|


The
Boldness of a Stranger
Correspondence Between C.S. Lewis and H. Lyman Stebbins
In addition to writing the classic series Chronicles
of Narnia, C.S. Lewis is known for the many books he wrote
on Christianity. With works such as The Screwtape Letters
and Mere Christianity, Lewis was one of the most
well-known Christian thinkers of his day. He was remarkably
close to Catholic thought in many ways, but chose to remain
Anglican. It was because of this reputation that H. Lyman
Stebbins (who later founded Catholics United for the Faith)
wrote to C.S. Lewis.
In November of 1998, Lay Witness published the
original letters written between the two men with commentary
by Madeleine Stebbins, widow of CUF founder H. Lyman Stebbins.
* * * * *
Published for the first time in commemoration of the centenary
in 1998 of the birth of a great writer, C.S. Lewis.
Lyman Stebbins was brought up an Episcopalian, in a vaguely
Christian way, and attended Yale College, from which he graduated
in 1933. He was aware of a lack of spiritual and intellectual
content in his college courses, with the exception of a marvelous
course on the poetry of Robert Browning taught by William
Lyon Phelps, which for the first time briefly brought him
into contact with a Christian worldview.
At a young age, he became a general partner of deCoppet and
Doremus, a Wall Street firm, and a member of the New York
Stock Exchange. In the midst of his successful career, he
had a keen sense of the emptiness of this world and a growing
awareness that there must be something more to life. This
perception took on a deeper dimension when, in 1938, he suddenly
came down with tuberculosis and was forced to take an almost
two-year leave of absence from work. No longer immersed in
the business world and its frenetic activity, he had time
to read and think. His hunger for truth and beauty increased,
as well as a more profound longing for God. The months of
suffering, in and out of hospitals, became a time of grace.
He finally went back to work in 1940.
Then for Christmas 1942 a friend gave him The Screwtape
Letters by C.S. Lewis. All at once a light went on in
him and over the dull landscape of his life. In June 1943
he wrote in his diary:
The new clear eye to which the beauties of heaven are suddenly
apparent sees, also in brightened colors, the allurements
of hell. Notice also that in the first rapture at the sight
of heaven, so long obscured from view, I assume that this
time my strength and fidelity will be equal to the fight,
forgetting that my history shows nothing but frailty and
failure.
That book, which obviously made a deep impression on him,
opened the enormous C.S. Lewis door. He started reading all
his books and was enthralled. That led him to Catholic bookstores
that sold C.S. Lewis’ books, where he discovered a rich trove
of books on the Catholic Church, about which he realized he
had been taught nothing. Almost immediately, her claims to
be the true Church founded by Christ struck him as intellectually
compelling. Deduced from Scripture, proven by the early Fathers
of the Church and Church history, everything rang true, and
followed logically. As his conviction grew with more and more
study, he increasingly felt the call to enter the Church.
However, there were still great obstacles of a personal kind
in his family.
So he turned to the man who got the ball rolling in the first
place. Maybe C.S. Lewis could show convincing reasons for
not entering the Catholic Church.
The correspondence speaks for itself.
April 20(?), 1945
Dear Mr. Lewis,
Please forgive the boldness of a stranger in imposing on
your patience, but I want advice, and dare to seek it from
you. I am an Episcopalian, and one of the many people, I am
certain, who have been led by your books to a reconsideration
of Christ, of Christianity, and of the Church.
But the pursuit of one of your books—The Pilgrim’s Regress—led
me to Sheed and Ward, and from there it was but a step to
an inquiry into the claims and history of the Roman Catholic
Church. (It has been suggested that this was a regress indeed!)
My situation at present is this: I find the case for Rome
entirely compelling, and I am not immune to the shameful tendency
of putting a personal belief into the form: “Any reasonable
and honest man will have to admit, etc., etc.” The point is
that you are the principal check to this tendency since you
are a living disproof of the assertion. The consideration,
“This is convincing to my mind” simply does not become a decision
as long as it is balanced by “For some good and sufficient
reason it is not convincing to the mind of C.S. Lewis.”
I would not dare ask you to write to me what you consider
to be the arguments which throw the decision to the Anglican
and against the Roman Catholic Church. But I do dare ask you
if you would do me the great favor of recommending the books
which, in your opinion, present these arguments most persuasively.
I shall be extremely grateful for any guidance you can give
me, and can only plead, as my excuse for picking on you, that
you picked on me on the happy day I bought your books.
