Alastair's Adversaria - The Anglicanism of C.S. Lewis
Episode Date: October 29, 2024The following is a reading of a reflection first published on our Substack: https://argosy.substack.com/p/lewis-the-anglican. A version of it was also published on Ad Fontes: https://adfontesjournal.c...om/web-exclusives/the-anglicanism-of-c-s-lewis/. Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.substack.com/. See my latest podcasts at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.
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Discussion (0)
The following reflection entitled The Anglicanism of C.S. Lewis was first published on my substack,
the Anchored Argosy, and then later on the Adfonte's website.
In a recent article at Advantes, the historian Mark Null reflects on the earliest American responses to the work of C.S. Lewis,
prior to the publication of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe and Mere Christianity in 1950 and 1952, respectively,
Lewis did not experience the worldwide fame that he would later enjoy.
However, many of Lewis's most important works were published prior to these,
including his Ransom Trilogy, 1938, 1993 and 1945,
the Problem of Pain in 1940, the Screw Tape Letters in 1942,
and Miracles in 47, and these works receive some attention from American readers.
It's noteworthy that initial appreciative responses for Lewis's work
chiefly came from Catholics, as did most of the closer engagement with his writing.
While American evangelical Protestants would later arguably become Lewis's most fervent fan base,
when first released Lewis's earlier works did not receive much attention from them.
Several of the responses they did receive were more wary in their character.
Noel's article came at an opportune moment for me as I had been reflecting on Lewis's work,
its appeal and its reception, especially in America.
Before Noel's article was published, Kat Koffin, a C.S. Lewis scholar, had remarked upon the
significance that many progressive writers ascribed to Lewis in their movement away from fundamentalism.
Her observation prompted me to think about the sheer breadth of appreciation for C.S. Lewis
and the importance that he has had for many people in making key transitions in their thinking
and affiliation. The most notable of these transitions have been from unbelief to Christian faith,
Yet for many others, Lewis has been a key figure in their movements away from fundamentalism and or evangelicalism.
C.S. Lewis's work has remarkably wide appeal. He is appreciatively read by Christians and non-Christians,
children and adults, men and women, scholars and laypeople, Protestants and Catholics,
conservatives and liberals, people on the left and the right, by people across the world and by such a range of readers,
for most of a century. You can certainly find people who dislike him and
his work. Some people love some of his works, while strongly disliking others. His appeal is
neither universal nor total. Nevertheless, its breadth remains notable, and it's worth trying to account
for it. I imagine this appeal is broader than it would have been in the current era, where faster
media and increased travel have altered the relationship between writers and their readers,
especially for his American audience. Lewis was overwhelmingly a writer of books. A book has
usually written at least a year or more before the average reader picks it up, and the reader
generally reads it in some degree of privacy or solitude. Words in books are not live and active
to the degree that the spoken word or words on social media are. The author that is encountered in
reading a book can also be much more abstracted from the personality, identity, affiliations,
and broader opinions of the writer. The experience of reading a book also enables the reader to step
back from the immediacy of their social worlds and contexts, and to entertain ideas from without them.
This becomes much harder when the writer is encountered as a living speaker and actor.
J.K. Rowling might be a good example to consider here.
If Lewis had been a frequent visitor to America, he never went to America, a figure on
conference circuits, a frequent voice in podcasts, and a personality on social media,
I'm sure that the reception of his work would have differed in many respects.
Putting such matters of media to one side, it seems to me that Lewis's appeal has much to do with the fact that he had a rich imagination, a curious and brilliant mind, a generous and Catholic spirit, a delight in expanse of attention to and receptivity to reality, and a capacious, conceptual and cultural world.
While he had his firm convictions, he was not narrow-minded or spirited.
