The Eric Metaxas Show - Walter Hooper - Part 2

Episode Date: October 3, 2022

Eric continues his in-depth interview of the late Walter Hooper in Oxford, England, for Socrates in the City. Hooper is an author, editor, and trustee of the literary estate of C.S. Lewis. ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Folks, welcome to the Eric Metaxus show, sponsored by Legacy Precious Metals. There's never been a better time to invest in precious metals. Visit legacy p.m. Investments.com. That's legacy p.m. Investments.com. Taxis show with your host, Eric Mettaxas. Folks, today's program, we bring you a special recording, an interview I did for Socrates in the city a few years ago with one of the most amazing men I've ever met. This is part two of a three-part interview I did with him in Oxford, England. Walter Hooper, who was C.S. Lewis's secretary, literary executor, just an astonishing human being. And here it is. I'm in Oxford, England right now, doing a special series of Socrates in the City events.
Starting point is 00:00:57 That's Socrates in the City. And I wanted to share them with you, my radio audience. So now let's listen in to the Socrates in the City event. I did yesterday, or it may have been the day before I'm getting confused with the jet lag, but very recently. I hope you enjoy it. Pipp, Pip, Cheerio, and so on and so forth. Thank you. Welcome to Socrates in the city, Oxford Edition. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. I am, thank you. I cannot tell you how excited I am about this, not just because we're here in Oxford, but particularly because for me this is a dream come true. For years, I have wanted to
Starting point is 00:01:46 interview Walter Hooper, and I never wanted to interview him just once. I want to interview him in a series, Nixon, David Frost's style, not quite, but to really get, you don't get that reference, you're all kids, to really get into some depth because he has such a wealth of information to share about his life and about C.S. Lewis's works, there's no one who can compare. So please, Socrates in the city, welcome for Walter Hooper. Think back 51 years to a day when you could not get the great works of C.S. Lewis. Now, when I say the great works, I think they're all great, but the idea that the abolition of man, a seminal prophetic work of Lewis's, that that would be out of print is a staggering thought.
Starting point is 00:02:43 And so I say this to underscore the service that you provided, not just to Lewis lovers, but to humanity, because this is, I would say, one of the classic works of the 20th century, which was out of print. And if you
Starting point is 00:02:59 20-something hot-shot American upstart that you were, to dare say to this patrician figure, Lady Collins, that you must put out this back, this old book. It's an extraordinary thing.
Starting point is 00:03:17 And what you did then, and I want to hear about the subsequent demands that you made to these poor old people who couldn't stand up to you, what a monumental service it is to the world of letters. I'm not trying to embarrass you, but I think that it needs to be clear that this one little young man from North Carolina comes to to England and does this, and if it had not been for you, and this is clear to me, this wouldn't have been done, and it is entirely possible that what we know of Lewis, we would not know of Lewis. And it's one of those things that, you know, it's like trying to think of, what if the South had won the Civil War or something like that. I mean, I cannot imagine the world without the works of Lewis being well known by millions of people,
Starting point is 00:04:09 many hundreds that I've discussed him with. So did you have any sense in 1964 as a very young man in that office with the intimidating Lady Collins of the importance of what you were doing? I think I did because, as I mentioned earlier, in my argument with C.S. Lewis, we didn't know who won at that time. But I'll remind you of the argument, which was essential for me. He was very worried about what would his older brother, who was a retired army officer, would live on when he himself died, then C.S. Lewis died.
