What do you think of Lews’ “The Great Divorce” and his theology of Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory expressed therein? Specifically what do you make of his plot device wherein the damned have the opportunity to be saved after death? His conflation of Hell and Purgatory? And what seems to be his near endorsement of Universalism in the speech given by George MacDonald towards the book’s conclusion? These teachings seem to run counter to Catholic doctrine, but the book has many other keen insights. Overall, do you like the book? Would you recommend it to others?
I first read it as a Protestant, and I’ve reread it as a Catholic.
I’d recommend it anytime. Lewis never pretended to be a theologian, and said so in at least one of his apologetic writings.
He was using allegory, as he did in the Narnia series, the Dr. Ransom SF series, the Screwtape Letters and other writings, to get across Christian ideas. He didn’t pretend to have all the answers, and if I remember rightly, there’s a line in the book itself where Lewis, using his imaginary George MacDonald as the mouthpiece, states that he’s not in a position to make assured statements about the fate of others.
Sometimes I think we over-analyse writers. CS Lewis wrote a work of fiction and years later we try to work out whether his work was in line with Catholic or some other teaching, depending on our own tradition. It was probably never his intention to comply with Catholic or even Anglican teaching, but merely to put across the Christian message in fictional form, as he understood it.
To me, he’s the outstanding apologist of the 20th century, bar none. And he had the ability not only to write conventional apologetics, but also put his arguments in allegorical and entertaining form, something very few apologists have been able to do.
People like stories, and story telling is one of the most effective methods of communicationg a message. What would you rather watch - a dry as dust documentary on church treachings about heaven, purgatory and hell? Or a movie based on “The Great Divorce”, complete with special effects (eg. a heraldically coloured bus which expanded as it escaped through a crack from Hell into Heaven), a waterfall which speaks and crystallises into an angel pouring out the water of life, with characters like the liberal Bishop, the Lustful Stallion, the earthly tyrant Napoleon striding up and down the dismal leaky halls of a hellish mansion blaming everybody else for his failures, or the virtuous uknown lady from the uknown village of Golders Green, completely unknown by the world, yet who is now a great hero in heaven.
Christ always taught in parables, aka stories. If it was good enough for Him, it should be good enough for us.