He was open to and had an appetite for the world and truth. He manifested the Catholic.
and magnanimity of one with a confident grasp on truth and reality, avoiding a fortress mentality,
tribalism, or the incuriosity of the ideologue. There is a sort of sapiential and cosmopolitan
character to Lewis's posture, a practice of receptive attention to an ironic engagement with,
a wide variety of voices and aspects of reality. As a result, one does not need to hold to a particular
ideology, belong to a particular tribal camp, or denomination, or hold a particular set of dogmas,
to find things to enjoy or appreciate in Lewis. Indeed, in works like mere Christianity,
Lewis was careful to accent those things that Christians of various denominations hold in common,
rather than those things that distinguished his class or tribe. Lewis wrote and spoke as a man of
strong convictions, and as one with occasionally sharp differences with others, yet not as a sectarian.
partisan or ideologue.
Consequently, Lewis can display some of the distinctive features of the Christian faith and imagination
in an overwhelmingly positive form and with scintillating wit and fluid prose.
Evangelicals rightly recognise in Lewis's work many of those things that they hold dearest.
However, in Lewis, these things appear with colour and warmth, and largely apart from the sort
of defensive dogmatism, sectarian combativeness or ideological incuriosity that so often
frames them elsewhere. While he could be polemical on occasions, Lewis was generally a highly
ironic writer. Although he spoke directly against various errors of his day, his work is overwhelmingly
constructive, and even when he challenges others, he is more corrective than combative in his tone.
His work was driven by a positive impulse, rather than by reaction. For this reason,
even when he is correcting errors, his work isn't characterized by tribal spirit and antagonism.
He wrote to persuade and win his reader over.
To those in settings driven by a culture war spirit, for instance, this can be refreshing.
Lewis sees and addresses many of the same evils, yet with little of the rancour, resentment, bitterness,
viciousness, fixation, or reactivity that can so often develop within such contexts.
While many with something of that spirit appreciate Lewis and even try to accommodate Lewis to it,
others learn a better way from him.
The spirit of Lewis has led a great many people out of fundamentalism for this and other reasons.
Fundamentalism's legalist tendencies, its definition through opposition, its tribalism and sectarianism, its tendency to narrow-mindedness, and its insularity, all stand in contrast to the spirit of Lewis.
Many have picked up on the spirit and manner in which Lewis held his convictions,
and even though they might diverge from him on his more idiosyncratic beliefs,
have learned how to hold their beliefs differently.
So many of these people have followed Lewis into context that breathed that different spirit.
Lewis has enabled them to make this transition without simply rejecting wholesale
and reacting and defining themselves against those contexts from which they came.
For others, however, in discovering how different Lewis was in his business,
beliefs and practice from the fundamentalism in which they grew up,
they have proceeded to undertake a more radical reassessment and thoroughgoing rejection
or deconstruction of their upbringing.
Brad East remarks upon the marked contrast and seeming incompatibility between Lewis
and his American evangelical audience.
Some such persons have ended up reacting against their old contexts
and have fallen into positions that are not clearly any less narrow, sectarian and ideological
than those that they left behind.
It seems to me much of the strength of Lewis comes from the fact that he closely attends to, delights in, and thinks and acts into a wider natural, social and cultural world, a world he wants to share in with people of many different backgrounds, identities, beliefs, and times.
His writing invites you into deeper appreciation of and attention to the world in which you already live, rather than calling you into a peculiar ideological, cultural and social frame.
He does, of course, write from a particular world, into which he invites you to be welcome,
a distinctively British mid-century Oxonian, Scholle-Leod, which is also the world of its own
cultural references to earlier worlds. He, of course, also encourages you to find those aspects
of reality that that world shares in common with your own, for example, the experience of
sensed, of friendship, of reading. This contrasts with fundamentalism and also with much
evangelicalism. For various reasons, many of them unwitting or unchosen, and some unavoidable,
these movements have retreated from much of the public square, civic life, the academy, wider cultural
projects and the broader church into the siloed safety of their own sub-altern counter-publics.
They have offered legalistic, ideological, cultural and lifestyle package deals to their adherence.
Their epistemology has become sectarian, cutting them off from thoughtful and reciprocal engagement
with divergent and opposing voices, both within and without the church.