Starting point is 00:05:00 And I said, he will live on your royalties. But then he pointed out what was well known, not to me, but I mean to people like him is that once an author dies then his books after three years trail off to almost nothing they stop selling and I said
Starting point is 00:05:21 well yours won't and he said well sometime an author has a resurrection like Sir Walter Scott is having now but that's very rare I said you need to worry about it and when he said I don't understand
Starting point is 00:05:37 Who is this American secretary who tells me I don't need to worry? Why don't I need to worry? And I said, because your books are so good and your readers are not that stupid. Well, I believe that, and he believed what he said. But then right after he died, I saw Blackwell's bookshops. His books were already remained, they were getting ready. to bury him, as it were. Anyway, someone,
Starting point is 00:06:11 a publisher had said to me, a new book helps to sell old books. And at that time, I was trying to complete Full Lewis, the book that he was editing before he died, which was a volume of poems. But he
Starting point is 00:06:28 didn't know very many of his poems. He didn't know where they were how to get to them, because he had so few of his own books and his house. much of this seven years ago this very day and I find it typical
Starting point is 00:06:45 of Lewis in the way that he was almost ridiculously humble and you know part of it is his Christian character and another part of it is sin I would say
Starting point is 00:07:00 and I would say to his face if he were here because I challenge people on that you can be overly humble and I think that that sometimes you can do great harm. And the idea that they had such little respect, he had such little respect for his own work. It's actually, you know, it's like somebody saying, well, I can commit suicide because I can do what I like,
Starting point is 00:07:20 but I can't kill you. It's like, well, no, you know, you have to treat yourself in the way you want to treat others, just as you should treat others the way you want to treat yourself. Now, I say this in part because this episode with the manuscripts, I think we touched upon it in the last session. But he had very little respect for the way. his own manuscripts, they would throw them away.
Starting point is 00:07:40 When Warnie was, his brother was worried about having to move or wanting to move, being afraid that he couldn't pay rent or afford the kilns, you said that he was getting rid of papers or maybe when I was with you a year ago, we spoke about this privately. But I'd love you to talk about this, that Warnie, his brother, who was his secretary for so many years,
Starting point is 00:08:07 was simply burning Lewis's papers, not just manuscripts, and we can talk about that, but all kinds of other papers that anyone, whether the Wade Center at Wheaton today or anybody, would love to have, papers, letters, even, you know, tax records of this literary giant, just to have a sense of who he was, something for his biographers to pour over.
Starting point is 00:08:35 what happened when you were there? When did you see this happening and what did you do about it? You see, Lewis was giving away two-thirds of his income. Right. So it didn't really represent what he made in royalties. So in one way, I was trying to be realistic, but he panicked. So he panicked and then he thought, I won't be able to afford the pay the rates on this large house. I'll move out to a small house.
Starting point is 00:09:07 I think also he had the feeling that the old, the good life is over. Get ready for purgatory now. This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Mataxis show. Folks, this is urgent. I want to tell you that we're doing a campaign with the Alliance Defending Freedom. These are the people who in court, often at the Supreme Court, defend our liberties. When people say, what can I do? What can I do?
Starting point is 00:09:33 I promise you they are fighting for you and for me. And what you can do is you can help them by going to metaxis talk.com, click on the banner and give them the most generous donation you possibly can. If you care about America, folks, you will be generous. They are fighting the battle. This is the least we can do. They're fighting for us. The Alliance Defending Freedom, go to metaxistalk.com.
Starting point is 00:10:00 You'll see the banner. I'm begging you, help them out. Metaxistalk.com. In case you haven't been paying attention, the Biden administration has caused a financial crisis and they have no clue how to fix it. Oil prices have skyrocketed. And when oil prices go up,
Starting point is 00:10:22 the cost of transportation and shipping spikes, leading the prices of goods to rise. And when we're already seeing record inflation, that's the last thing we need. Our economy is in trouble and you need to take steps to protect yourself. If all your money is tied up in stocks, bonds, and traditional markets,
Starting point is 00:10:40 Gold is one of the best ways to protect your retirement. No matter what happens, you own your gold. It is real, it is physical, it's always been valuable since the dawn of time. Legacy precious metals is the company I trust for investing in gold. They can help you roll your retirement account into a gold-backed IRA where you still own the physical gold. They can also ship gold and precious metals safely and securely to your house. Call Legacy at 866-528-1903 or visit them online at Legacy. If you want to know what the left's real plan is for your kids, just look at the reaction to the work
Starting point is 00:11:16 Patriot Mobile did in multiple school districts in Texas. The left is losing their minds over it. Patriot Mobile is America's only Christian conservative mobile phone provider and a force for conservative values. That's because they take a portion of your bill and fund conservative causes and candidates who believe in the sanctity of life, freedom of speech, the Second Amendment, and they're winning. Patriot Mobile has affordable plans for you, your family, even your business, they offer the same nationwide coverage as the major carriers because they use multiple major networks. Plus, you're supporting conservative values with every phone call. Go to patriotmobile.com slash Eric.
