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By Ed Vitagliano
| AFA Journal News Editor
In the wake of the huge popular success of Mel Gibsons The
Passion of the Christ, its probable that religion isnt
likely to get short-shrift in the media for a while. In fact, on
PBS in September, the issue of religion came front and center in
an outstanding two-part series.
The Question of God: Sigmund Freud & C.S. Lewis, is a
superb four-hour journey into the critical distinctions between
the competing worldviews which underlie the cultural war currently
convulsing Western Civilization.
The fault line of that war lies precisely at the point of collision
between forces urging the West to adopt a purely secular public
life, and those defending traditional foundations based upon the
Judeo-Christian view of nature, man, and society.
As the title implies, these two views of the world are championed
in the PBS program by two of the most prominent voices of the last
century: Sigmund Freud, the Father of Psychoanalysis
and a resolute atheist; and Clive Staples (C.S.) Lewis, whose writings
were arguably the most influential among Western Christians in the
20th century.
The narration in The Question of God is intercut with reenactments
by two wonderful actors who portray Freud and Lewis, using only
the words written by the actual men in their books.
The program was enhanced by the participation of Dr. Armand Nicholi,
Jr., a Harvard University professor and practicing psychiatrist.
He is also author of the book on which the series is based, The
Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love,
Sex, and the Meaning of Life.
An unexpected pleasure was the round-table discussion, lead by Nicholi,
that was interwoven throughout the narrative. The participating
individuals enthusiastically debate both sides of the issues raised
by The Question of God
While many evangelical Christians may mistrust PBS when it comes
to accurately and respectfully presenting a Christian view on virtually
anything, The Question of God treats Lewis views with
utmost respect, and his beliefs are even portrayed with sympathy
in numerous segments.
But the two-part series is not one-sided by any means, as Freuds
argument against the existence of God is laid out as completely
as Lewis faith in Christ. So, while faint-hearted Christians
who dislike any open discussion of contrary viewpoints would be
disappointed, those interested in understanding the cultural divisions
among us would be thrilled. The program is, as Christianity Today
called it, Think TV.
All there is?
The Question of God explores in rich fashion the many issues
related to this debate, such as the nature of reality and truth,
miracles, and whether or not morality is absolute or a purely human
invention. The program excels in presenting such concepts in a rich,
intriguing manner.
Yet The Question of God moves beyond abstract arguments in
its poignant portrayal of the humanity of both Freud and Lewis,
especially in its examination of the early and later years of their
lives.
As The Question of God begins to unfold, the narrator says
of Freud: The man who would become an atheist was raised in
a world steeped in religious belief. Born in 1856 among a
small community of Jews in a primarily Catholic town in Moravia,
Freud was raised in a traditional Jewish home, in which his devout
father immersed his son in the Hebrew Scriptures.
After Freuds father lost his business, the family was forced
to move to a Jewish ghetto in Vienna, Austria, where they lived
in poverty. First under the instruction of a personal tutor
who was a secular Jew and then after entering into secondary
school, Freud began to learn about a world that said it did not
need God.
That world, in the latter half of the 19th century, was the secular
scientific world, in which life and all reality was
limited to nature and the material universe.
The new teaching captivated his imagination, the narrator
says, and, it seems, drove out the earlier Bible lessons about the
God of Israel.
I felt an overpowering need to understand something of the
riddles of the world in which we live, Freud would later say
of his youth. I came to know all the fields of science.
In a sense, the material world became the limit of existence for
Freud. Scientific work, he said in his book, The Future of an
Illusion, is the only road which can lead us to a knowledge
of reality.
Beyond that reality, there is nothing. No God. No soul. No heaven
or hell.
Made for another
world?
C.S. Lewis was born in Belfast, Ireland, in 1898, and although he,
too, would eventually grow up to be an atheist, Lewis could not
seem to escape the feeling that there was something beyond the natural
world.
This belief came in a peculiar way. Lewis relates an occasion from
his youth, when his older brother, Warren, showed him something
he had made. It was a large box, decorated with moss and flowers,
and when it was opened, an awestruck C.S. Lewis marveled over what
was inside: a toy garden, containing a small pool of water, surrounded
by plants and flowers.
That was the first beauty I ever knew, Lewis later recounted,
adding, It was quite different from ordinary life, and even
from ordinary pleasure. Something, as they would now say, in another
dimension.
It was, he insisted, a sensation of desire that, unfortunately,
soon dissipated, and the world turned commonplace again.
In that brief moment, Lewis glimpsed something that would haunt
him for years to come. He called the sensation of desire for that
far-away place beyond this life simply joy.