They have developed peculiar subcultural identities.
They have withdrawn from and encouraged suspicion and antagonism towards public institutions.
They have subdivided and sorted into their own increasingly niche circles of affiliation
and cultural consumption.
Their capacity to communicate with and to understand people outside of their circles has atrified.
They have developed their own forms of identity politics.
Lewis and other voices like him can reveal the contingency and hence contestability of much of the socio-cultural packaging that accompanies many evangelical and fundamentalist beliefs.
This is both exhilarating and threatening.
While fundamentalism might present its posture to be a simple matter of orthodoxy,
the posture of figures such as Lewis reveal that fundamentalism is largely sociological and cultural in character
and that it does not naturally follow from the Christian doctrines it rightfully upholds.
Fundamentalism is one way of making an edifice of certain Christian convictions one's home,
but there are radically different ways of inhabiting much the same edifice.
To understand Lewis it helps to consider a certain,
form and vision of the Church of England and of a distinctive Anglican spirit. Lewis and his work grew
in a sort of cultural soil that is much depleted now, even in those pockets where it is still
partially encountered. The Church of England is not a denomination in the sense that Baptists, Methodists,
Presbyterians, outside of Scotland at least, and other such groups are. As a communion, it seeks to
be non-sectarian and at its best orthodox, and contains many types within it.
While denominations can function like more defined clubs where higher levels of theological and cultural alignment are expected,
a non-denominational established church like the Church of England has much more of the givenness characteristic of a family,
whereas clubs can readily split when opinions and visions diverge or people fall out.
The same is not the case for a family.
A family feels much more of a need to break differences down to size, to seek peace, to reconcile,
and to speak across divides.
There may be times in the life of a family
when parties are alienated from each other,
when one or more members are in serious sin,
or when deep misunderstandings or tensions exist.
In such situations, the whole family suffers
and does whatever they can to resolve the issues.
While a club could divide without too much heartbreak,
a family will typically regard such measures
as much nearer to a last resort,
and will only adopt them when all other possibilities
have been exhausted. In such a family there may be an urgent need to protect some members from the
bad influence of one or more of the other members. A family that has not split is not necessarily
a family in full communion within itself or where no internal lines have been drawn. Nor does the fact
that a family does not part ways when one member is in sin imply that sin is tolerated within it.
Rather such a family ideally does what it can to reform its life, to correct its erring
members and to establish healthy relationships. For Christians who are accustomed to fundamentalism
and denominationalism, this can seem entirely foreign, as can the sort of practice that it encourages.
A couple of decades ago, John Frame wrote about the faciparous nature of the movement that followed
men like J. Gresham-Machin. Their fight against liberalism was succeeded by incessant
controversies and divisions on a host of issues of theology, many of them arguably minutiae.
When a denominational instinct takes hold, any difference can become the occasion for a bitter fight and a subsequent split.
When the church has come to be regarded as if it were a sort of orthodoxy club,
we should not be surprised that people do not approach their disagreements, as if they were brothers and sisters,
with the preservation, pursuit or recovery of unity in the truth being of very high importance.
Writing within the non-denominational context of the Church of England, Lewis diligently sought to extend
end a non-denominational spirit even further. He ran much of the text of mere Christianity
by clergymen of different traditions, seeking their feedback. He wanted to ensure that it was as
true an account to what Christians holding common as possible. In the preface of mere Christianity,
he claims that he also made it clearer why Christians of different traditions should be reunited.
When thinking about reunion, it is not all or nothing, it admits of many degrees. It is about
seeking to be as much in fellowship with each other as we can be in the truth, and seeking
to extend the measure of truth that we share. Being in a denomination need not entail denominationalism,
of course. Many people in denominations have a more Catholic and non-denominationalist spirit,
and invest much effort in developing a breadth of charitable bonds beyond their denominations,
classes, nations, tribes, and immediate theological traditions, while maintaining clarity concerning
the truth. The Church of England has tended to be perceived as the default Christianity for many
in England. There is a givenness to it. It is not a choice or a more freighted alignment as joining
or belonging to a church of a particular denomination in the American religious ecosystem might be.