Starting point is 00:11:51 Patriotmobile.com slash Eric or call 972 Patriot. Get free activation with the offer code Eric. Special discounts available for veterans and first responders. Join our movement. Make the switch today and a difference tomorrow. Patriotmobile.com slash Eric. Patriotmobile.com slash Eric. Patriot.
Starting point is 00:12:12 The best of the Eric Mataxis show. You're listening to a special version of the Eric Mataxis show. I'm doing a Socrates in the city event in Oxford, England. Let's continue my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper. The idea that this bonfire, first of all, was burning for three days. What does that mean? I can't quite, I'm from Manhattan in New York City. We don't have bonfires.
Starting point is 00:12:54 What was going on? In other words, what were they burning three days running? They were burning various papers of C.S. Lewis. There were various, say, lectures that he had given. He kept the manuscripts of them if they hadn't been published. So, and Joycea, one of his friends who wrote a biography, was pretty sure that he'd written a sequel to Surprise by Joy. I don't know that.
Starting point is 00:13:25 but we thought, well, if he did write it, it's gone into the bonfire. I'm just stunned to hear this. I just have to ask you because the idea that Warnie was doing this, was Warnie, you know, in his right mind, do you think? I mean, it seems like he was a very anxious person, but that's an extraordinary thing that he might be burning a great manuscript. Well, when this came up one time, he said, but I didn't burn any the diaries of the Lewis family.
Starting point is 00:14:03 He cared really only about family papers as opposed to, say, professional papers. In fact, he wrote a letter to me shortly after that, pointing out that he had, he and Jack had brought over all the family papers, their father, and mothers letters, their grandfather's diaries, or, I mean, 11 volumes of papers. Anyway, he was at that time, he spent 1932 to 1933, simply going through those papers and copying them onto the typewriter, so that they make up 11 volumes of typewritten papers, about 300 pages each.
Starting point is 00:14:53 And then, he said, he went away and came back to find that Jack had burnt all the original family papers. So, you know, Jack didn't care. He said, they're already copies of them, you know. So Warning wrote this to you in a letter. He did. Did you have the letter or did you burn it? No, I think you should burn it. I never burn it.
Starting point is 00:15:19 Let's burn it tomorrow. Let's burn it right here. We'll get the last last warning. But this is unfathomable, and I don't want to run past it too quickly. Let me ask you as well, and I don't know if you can answer this, but when I hear things like this, very little is known about warning, certainly compared to C.S. Lewis. Was his faith anything like his brother's faith,
Starting point is 00:15:46 or was his faith more of a nominal faith? because when people are so anxious and so worried, I worry that he really didn't have any place to take his grief. He had a faith. He had, it was not nominal. He had come back to Christianity of the same time that C.S. Lewis had in 1931. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:16:11 And so when he came back from China, you know, they each discovered they had both come back to the faith. Warnie always The system that Jack was not converted He said he was always converted He just returned But Lewis I think knew about what his own faith was like He said no I had lost it
Starting point is 00:16:32 And then I gained it through the conversion But Warnie said no No but he said no about his own brother But I think his own faith Was never shaken And since he never became rabid atheist. But he was a very firm believer
Starting point is 00:16:54 and that, you know, there was no doubt at all. But he did, but he really did insist that his brother, Jack, had never fully left the faith. That's right, yes. And he always said that. Yeah, I think he, in one way, believe that, you know, this is sort of the army thing. you know, one doesn't behave irrationally if you are, you know, army people, you know, and also good Irish people from Northern Ireland.
Starting point is 00:17:29 But, I mean, Lewis's diary, I mean, his own biography, surprised by joy, tells a different story. But in the sequel, he refutes it. We wondered if that was the sequel, but if so, we won't find it. goodness. Well, so you come upon this scene. Now, is it Paxford? Paxford, the gardener. The gardener. He said that up there are all these notebooks there. And he said to the major, I'm pretty sure Mr. Hooper would like those. And the major said, well, if he comes today, he can take him away. So I went up to the kills. And he said, yes, yes, Paxford said you.
Starting point is 00:18:17 wanted these notebooks. And I found so many papers that they fill two huge suitcases. And I said, but I don't think I can carry both of those today. Could I come back tomorrow and get the rest of them? No, whatever you leave today goes on the bonfire. Excuse me, excuse me. why do you suppose he was hankering to burn these papers?