Yours sincerely,
H. Lyman Stebbins
May 9, 1945
Dear Mr. Stebbins,
My position about the Churches can best be made plain by
an imaginary example. Suppose I want to find out the correct
interpretation of Plato’s teaching. What I am most confident
in accepting is that interpretation which is common to all
the Platonists down all the centuries: What Aristotle and
the Renaissance scholars and Paul Elmer More agree on I take
to be true Platonism. Any purely modern views which claim
to have discovered for the first time what Plato meant, and
say that everyone from Aristotle down has misunderstood him,
I reject out of hand. But there is something else I would
also reject. If there were an ancient Platonic Society still
existing at Athens and claiming to be the exclusive trustees
of Plato’s meaning, I should approach them with great respect.
But if I found that their teaching was in many ways curiously
unlike his actual text and unlike what ancient interpreters
said, and in some cases could not be traced back to within
1,000 years of his time, I should reject their exclusive claims—while
ready, of course, to take any particular thing they taught
on its merits.
I do the same with Christianity. What is most certain is
the vast mass of doctrine which I find agreed on by Scripture,
the Fathers, the Middle Ages, modern Roman Catholics, modern
Protestants. That is true “catholic” doctrine. Mere “modernism”
I reject at once. The Roman Church where it differs from this
universal tradition and specially from apostolic Christianity
I reject. Thus their theology about the Blessed Virgin Mary
I reject because it seems utterly foreign to the New Testament;
where indeed the words “Blessed is the womb that bore thee”
receive a rejoinder pointing in exactly the opposite direction.
Their papalism seems equally foreign to the attitude of St.
Paul toward St. Peter in the epistles. The doctrine of Transubstantiation
insists on defining in a way which the New Testament seems
to me not to countenance. In a word, the whole set-up of modern
Romanism seems to me to be as much a provincial or local variation
from the central, ancient tradition as any particular
Protestant sect is. I must therefore reject their claim: though
this, of course, does not mean rejecting particular things
they say. I’m afraid I haven’t read any modern books of Roman-Angelican
controversy. Hooker (Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity)
is to me the great formulation of Anglicanism. But the great
point is that, in one sense, there is no such thing as Anglicanism.
What we are committed to believing is whatever can be proved
from Scripture. On that subject there is room for endless
progress. However you decide, good wishes. Mention me in your
prayers.
Yours sincerely,
C.S. Lewis
June 16, 1945
Dear Mr. Lewis,
It is not possible to describe the gratitude I feel for your
trouble and interest in answering my inquiry. Now I find myself
in something of a quandary. Not to write to you again would
be ungracious; and anyway, I want to write to you again. Yet
if I do write to discuss the points you raise, you may with
some justice think I am going beyond the original terms. If
I accost you in the street and ask for a light, you may think
that permissible and may willingly accommodate me; but if,
then, with a great show of gratitude, I go on to suggest a
small loan, I can imagine that your amiability might suffer
something of a chill.
The original object was for me to get your views, not you
mine. But though in general an exchange of views is enough
to hope for from a discussion, in my case I am under the necessity
of being convinced one way or the other; and this is an inducement
to me to answer each point as it appears to me, and not turn
aside in silence with an internal “not proven.” So please
believe that this letter is more an exercise than anything
else; that I am not trying to trap you into a debate with
a total stranger in a foreign land; that I think you have
already done much more than you were obliged to do; and that
I thank you very much indeed.
I agree that I am most confident in accepting what is common
to all Christians down all the centuries. But it cannot be
said that the Roman Catholics differ with what is common to
all, including Roman Catholics. It is just in the important
area where there is disagreement that I feel the need of an
authority. It seems to me that the whole idea of seeking an
interpretation of a text from some outside authority or authorities
presupposes that no one specific interpretation can be proved
from the text itself. The question, “Where shall I find
a true interpretation of a doubtful text?” is not answered
by “Read the text,” nor is it answered by “Believe the texts
which are not in doubt.” And yet, “We are committed to believing
whatever can be proved from Scripture” seems to me just such
an answer to just such a question.
If we adopt the principle that unanimity is the mark of the
area of doctrine which must be believed, does not recent history
as well as our own reason tell us that that area will shrink
and shrink? It is true that the remaining area would always
be where we would feel most confident; the question is how
long it would be big enough to sustain life.
There is another point in this connection which perplexes
me. You imply that you would reject an interpretation if it
could not be traced back to within 1,000 years of Christ’s
time. Yet, on the subject of what can be proved from Scripture,
you say there is room for endless progress. I do not see how
these two principles can be reconciled. Suppose we were to
progress one step tomorrow—really progress. Would another
generation be wise in rejecting the step because it could
not be traced back to within 1,900 years of His time? If progress
is both good and possible, then we cannot reject a group which
claims to have progressed in interpretation, on that very
ground. We must be able to convict them of a contradiction.