There have certainly always been strong theological differences within the Church of England. However,
the institution itself imposes a discipline of Catholicity that challenges all parties within the church
to seek ways to mitigate, speak across, and resolve those differences.
Such a church is not a pure gathering of faithful persons,
while denominationalism separates in order to form such groups,
this is not the way that matters have usually been handled
within the history of the people of God and the church.
Under the Old Covenant, you could not simply opt out of the temple and synagogue system
and form your own alternative.
The division of the kingdom and Jeroboam's establishment of idolatry
in the Northern Kingdom of Israel might be seen as something akin to such an opting out.
There was one system, which was generally corrupt in various regards,
and it was necessary to remain in contact with it and to seek to reform it.
There were occasions when righteous persons were expelled from the system,
but they could not simply turn their back on it.
Even the most critical of prophets, for example, rail at Israel,
they do not turn away and start an alternative reformed Israel
that was separate from the temple and main body of the people.
If the temple was corrupt, it was the only temple,
and its corruption continued to be our problem.
It was not a problem born by some other group.
Over the history of the church,
things have generally been much the same.
Rather than cutting themselves off,
faithful people have generally sought to remain in impure churches
and bear faithful witness within them,
ideally to reform and revive them.
Such groups have typically sought to secure uninsured,
enclaves of faithfulness, typically specific churches and institutions that stand firm against a
general declension, to develop Ecclesiolae and Ecclesia, little churches within the church working for
renewal, sodalities for the purpose of reform and the like. The early Methodist movement is a good example
of what such a vision can entail, and John Wesley's words against separation from the Church of England
are instructive here. Wesley wrote, By such a separation, we should not only throw away the peculiar
a glorying which God has given us, that we do and will suffer all things for our brethren's sake,
though the more we love them, the less we be loved, but should act in direct contradiction to that
very end, for which we believe God hath raised us up. The chief design of his providence in sending us out
is undoubtedly to quicken our brethren. And the first message of all our preachers is to the lost sheep of
the Church of England. Now would it not be a flat contradiction to this design to separate
from the church. It has indeed been objected that till we do separate, we cannot be a compact
united body. It is true we cannot till then be a compact united body, if you mean by that
expression a body distinct from all others. And we have no desire so to be. We look upon ourselves,
not as the authors or ringleaders of a particular sect or party, it is the farthest thing from our
thoughts, but as messengers of God, to those who are Christians in name but heathens,
in heart and in life, to call them back to that from which they are fallen, to real genuine Christianity.
We are therefore debtors to all these of whatever opinion or denomination, and are consequently
to do all that in us lies to please all for their good to edification. We look upon the Methodists,
so called, in general, not as any particular party. This would exceedingly obstruct the grand
design for which we conceive God has raised them up, but as living witnesses in, and to every
every party of that Christianity when we preach, which is hereby demonstrated to be a real thing
and visibly held out to all the world. We look upon England as that part of the world,
and the church as that part of England, to which all we who are born and have been brought up therein
owe our first and chief regard. We feel in ourselves a strong Storgay, a kind of natural affection
for our country, which we apprehend Christianity was never designed either to root out or to
impair. We have a more peculiar concern for our brethren, for that part of our countrymen,
to whom we have been joined from our youth up by ties of a religious, as well as of a civil
nature. True it is that they are in general without God in the world. So much the more do our
bowels yearn over them. They do lie in darkness and the shadow of death. The more tender is our
compassion for them. And when we have the fullest conviction of that complicated wickedness which
covers them as a flood, then do we feel the most, and we desire to feel yet more of that inexpressible
emotion, with which our blessed Lord beheld Jerusalem and wept and lamented over it. Then are we the most
willing to spend and be spent for them, yea, to lay down our lives for our brethren. So far, John Wesley.