Starting point is 00:18:53 Oh, I think because he needed to move into smaller house so he needed to downsize, as you'd say today. Well, okay, now that we know that you did, well, what happened? How did you get them out of there? I didn't know, and I wasn't, I wasn't a rich man at all.
Starting point is 00:19:09 I had almost nothing to live on. And so I dragged them the mile down to the bus stop, and then I got the bus into Tom and dragged them into. But I'm young then. I was only 32. And that made all the difference. You dragged these heavy suitcases filled. Now, was there, in fact, anything in there of considerable value? That was.
Starting point is 00:19:40 That was not only. the 52 notebooks, many of which had essays and things which I published over the years. Can you give us an example of an essay that would have burned? Well, they were, yes, a number of the essays like on prayer and on Addison, mainly literary essays. And where have they been published? They've been published in selected literary essays, published by Cambridge University Press.
Starting point is 00:20:20 So there were quite a lot. Lewis didn't save the letters that were sent to him, but he did save a few letters from really important people like E.R. Edison, who wrote The Worm of Robberus. Lewis had corresponded with him for years. He always cites that book. as a tremendous influence on him. I've tried to get a copy, and I haven't,
Starting point is 00:20:45 but I'd like to read what Lewis read. He cites a few other things, obscure books, but that's one of them. And so you're saying that he did correspond with Edison. Yeah, he did. Edison, fortune preserved all of Lewis's letters, and Edison's daughter and I, this is some years later, we got together, I said, I have your father's letters to C.S. Lewis.
Starting point is 00:21:15 And she said, well, I have Lewis's letters to my father. So we agree to both put both collections into the Bodleian Library. So it's a wonderful conclusion to a story. And have those, are there still letters and notebooks, diaries, things of that nature, that have not been published? no, most things have been published, but those letters to Edison are all in volumes two and three of the collective lives of Lewis.
Starting point is 00:21:50 And then there were a good many letters from Darfa Eusea. He saved those two. She began corresponding with him in 1942, and thus it led to a long correspondence, and many of his letters, have his letters to her have been published in collected letters. And then some of all her letters have been published, most of them, by Barbara Reynolds. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:19 And the four volumes of collected letters. This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Metaxa show. There is more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next. Tell me, Eric, why is relief factors so successful at lowering or eliminating pain. I'm often asked that question. The owners of Relief Factor tell me they believe our bodies were designed to heal. That's right, designed to heal. And I agree with them. So the doctors who formulated relief factor for them selected the four best ingredients, yes, 100% drug-free ingredients, each helps your body deal with inflammation. Each of the four ingredients deals with inflammation from a different
Starting point is 00:23:11 metabolic pathway. And that right there, approaching from four different angles, may be why so many people find such wonderful relief. So if you've got back pain, shoulder, neck, hip, knee, or foot pain from exercise or just getting older, you should order the three-week quick start discounted to only 1995 to see if it will work for you. It works for me. It has for about 70% of the half a million people who've tried it and have ordered more. Go to relieffactor.com or call 800 for relief to find out about this offer. Feel the difference. Is the government the best mechanism for fighting poverty? Are there any real-life examples of communities successfully combating addiction and homelessness today?
Starting point is 00:23:49 How can we best deliver hope to our nation? Those questions get answered September 23rd on SalemNow.com in an inspiring new motion picture from Kingstone Studios based on a true story. In no vacancy, a demoted journalist finds her cynicism slowly transformed as she befriends a recovering addict while working a story about a church struggling to purchase a motel for homeless families. No Vacancy starring Dean T.C. Stallings and Sean Young is based on the true story of First Baptist, Leesburg, Florida, and a real location in the Samaritan Inn.
Starting point is 00:24:20 Movie reviewers are saying movies like this bring purpose to the big screen, well-produced, and the acting is tops. Enough cannot be said about how incredible this true story is, and this film does it justice. Pre-order it, September 19th at SalemNow.com. Watch the movie on demand or buy the DVD on Friday, September 23rd at SalemNow.com. That's SalemNow.com. Salem now.com. Welcome back.
