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The Pitfall of Possessions
C.S. Lewis
From: The Screwtape Letters
Editor’s
Note: If you are already familiar with The Screwtape Letters—CS
Lewis’ ingenious dialogue between a senior devil, Screwtape, and his
apprentice, Wormwood—this excerpt about the peril of thinking we
“own” anything is well worth re-reading. And if you’re not familiar with
the book, you have an extraordinary opportunity to gain new insight
into how Satan operates in our lives. (For the first time reader,
note that since this is written from one demon to another, “Our
Father” refers to Satan himself, while “the Enemy” refers to God.)
MY DEAR WORMWOOD,
…Men are not angered by mere misfortune but by misfortune conceived as injury.
And the sense of injury depends on the feeling that a legitimate claim has been
denied. The more claims on life, therefore, that your patient can be induced to
make, the more often he will feel injured and, as a result, ill-tempered. Now
you will have noticed that nothing throws him into a passion so easily as to
find a tract of time which he reckoned on having at his own disposal
unexpectedly taken from him.
It is the unexpected visitor (when he looked forward to a quiet evening), or the
friend’s talkative wife (turning up when he looked forward to a tete-а-tete with
the friend), that throw him out of gear. Now he is not yet so uncharitable or
slothful that these small demands on his courtesy are in themselves too much for
it. They anger him because he regards his time as his own and feels that it is
being stolen. You must therefore zealously guard in his mind the curious
assumption “My time is my own.” Let him have the feeling that he starts each day
as the lawful possessor of twenty-four hours. Let him feel as a grievous tax
that portion of this property which he has to make over to his employer’s, and
as a generous donation that further portion which he allows to religious duties.
But what he must never be permitted to doubt is that the total from which these
deductions have been made was, in some mysterious sense, his own personal
birthright.
You have here a delicate task. The assumption which you want him to go on making
is so absurd that, if once it is questioned, even we cannot find a shred of
argument in its defence. The man can neither make, nor retain, one moment of
time; it all comes to him by pure gift; he might as well regard the sun and moon
his chattels. He is also, in theory, committed a total service of the Enemy; and
if the Enemy appeared to him in bodily form and demanded that total service for
even one day, he would not refuse. He would be greatly relieved if that one day
involved nothing harder than listening to the conversation of a foolish woman;
and he would be relieved almost to the pitch of disappointment if for one
half-hour in that day the Enemy said “Now you may go and amuse yourself.” Now if
he thinks about his assumption for a moment, even he is bound to realise that he
is actually in this situation every day. When I speak of preserving this
assumption in his mind, therefore, the last thing I mean you to do is to furnish
him with arguments in its defence.
There aren’t any. Your task is purely negative. Don’t let his thoughts come
anywhere near it. Wrap a darkness about it, and in the centre of that darkness
let his sense of ownership-in -time lie silent, uninspected, and operative.
The sense of ownership in general is always to be encouraged. The humans are
always putting up claims to ownership which sound equally funny in Heaven and in
Hell and we must keep them doing so. Much of the modern resistance to chastity
comes from men’s belief that they “own” their bodies—those vast and perilous
estates, pulsating with the energy that made the worlds, in which they find
themselves without their consent and from which they are ejected at the pleasure
of Another! It is as if a royal child whom his father has placed, for love’s
sake, in titular command of some great province, under the real rule of wise
counselors, should come to fancy he really owns the cities, the forests, and the
corn, in the same way as he owns the bricks on the nursery floor. We produce
this sense of ownership not only by pride but by confusion. We teach them not to
notice the different senses of the possessive pronoun—the finely graded
differences that run from “my boots” through “my dog,” “my servant,” “my wife,”
“my father,” “my master” and “my country,” to “my God.” They can be taught to
reduce all these senses to that of “my boots,” the “my” of ownership. Even in
the nursery a child can be taught to mean by “my Teddy-bear” not the old
imagined recipient of affection to whom it stands in a special relation (for
that is what the Enemy will teach them to mean if we are not careful) but “the
bear I can pull to pieces if I like.”
And at the other end of the scale, we have taught men to say “My God” in a sense
not really very different from “My boots,” meaning “The God on whom I have a
claim for my distinguished services and whom I exploit from the pulpit—the God I
have done a corner in.” And all the time the joke is that the word “Mine” in its
fully possessive sense cannot be uttered by a human being about anything. In the
long run either Our Father or the Enemy will say “Mine” of each thing that
exists, and especially of each man. They will find out in the end, never fear,
to whom their time, their souls, and their bodies really belong—certainly not to
them, whatever happens. At present the Enemy says “Mine” of everything on the
pedantic, legalistic ground that He made it: Our Father hopes in the end to say
“Mine” of all things on the more realistic and dynamic ground of conquest.
Your affectionate uncle, SCREWTAPE