Wesley also discusses the way that the spirit of controversy increasingly characterised those who adopted
the root of division, driving out a spirit of love and true religion. To those accustomed to the way
of denominationalism, the determination of someone like Wesley to remain in a deeply corrupt and
unfaithful church can be dismissed as the toleration of evil. That could not be further from the
truth. Where faithful Christians have not effectively formed enclaves of faithfulness, communities and
institutions that ground and form their members more deeply in the truth, and networks and agencies of reform,
they can too easily capitulate and assimilate the waves of unfaithfulness that surround them,
a constant challenge for faithful Christians in a body like the Church of England,
and one area where a continued fraternal voice of caution from non-conformists,
independence and fundamentalist brethren is salutary.
Often faithful Christians have been driven out of such bodies.
In other situations they may have felt unable to resist the cancerous spread of unfaithfulness
in the general body without an amoeuvreous.
emergency amputation. However, even when driven out, they can comport themselves without a denominational
spirit, bearing a true and loving witness for the good of those who have expelled them and desirous
of a reunion in the truth. Lewis's mere Christianity vision is quite fitting to such a non-denominational
context. It doesn't major on the distinctives of a particular sect or denomination, but articulates
an orthodox faith that resonates with Christians of many, with a warm,
and Pacific spirit of Catholicity that keeps first things first and does not accent the
distinctives of sects. The mainline in America is denominational in character, which is an important
difference. Likewise, conservatives were in large measure driven from or vacated the US mainline,
institutionalising the modernist fundamentalist division. This did not occur in the same way in England.
In the English context, it was consequently easier to resist much of the modernist movement,
without becoming overly defined by that resistance,
becoming an inverse of the modernism you were opposing
or rewriting the tradition to make it fit the concerns of fundamentalism,
the challenge of modernism could be responded to, rather merely reacted against.
For instance, even among those holding very high views of scripture against modernism,
inerency was not as architectonic in biblical scholarship in Conservative Church of England contexts,
and consequently doctrines of scripture have often had a different,
center of gravity, one more consistent with older doctrines of scripture in the tradition.
Even when there are important lines to hold, defining ourselves over much in terms of those lines
can be dangerous. It is easy for orthodoxy under such circumstances unwittingly to assume
unorthodox framing by defining itself as the inverse of dominant or especially threatening errors.
As one friend of mine has observed, fundamentalism as a response to the very real threats of modernism,
was akin to a program of lockdowns and attempted inoculations.
It quarantined people from the plague of modernism by forming new ecclesial bodies,
cut off from the broader conversation of the church and from mainline academic institutions.
It sought to inoculate people through straw man portrayals of opposing views
and the injection of radical suspicion of outsiders and intellectuals.
Fundamentalism's reactive and belligerent posture towards non-fundamentalists,
its deep distrust, its divisive character, its common anti-intellectualism, and its caricaturing of opposition
are all expressions of this underlying move.
Non-fundamentalist conservative Anglicans exhibit a different possibility,
and one that may prove increasingly necessary as greater exposure to opposing voices in modern media and intellectual environments
leaves well-managed engagement the only real alternative to escalating tribalism.
As an established church, the Church of England has a recognition.
