reminder that one
does not need to adopt the Christian approach to Satan, and to Paradise Lost,
to understand that today, in the United States, genuine demons walk, and
podcast, amongst us. They may use microphones instead of missives to advance
their morally inverted cause, but what they still seek is to sway souls to
embrace evil.
Some years ago, I visited, with a Jewish group, the
infamous villa at Wannsee. It was there that the Nazi leadership had gathered
to plan the destruction of millions of Jews—the murdered multitudes whose
memories Carlson and his guest so desecrated. Before we entered the villa, I
sought words to capture the terrible fact that this great crime was planned in
this placid setting. And so I turned to this very Jewish assembly and quoted
Lewis, a Christian author, and his description of why he had chosen to depict
devils not as pitchfork-wielding creatures but as bureaucratic letter-writers:
I live in the Managerial Age, in a
world of “Admin.” The greatest evil is not now done in those sordid “dens of
crime” that Dickens loved to paint. It is not done even in concentration camps
and labour camps. In those we see its final result. But it is conceived and
ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed and
well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and
smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voices.
Evil is furthered by many, including those who foster
hatred and lies without raising their voices and by those who claim to be “just
asking questions.” These are some of the demons of our time. It was Churchill
who, in describing his hatred for his foe, quipped that “if Hitler invaded hell
I would at least make a favorable reference to the devil in the house of
commons.” But the devil amongst us has made things simple by embracing Hitler
himself; all we need do is recognize it, and, in response to the Screwtapes of
our age, continue to call evil by its name.
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