Starting point is 00:24:49 You're listening to a special British version of the Eric Mataxis show. Yes, I'm in Oxford, England, taping a series of Socrates in the city events. I hope you're enjoying it. Here's more of my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper. Did Lewis keep in his notebooks or did he have diaries? Because I cannot remember, I feel like I should be aware of everything published under his name, but were there diaries or journals or things like that that he wrote that have been published? Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:25:21 I edited a volume of diary. It's called The Diary All My Road Before Me. Oh, yeah, okay. It came back in 1992. Okay. And this covers the years just 1920, 1928. It didn't keep it very long. But that was partly, those diaries were recovered from the bonfire.
Starting point is 00:25:46 Those? You drag them down the hill, a mile. down the hill. But I was strong then. I was a bigger man then than I am now. I think even in this state, you wouldn't have left them to burn. I can't imagine you would have left them to burn. You might have tackled a warning or something. But I'm just, it's unfathomable to me that these treasures were poised for the fire and that you happened to be there to rescue them. I mean, it's a very fitting picture. You know, if I were to invent the film version of
Starting point is 00:26:24 this, I would invent this story to sum up what you have done with your life. But it's very nice to have this picture of it and to know this is actually true. But I don't want anybody to suppose that Warnie didn't love his brother
Starting point is 00:26:39 that this had anything to do with. He loved him very, very much. And in one way, getting rid of all of these things is part of the love. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, it's clear, I mean, that they loved each other and that they were best friends their whole lives. That's why it's just so, only somebody who's that close to someone else would maybe have the freedom to do something like that. You know, you wouldn't have a hands-off attitude because you'd feel like what's his is mine and what's mine is his,
Starting point is 00:27:07 and they probably shared clothes for all we know. But it's, it is extraordinary. So this is 1964. you have saved treasures from literal fire. You take the collected poems to Lady
Starting point is 00:27:25 Collins in London, I guess. The collected poems were published by Bless. She came later. What did you take to Lady Collins? They stand together the letters of Seaslers to Arthur Greaves. Okay. So that was what
Starting point is 00:27:43 you were presenting here with. Did you Did Blessed do any other work? You said that they went out of business, I think. Yes, they did. They were. Bless had already died. Jocelyn Gibb took over the firm, but he wanted to retire.
Starting point is 00:28:02 So they just gave up the business. And so the Lewis estate, by this time, I had become one of the three trustees. and we had to decide who we would give all this Lewis's works too I mean who's going to take them over well Collins were already publishing the Narnian stories in paperback
Starting point is 00:28:29 so they had the best claim to them and Lady Collins had already brought out a number of paperbacks because Bless didn't bring out any paperbacks so she was the natural person to do it It turns out to be she was ideal, but because we also have the benefit of a literary agent's Curtis Brown. And the ladies in Curtis Brown knew what Lady Collins was. They knew how glamorous she was. And so they said to me after that first meeting with Lady Collins,
Starting point is 00:29:05 now look, we know you are under the spell of Lady Collins, but we are not. We are immune to her spell. So if she says, you know, what about a 10% royalty, 5%? You probably would say, oh, why bother with royalties? But we are not, we are immune to her charms. So that's when we come then and settle into royalties. But don't say anything about money, because you'll give it all. old way.
Starting point is 00:29:45 Well, what, so this was, was this 1964 that you were with Lady Collins in London? Yes. Okay. So at what point did you realize that this might go on beyond this juncture? I mean, did you have a sense that there were years of this kind of service ahead at that point? Well, the things were. changing at that time. One of the
Starting point is 00:30:17 important works, it was not important work in itself, but its publication was important at that time, was God in the dark by the Bishop of Woolwich. And this had unsettled the faith of many, many Christians at that time.
Starting point is 00:30:39 He argued, and Lewis had seen a chapter of that, and it had been asked to comment on it, which he did in an essay. Anyway, in honest to God, what the bishop said at that time is roughly that you can't trust metaphors or images because they're always, they're not literally true. More of the best of the Eric Metaxas show after this. With the overturn of Roe v. Wade, lots of companies are coming out saying they'll pay for employees, abortion travel and expenses. Most of you've heard about some of these companies.