duty to the nation in ways that denominations do not. It is always already in the public square
and must speak with candour, faithfulness and love. The apologetic task has a distinctive
character in such a context. The Church of England, as established, is ideally much better
position to act with magnanimity and avoid a resentful spirit of underdogism. Apologetics can be
much less instinctively defensive under such conditions and hopefully committed to a cultural
of persuasion. Another key aspect of the Church of England is its close attachment to the universities,
the consequent place of theology in the academy, and the greater exposure of theology to a range
of intellectual interlocutors in the public conversation. This pushes the church into the work
of rigorous theology, the task of public persuasion, cultural creation, and the careful
articulation of ethics for the actually existing society. Oliver O'Donovan is another great
exemplar of the sort of person that this can create. The Church of England must minister across
the breadth of English society, from having bishops in the House of Lords, chaplains in palaces
and prisons, canon theologians connecting universities with churches, schools in parishes
across the country, and all classes and backgrounds in its pews. Such a church must develop elite
scholars and skilled popular communicators. It must be able to speak to the homeless person who
walks in off the street, while also being able to hold its own with the greatest scholars in the
land. It cannot be either populist or elitist, but it must cultivate excellence and enjoys many of the
means to do so. It must be adept at operating in the full expanse of the big pond of English
society and cannot simply retreat to its own sheltered and safe world. The Church of England,
as an established church, is called to play the role of a chaplain. The role of the critical and
countercultural profit can easily be one that allows us to absolve ourselves of true responsibility,
with a morality chiefly manifest in the condemnation of others' sins, persons who are generally not in
our audience. The chaplain, however, does not have the same luxury of a purity that distancing
and detachment allows. The chaplain needs actively to seek the good of the society to which he
has joined. He must build bridges, and he must create to maintain the conditions in which he can speak,
and act as a faithful witness and be heard.
The position of the chaplain also highlights the duty of the church
to seek the good of its society and its various groups.
When Christians have retreated from much public life
and form their own subaltern counter-publics,
it is easy for Christians to start to think of themselves chiefly
as if a constituency with its own sectional interests
to be advanced against competitors.
In such a situation, Christian leaders may be expected to be belligerial,
towards and to delegitimate other rival groups and agencies, their public task is supposedly
chiefly that of representing Christians and their interests, rather than that of representing Christ
in a way that serves the good interests of the people to whom they are ministering. People who are in
the position of a chaplain can appear like traitors. Lewis was not the most enthusiastic churchgoer,
but he was a faithful one, and thereby he illustrates the importance of the Catholicity of the
Church of England's parochial ordering. Going to a local parish church, Lewis experienced the
discipline of learning to love his neighbours and to see them as brothers and sisters. Too many people
are accustomed to treating the church as religious consumers, driving great distances in search
of a church that offers a community that fits their preferences and ticks their boxes, rather than working
at forming a community with the actual Christians in their own immediate locality. Although this may not be an
option for many, it is important that we are alert to the formative power of these differing
experiences of church. Lewis's writing on church attendance reveals benefits of the parochial
church over the consumer church in shaping key Christian virtues. The parochial church, unlike the
consumer church, must accommodate people of many different temperaments, politics, classes, and
backgrounds. At his local parish church, Lewis had to learn to see people of a very different class,
and educational background, as his brothers and sisters.
While many churches in a religious marketplace
can purposefully target a particular constituency,
sometimes even willfully antagonizing others in order to do so,
a parish church does not get to choose its constituency.
Whatever the priests' temperaments, politics or sensibilities,
he has faithfully to present the gospel to the breadth of people
within his church's locality.
This naturally encourages a more winsome approach,
a disciplined practice of traversing differences in truth.
Lewis also evidently drank deeply of the distinctive spirit of Anglican humanism
and the sort of contemplative pragmatism that is articulated by such as Richard Hooker,
a confident, reflective, and expansive sapiential posture towards the world.
Lewis's effusive description of Hooker's thought in his English literature in the 16th century
expresses some of the virtues he exemplified in his own.
He writes,
Every system offers us a model of the universe.
Hooker's model has unsurpassed grace and majesty.
From much that I have already said,
it might be inferred that the unconscious tendency of his mind
was to secularize.
There could be no deeper mistake.
Few model universes are more filled,
one might say, more drenched with deity than his.
All things that are of God,
and only sin is not, have God in them, and he them in himself likewise,
yet their substance and his holy differeth. God is unspeakably transcendent, but also
unspeakably imminent. It is this conviction which enables Hooker, with no anxiety,
to resist any inaccurate claim that has made for revelation against reason, grace against nature,
the spiritual against the secular. We must not honour even heavenly things with compliments
that are not quite true, though it seems an honour it is an injury.
All good things, reason as well as revelation, nature as well as grace, the Commonwealth, as well
as the church, are equally, though diversely, of God.