Later in life, he would refer to that moment again and again. Theres
a pang of desire that this garden brings back, as though he once
was someplace, which is now beyond his reach. Its lost to
him, says Professor James Como of York College, City University
of New York in The Question of God And he wants desperately
to return to that.
This is the first hint to Lewis that a realm existed beyond this
life. In perhaps his most famous book, Mere Christianity,
Lewis would say, If I find in myself a desire which no experience
in the world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that
I was made for another world.
Stricken by suffering and death
However, the suffering of this world struck Lewis as a boy. In The
Question of God, we see the young Lewis getting on his knees
to pray that God would heal his mother, as she lay dying in her
bed. The prayer goes unanswered. Her death starts Lewis on a journey
to atheism, which he later, at least intellectually, fully embraced.
But God would not leave Lewis alone. Through nagging doubts about
his atheism and discussions with his Christian friends, C.S. Lewis
is converted first to a belief in the existence of God, and
later, to Christianity. Over the course of the years of World War
II, he writes some of the most powerful and influential books in
all of Christian history.
Freud does not escape tragedy, either. As an adult, his beloved
daughter dies of influenza, along with her unborn child, and later
Freud would lose a favorite grandson as well. He is forced to watch
the rise of Nazism in Europe, the conquest of Austria, where he
still lived, and the growing horror of anti-Semitism.
Although it was still a time of fruitful writing for Freud, the
last 16 years of his life were spent in a struggle against oral
cancer, which eventually overcame him.
As he faced death, Freud is shown in The Question of God being
forced to deal with his own uncompromising belief that death was
the absolute end of a man. One almost watches with bated breath
to see if the famous atheist would, perhaps, embrace God at the
end. Sadly, he remained defiant. Surrounded by ancient statues of
pagan gods that hed collected over the years, Freud died in
1939, after a physician friend administered a lethal overdose of
morphine.
In one of Freuds works, he had written that Obscure,
unfeeling and unloving powers determine mens fate. From
the Christian perspective, such sentiments flow from the mournful
despair of a soul that does not know God.
Lewis, on the other hand, came to see Divine purpose in suffering.
In The Problem of Pain, Lewis says, God whispers to
us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our
pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.
However, despite his relationship with Christ, Lewis would also
face the mournful despair of tragedy.
His most difficult time came, oddly enough, through the love of
marriage. Lewis remained a bachelor until 1956, when he married
Helen Joy Davidman. The two had corresponded by letter, and had
struck up a deep friendship that turned into love. But it was expected
to be a short marriage. When the two wed, both knew that Joy had
bone cancer, and Lewis relates that he expected to be both bridegroom
and widower in a relatively short span of time.
Here The Question of God produces its most poignant segment.
With Lewis earlier, desperate childhood prayer for his mother
still vivid in the viewers minds, we see him calling for the
assistance of a friend, a priest who, the program informs us, has
a reputation for having the gift of healing. Lewis, with his friend
by his side, kneels at his stricken wifes bedside and prays
that God will heal Joy.
Amazingly, just days away from death, Joy begins to recover. A few
months later, doctors report to Lewis that, inexplicably, her pelvis
has begun to regenerate. The happy couple, as Lewis puts it, feast[s]
on love for the next three years.
But the cancer returns, and this time Lewis wife succumbs,
dying in 1960. It is a blow which threatens to shatter his faith.
In A Grief Observed, Lewis plainly writes of his struggle to hold
onto his faith through his sorrow and his bitterness toward God.
Yet, he does recover, and he comes to learn a powerful lesson. Lord,
are these your real terms? he says. Can I meet Helen
again only if I learn to love you so much I dont care whether
I meet her or not?
Lewis died in 1963, and the viewer is left with the distinct feeling
that, in addition to seeing again his beloved Helen Joy, he finally
found that true Joy of which he only caught a glimpse as a young
boy.
Resources
Order The Question
of God: www.pbs.org/wgbh/questionofgod
A Books by C.S. Lewis: Mere Christianity; The Problem of Pain;
The Screwtape Letters; Miracles; The Chronicles of Narnia; Surprised
By Joy; and A Grief Observed.
Christian apologetics
Web sites:
Answers in Action (Gretchen
Passantino): www.answers.org
Answers in Genesis
(Ken Ham): www.answersingenesis.org
Bible Archaeology Search
and Exploration Institute (Bob Cornuke): www.baseinstitute.org
Institute for Christian
Defense (Frank Harber): www.gotlifeministries.com
Josh McDowell Ministries
(Josh McDowell): www.josh.org
Leadership U: www.leaderu.com
Ravi Zacharias International
Ministries: www.rzim.org
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