On the three subjects you mentioned, I am unable to see that
any contradiction can be shown. On the principal disagreement
with regard to the Blessed Virgin Mary, whether we may offer
veneration and ask her intercession, I cannot fail to regard
with deepest respect the woman who was the mother of Christ,
who was hailed by the angel as full of grace, and who is described
as blessed amongst women; and if we do believe in survival
after death, and in the communion of saints, then it seems
to me that, if it is reasonable for you to ask me, as you
do, to mention you in my prayers, how much more reasonable
that you should ask the same of the Blessed Virgin. As to
the doctrines of the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption,
I agree that they cannot be naturally proved, but I do not
see that they contradict themselves or anything else.
If Scripture permits one to believe in the Real Presence,
and Cardinal Wiseman’s lectures on the Holy Eucharist convince
me that it does, then I cannot see that there is anything
in the doctrine of Transubstantiation that is incongruous,
although, again, it cannot be naturally proved like a mathematical
proposition.
As to papalism, and the attitude of St. Paul, the fact that
St. Paul stood up to St. Peter can be advanced as an indication
of their equality. But it seems to me that the fact that St.
Paul makes so much of it, almost seems to boast of it, affords
an equally strong indication on the other side. In the last
analysis, this question, like so many others, reduces itself
to the question of an infallible Church. If the Church cannot
err, and teaches that the Pope in some circumstances cannot
err, then, in those circumstances, the Pope cannot err. It
is here that I feel your example of Plato does not fit. Plato
was not God and therefore one can say decisively that he would
not have had the power to found an interpreting society which
he would guide personally throughout all time. Christ did
have such power, and we cannot be, without careful investigation,
so decisive about the more debatable question of whether He
had the inclination.
St. Paul says that the Church is the pillar and ground of
truth; he says that the Church is the Body of Christ, and
how could the Body of Christ, as such, act in conflict with
truth? Christ says “Whosoever heareth you heareth Me.” “As
my Father hath sent Me, so also send I you.” “I am with you
all days.” Who was He talking to? I cannot escape the conclusion
that He said that after He left the world there would be someone
on earth, until the end of time, who would have the right
to speak authoritatively in His name; and that anyone who
rejected this someone would thereby be rejecting Him and so
the Father who had sent Him. It seems to me that we have it
on His authority that this right is now vested somewhere.
He wanted everyone to have access to the truth, and He cannot
have expected that each individual would be a scholar or a
theologian. Far from finding the claim to infallibility a
stumblingblock in the Roman Catholic Church, it seems to me
that any group which does not claim it cannot be the Church
founded by Christ.
Am I wrong in thinking that the acknowledgment of an infallible
authority is implicit in your letter? I’m sure you will accede
to the proposition that we are committed to believing the
truth. If you will, then your assertion that we are committed
to believing whatever can be proved from Scripture is an assertion
that whatever can be proved from Scripture is the truth, which
is an assertion of the inerrancy of Scripture. From what kind
of authority is it possible to learn of the inerrancy of a
written document? The witness of the author is obviously not
valid, and so we cannot learn the inerrancy of Scripture from
Scripture. It seems to me that the assertion by any authority
short of an infallible one would be equally invalid. I could
not assent to the following:
Scripture is inerrant.
I say so.
I may be wrong.
The true sequence seems to me to be as follows: I am satisfied
that the New Testament is reliable historically; from reading
that history I become convinced that Jesus Christ was God;
I become convinced that He founded an infallible Church which
should endure until the end of time; in the course of time
this Church pronounces the inerrancy of Scripture; therefore,
whatever can be proved from Scripture is truth. I cannot see
any other way by which one can arrive at the conclusion, and
it all requires an infallible authority.
Well, there is my exercise in expressing the considerations
which your very kind letter brought to my mind. I hope there
are not great gaps in the logic. My wife is English, and we
hope to spend much time in England in the years to come; and
we are agreed that, however deep a plot may be required, we
shall contrive for ourselves the honor and the pleasure of
meeting you.
Once more, my deepest thanks.
Sincerely,
H. Lyman Stebbins
* * *
Lyman also wrote down some undated comments after he received
C.S. Lewis’ letter. Most are incorporated in his response.
But the following two are not: (1) “Plato left everything
that he left in writing; Jesus Christ left nothing in writing”;
and (2) “‘Unlike what ancient interpreters said.’Which?”
What was Lyman’s reaction to this correspondence? It was
recorded on a cassette he made in 1987:
“I wrote to C.S. Lewis and got a fascinating and interesting
reply. That letter of Lewis practically put me into the Church,
because that man for whose intellect I had boundless admiration
very carefully wrote a stupid letter, the stupidest thing
he ever wrote. He summoned all that he could dream up to say
as an argument against my becoming a Roman Catholic and there
was no substance in any of it. My immediate response was that
if this is the best this marvelous man can think of as an
argument against it, then I’m all for it.
“So then when I was in London, I went to the Jesuit church
at Farm Street on May 28, 1946, blessed day. I was received
into the Catholic Church.”
|
|