If nature hath need of grace, yet also grace hath use of nature.
Laws merely human, if they are good, have all been copied out of the tables of that high
everlasting law which God made, the law of nature, the general and perpetual.
voice of man is as the sentence of God himself, for it is taught by nature whose voice is but his
instrument. Divine testimony and demonstrative reasoning are equally infallible. Certainly the Christian
revelation is that principal truth in comparison whereof all other knowledge is vile, but only in
comparison. All kinds of knowledge, all good arts, sciences and disciplines come from the father of lights
and are, as so many sparkles resembling the bright fountain from which they rise,
we must not think that we glorify God only in our specifically religious actions.
We move, we sleep, we take the cup at the hand of our friend,
and glorify him unconsciously as inanimate objects do.
For every effect proceeding from the most concealed instincts of nature manifests his power.
Not of course that our different modes of glorifying God are on a level,
but we must not so regard the highest in us as to forget that the lowest is still of God,
nor so call some of our activities religious as to make the rest profane.
We meet on all levels the divine wisdom shining through the beautiful variety of all things
in their manifold and yet harmonious dissimilitude.
So far, C.S. Lewis on Hooker.
Such a vision of reality is not ideological,
nor a reality that is exclusively known by those with special revelation.
It is a full reality in which all are to be wakened to their part.
It is a reality in which reason has its role
and in which we can learn extensively from non-Christians.
Now, it should be evident that the Church of England is in a sorry state.
My intent is definitely not to claim otherwise.
I'm not suggesting that anyone join it.
Nor am I claiming that it has nothing to learn from
or is categorically superior to others.
American fundamentalists among them.
Nevertheless, it is a tradition that holds remarkable possibilities
and has specific virtues from which other Protestants could learn.
Many outside of it, without being blind to its faults,
have drunk deeply of the best of its spirit
and learned from some of its greatest minds.
So many American evangelical leaders, for instance,
have been formed in British universities
and have brought something of the spirit of faithful Anglicanism
that Lewis once exemplified back with them.
Even many of those who were not, figures like Tim Keller, have looked to the UK to learn how to minister to a wider society.
Navigating the relationship between non-fundamentalist conservative Christians in the Church of England
and American fundamentalists and evangelicals has long been complex.
American fundamentalists and evangelicals have historically frequently looked to British conservative Christians
for intellectual advocacy of the orthodoxy that they share.
However, British Conservative Christians, while feeling a genuine kinship with American
Conservative Christians, have non-fundamentalist instincts.
They are not as tribal or antagonistically postured towards other groups, having a felt
commitment to pursuing peace and truth in a wider church and society.
Without the lockdowns of fundamentalism, British Conservative Christians have been much more
open to the world of the Academy, for instance.
From the perspective of American fundamentalists, this openness can sometimes feel like
a betrayal or as a cynical approval seeking, as British conservative Christians engaged charitably
with people American fundamentalists regard as their cultured despises, disapprove of their
politicised tribalism, and do not simply take their side. Class divisions that are also internal
to American conservative churches can easily play out in and be projected onto this transatlantic
relationship, with suspicion, chauvinism, resentment and prejudice, inferiority and superiority,
at work on the various sides.
While perceiving and addressing such failures of Christian love,
chiefly within our own hearts,
it is also essential that we recognise and reckon with
the genuine issues of principle that are at stake.
C.S. Lewis is an example of the sort of exceptional character
that the Church of England has produced and nurtured.
Mindlessly uproot the flower of Lewis's work
from the soil within which it grew, and it can rapidly wither.
However, those lovers of Lewis, who also consider that soil, can benefit more from him,
even when joining Lewis's Church of England is not an option for them or for any of us.
Thank you very much for listening.
If you'd like to read this and other reflections like it on the substack, you can do so at argosy.substack.
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My work is supported by the kind donations of Patreon,
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If you want to find the details of that,
you can look in the show notes below.
Thank you very much for your time.
God bless.
