From today's C.S. Lewis Daily (I love the very last sentence.):
On death
On the one hand Death is the triumph of Satan,
the punishment of the Fall, and the last enemy. Christ shed tears at the
grave of Lazarus and sweated blood in Gethsemane: the Life of Lives
that was in Him detested this penal obscenity not less than we do, but
more. On the other hand, only he who loses his life will save it. We are
baptised into the death of Christ, and it is the remedy for the Fall.
Death is, in fact, what some modern people call “ambivalent.” It is
Satan’s great weapon and also God’s great weapon: it is holy and unholy;
our supreme disgrace and our only hope; the thing Christ came to
conquer and the means by which He conquered.
Satan produced human
Death. But when God created Man He gave him such a constitution that, if
the highest part of it rebelled against Himself, it would be bound to
lose control over the lower parts: i.e., in the long run to suffer
Death. This provision may be regarded equally as a punitive sentence
(“In the day ye eat of that fruit ye shall die”), as a mercy, and as a
safety device. It is punishment because Death—that Death of which Martha
says to Christ, “But . . . Sir . . . it’ll smell”—is horror and
ignominy. (“I am not so much afraid of death as ashamed of it,” said Sir
Thomas Browne.) It is mercy because by willing and humble surrender to
it Man undoes his act of rebellion and makes even this depraved and
monstrous mode of Death an instance of that higher and mystical Death
which is eternally good and a necessary ingredient in the highest life.
“The readiness is all”—not, of course, the merely heroic readiness but
that of humility and self-renunciation. Our enemy, so welcomed, becomes
our servant: bodily Death, the monster, becomes blessed spiritual Death
to self, if the spirit so wills—or rather if it allows the Spirit of the
willingly dying God so to will in it. It is a safety device because,
once Man has fallen, natural immortality would be the one utterly
hopeless destiny for him. Aided to the surrender that he must make by no
external necessity of Death, free (if you call it freedom) to rivet
faster and faster about himself through unending centuries the chains of
his own pride and lust and of the nightmare civilisations which these
build up in ever-increasing power and complication, he would progress
from being merely a fallen man to being a fiend, possibly beyond all
modes of redemption. This danger was averted. The sentence that those
who ate of the forbidden fruit would be driven away from the Tree of
Life was implicit in the composite nature with which Man was created.
But to convert this penal death into the means of eternal life—to add to
its negative and preventive function a positive and saving function—it
was further necessary that death should be accepted. Humanity must
embrace death freely, submit to it with total humility, drink it to the
dregs, and so convert it into that mystical death which is the secret of
life. But only a Man who did not need to have been a Man at all unless
He had chosen, only one who served in our sad regiment as a volunteer,
yet also one who was perfectly a Man, could perform this perfect dying;
and thus (which way you put it is unimportant) either defeat Death or
redeem it. He tasted death on behalf of all others. He is the
representative “Die-er” of the universe: and for that very reason the
Resurrection and the Life. Or conversely, because He truly lives, He
truly dies, for that is the very pattern of reality. Because the higher
can descend into the lower He who from all eternity has been incessantly
plunging Himself in the blessed death of self-surrender to the Father
can also most fully descend into the horrible and (for us) involuntary
death of the body. Because Vicariousness is the very idiom of the
reality He has created, His death can become ours. The whole Miracle,
far from denying what we already know of reality, writes the comment
which makes that crabbed text plain: or rather, proves itself to be the
text on which Nature was only the commentary. In science we have been
reading only the notes to a poem; in Christianity we find the poem
itself.
From Miracles
Compiled in Words to Live By
Miracles: A Preliminary Study.
Copyright 1947 C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. Copyright renewed © 1947 C. S.
Lewis Pte. Ltd. Revised 1960, restored 1996 C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All
rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers. Words to Live By: A Guide for the Merely Christian. Copyright © 2007 by C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers.
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