My dear Wormwood,

Even under Slubgob you must have learned at college the routine
technique of sexual temptation, and since, for us spirits, this
whole subject is one of considerable tedium (though necessary as
part of our training) I will pass it over. But on the larger issues
involved I think you have a good deal to learn.
The Enemy’s demand on humans takes the form of a dilemma; either complete
abstinence or unmitigated monogamy. Ever since our Father’s first great victory, we
have rendered the former very difficult to them. The latter, for the last few centuries,
we have been closing up as a way of escape. We have done this through the poets and
novelists by persuading the humans that a curious, and usually short-lived, experience
which they call “being in love” is the only respectable ground for marriage; that
marriage can, and ought to, render this excitement permanent; and that a marriage
which does not do so is no longer binding. This idea is our parody of an idea that came
from the Enemy.
The whole philosophy of Hell rests on recognition of the axiom that one thing is not
another thing, and, specially, that one self is not another self. My good is my good and
your good is yours. What one gains another loses. Even an inanimate object is what it
is by excluding all other objects from the space it occupies; if it expands, it does so by
thrusting other objects aside or by absorbing them. A self does the same. With beasts
the absorption takes the form of eating; for us, it means the sucking of will and freedom
out of a weaker self into a stronger. “To be” means “to be in competition”.
Now the Enemy’s philosophy is nothing more nor less than one continued attempt
to evade this very obvious truth. He aims at a contradiction. Things are to be many,
yet somehow also one. The good of one self is to be the good of another. This impossibility
He calls love, and this same monotonous panacea can be detected under all He
does and even all He is — or claims to be. Thus He is not content, even Himself, to
be a sheer arithmetical unity; He claims to be three as well as one, in order that this
nonsense about Love may find a foothold in His own nature. At the other end of the
scale, He introduces into matter that obscene invention the organism, in which the
parts are perverted from their natural destiny of competition and made to co-operate.
His real motive for fixing on sex as the method of reproduction among humans
is only too apparent from the use He has made of it. Sex might have been, from our
point of view, quite innocent. It might have been merely one more mode in which a

stronger self preyed upon a weaker — as it is, indeed, among the spiders where the
bride concludes her nuptials by eating her groom. But in the humans the Enemy has
gratuitously associated affection between the parties with sexual desire. He has also
made the offspring dependent on the parents and given the parents an impulse to support
it — thus producing the Family, which is like the organism, only worse; for the
members are more distinct, yet also united in a more conscious and responsible way.
The whole thing, in fact, turns out to be simply one more device for dragging in Love.
Now comes the joke. The Enemy described a married couple as “one flesh”. He did
not say “a happily married couple” or “a couple who married because they were in love”,
but you can make the humans ignore that. You can also make them forget that the man
they call Paul did not confine it to married couples. Mere copulation, for him, makes
“one flesh”. You can thus get the humans to accept as rhetorical eulogies of “being in
love” what were in fact plain descriptions of the real significance of sexual intercourse.
The truth is that wherever a man lies with a woman, there, whether they like it or not, a
transcendental relation is set up between them which must be eternally enjoyed or eternally
endured. From the true statement that this transcendental relation was intended
to produce, and, if obediently entered into, too often will produce, affection and the
family, humans can be made to infer the false belief that the blend of affection, fear, and
desire which they call “being in love” is the only thing that makes marriage either happy
or holy. The error is easy to produce because “being in love” does very often, in Western
Europe, precede marriages which are made in obedience to the Enemy’s designs,
that is, with the intention of fidelity, fertility and good will; just as religious emotion
very often, but not always, attends conversion. In other words, the humans are to be
encouraged to regard as the basis for marriage a highly-coloured and distorted version
of something the Enemy really promises as its result. Two advantages follow. In the
first place, humans who have not the gift of continence can be deterred from seeking
marriage as a solution because they do not find themselves “in love”, and, thanks to us,
the idea of marrying with any other motive seems to them low and cynical. Yes, they
think that. They regard the intention of loyalty to a partnership for mutual help, for
the preservation of chastity, and for the transmission of life, as something lower than
a storm of emotion. (Don’t neglect to make your man think the marriage-service very
offensive.) In the second place any sexual infatuation whatever, so long as it intends
marriage, will be regarded as “love”, and “love” will be held to excuse a man from all
the guilt, and to protect him from all the consequences, of marrying a heathen, a fool,
or a wanton. But more of this in my next,

Your affectionate uncle

Screwtape

Almighty God, on this day you opened the way of eternal life to every race and nation by the promised gift of your Holy Spirit: Shed abroad this gift throughout the world by the preaching of the Gospel, that it may reach to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

gavinashenden's avatarGavin Ashenden

Curry 1

The world is rightly talking about Michael Curry’s wedding sermon. It was a ‘tour-de-force’. He is very good at preaching. But it also offers us all an insight into the dramatic difference between the two kind of Christianity that are at odds with each other in the Anglican Communion.

We will call them for the moment, ‘Christianity-max’, and ‘Christianity-lite’.

Credit where it is due. ‘Christianity-lite’ can be very appealing. It reaches out to where people are hurting and it encourages them. It reaches out to where they are longing for good change, and it promises them that change can come.

It speaks continuously of love and hope. Everyone likes to hear of love and hope.

But it has three serious flaws. It doesn’t define love, and it never delivers on the hope. It isn’t what Jesus preached.

It was of course wonderful to hear a celebration of love in the…

View original post 1,868 more words

Most films have their composers put music to images far into post-production. These days, temp tracks are common right until the last possible moment. But such was Leone’s faith in his collaboration with Morricone, which had already spawned the hit ‘Dollars’ trilogy, he had him compose the key themes before filming – and played the music during the shoot in order to inspire his cast.

https://www.scotsman.com/read-this/once-upon-a-time-in-the-west-at-50-how-ennio-morricones-music-powered-a-classic/

Vindicate me, O God, and plead my case against an ungodly nation;
O deliver me from the deceitful and unjust man!
For You are the God of my strength; why have You rejected me?
Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?
O send out Your light and Your truth, let them lead me;
Let them bring me to Your holy hill
And to Your dwelling places.
Then I will go to the altar of God,
To God my exceeding joy;
And upon the lyre I shall praise You, O God, my God.
Why are you in despair, O my soul?
And why are you disturbed within me?
Hope in God, for I shall again praise Him,
The help of my countenance and my God.

  1. iudica me Deus et discerne causam meam a gente non sancta a viro doloso et iniquo salva me
  2. tu enim Deus fortitudo mea quare proiecisti me quare tristis incedo adfligente inimico
  3. mitte lucem tuam et veritatem tuam ipsae ducent me et introducent ad montem sanctum tuum et ad tabernaculum tuum
  4. et introibo ad altare tuum ad Deum laetitiae et exultationis meae et confitebor tibi in cithara Deus Deus meus
  5. quare incurvaris anima mea et quare conturbas me expecta Dominum quoniam adhuc confitebor ei salutibus vultus mei et Deo meo

DÉJUNER. Déjeuner. Déjuner est l’antique prononciation. B. de La Monnoye dans une note à un Epigramme de Saint-Gelais nous l’assure; «Et illec près nous menèrent en lieu bel, cler et près, pour desjuner». (CHRISTINE DE PISAN); «Vingt mille francs, ce dis Bertrand, ce n’est que un desjuner». (Mémoire de Du Guesclin); «Il luy dit qu’il voulait desjuner pour monter à cheval». (BRANTÔME, [Vies des hommes illustres et des grands capitaines], «Le Maréchal de Saint-André»); «Ne se desjuneront nis de un disner, / Einz Ke a Verolame aient fait mener le clerc». (Vie de saint A[l]ban, reproduit par G. Paris); «L’autre ayant prié Dieu et bien desjuné». ([D’]AUBIGNÉ). On trouve le mot épelé, très souvent, desjeûner, dans les très anciens auteurs. Cet eû se prononçait u. Déjeuner ou déjuner, c’est cesser de jeûner.

DÎNER. Il paraîtrait que dîner, anciennement disner, et déjeuner auraient le même radical et signifieraient, l’un et l’autre, rompre le jeûne. Le dîner était le repas du matin, empremier: «Ne porte od sei (avec soi) ne pain, ne vin / Dunt il se digne (dîne) a cel matin». (Vie de s[aint] Gilles, v. 1247-8). Nous déjeunons le matin; dînons à midi (à l’heure de l’angelus) et soupons le soir, à six heures.

SOUPER. Repas du soir. Nous déjeunons le matin, dînons le midi et soupons le soir selon l’usage antique, sinon solennel, des Français d’autrefois. Aujourd’hui, l’on déjeune sur les onze heures, à Paris, et l’on dîne le soir. Souper, c’est manger de la soupe. Aussi la soupe faisait-elle partie obligatoire du repas du soir; on commençait par la soupe: «Un valet se levant le chapeau sur la tête, / Nous vint dire tout haut que la soupe estait preste». (RÉGNIER, [Satires], «Satire X»); «On apporta une alose pour le desjeuner de Jeanne d’Arc: Gardez-la pour le souper, dit-elle à son hôte, car je vous emmenerai un goddam (un Anglais) qui en prendra sa part». On prenait alors ses repas, en France, aux mêmes heures apparemment qu’on les prend aujourd’hui en Acadie.

-Le Glossaire acadien

http://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/dejeuner

http://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/D%C3%8ENER

http://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/souper

O God, the King of glory, you have exalted your only Son Jesus Christ with great triumph to your kingdom in heaven: Do not leave us comfortless, but send us your Holy Spirit to strengthen us, and exalt us to that place where our Savior Christ has gone before; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, in glory everlasting. Amen.