Starting point is 00:31:37 You've decided to stop shopping or doing business there, but did you know that you most likely own stock in those companies through your 401Ks, IRAs, and other investment accounts? Folks, this is a huge problem, and we need to do something about this to send a message to Wall Street through our investments. You need to go to inspireadvisors.com slash Eric and get a free Inspire Impact Report.
Starting point is 00:31:59 This biblical investment analysis will educate you on what's really in your investment accounts, like companies paying for abortion travel. You need to go to inspireadvisors.com slash Eric to connect with an Inspire Advisors Financial Professional who can run your report and help remove companies paying for abortion travel today. Go to inspireadvisors.com slash Eric.
Starting point is 00:32:19 That's inspireadvisors.com slash Eric. Advisory services are offered through Inspire Advisors LLC, a registered investment advisor with the SEC. My Pillow is having their biggest sheet sale of the year. You've all helped build my pillow into the amazing company it is today. Now Mike Lindell, inventor and CEO wants to give back exclusively to my listeners. That's you. The percale and Giza Dream bedsheets sets are available in a variety of colors and sizes,
Starting point is 00:32:46 and they're now all on sale for as low as 2998 with our listener promo code. Order now because when they're gone, they're gone. The percale and Giza Dream sheets are breathable and have a cool, crisp feel. They come with a 10-year warranty and a 60-day money-back guarantee. Don't miss out on this incredible offer because they're not. There's a limited supply, so be sure to order now. Call 1-800-978-3057 now and use the promo code Eric, or you can go to mypillow.com. Click on the radio listener square and use the promo code Eric.
Starting point is 00:33:14 This offer will not last very long. They're known to sell quickly. So order now with promo code Eric at mypillow.com. promo code Eric at mypillow.com. Texas show. Today you're hearing a special Socrates in the city version of the show drawn from a number of events that I hosted in Oxford, England. Here's more of my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper. What the bishop said at that time was roughly that you can't trust metaphors or images because they're always, they're not literally true.
Starting point is 00:34:03 So he said when we say that Christ came down from heaven, that's not literally true, because sounds like a man and a parachute coming down. So in fact, we just don't know. We can only say something like he entered the universe. Well, when Lewis was asked to comment on that, he says the bishop has told us something that we already believe for many centuries, all language is metaphorical. The language of the scientists, as much as those of literary scholars. And he said, when you exchange, say, he came down from heaven,
Starting point is 00:34:46 for we ended the universe, it sounds like you said, the man didn't come down in a parachute. He went from the garden shed, out and opened the door, into the drawing room. But you can't be absolutely literal, but at least what we have in the Bible
Starting point is 00:35:04 is inspired metaphors. So therefore, we should give more credence to those that anything we make up. Brilliant. Well, you're just exchanging metaphor for metaphor. That's right, yeah. You can't escape the idea of the metaphor. But you're saying that there was a book published by this bishop called God in the Dock?
Starting point is 00:35:25 Yeah, God in the Dark. And you... So, no, no, his book was called, I've just said it. Honest to God. Honest to God. Honest to God. And so God in the Doc was the response. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:37 And then in America, the man came, what was his name? Some of you may remember who said, God is dead. This school of thought was present in America about the same time, same years, about 65 or 66. And so there was a lot of falling away of people at that time. And many of even the clergy who had admired CISO, they had. and they would be getting on the bandwagon of the new garden, you know, all these unbelievers, the new unbelievers. But one of the things that had happened was the meeting of the Vatican Council
Starting point is 00:36:23 between 1962 and 1965 in Rome. And I thought, how does this benefit the CS-Louis Estate? Well, I saw one particular benefit. John the 23rd, who opened the Council, Pope John the 23rd, had made a statement which I thought sums up exactly what Lewis himself believed. He said in that opening statement of the Council, the deposit of faith and the vulnerable truths of our tradition are one thing, what you call the revelation.
Starting point is 00:37:08 But presentation of that truth is another thing. But the presentation must always bear the same sense and meaning. So there's the everlasting gospel. There are ways of making that gospel known. But if you make them known, like Scrutake Brothers, of the Manian Chronicles, it must also bear the same. same sense and meaning. You must have the gospel. If you keep the gospel out, then, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:41 it doesn't make any difference what the presentation is. If it's no longer Christian, it's no longer Christian. And so I thought, what Lewis writes, you know, he is writing the scutate letters to enforce the truth so you can see things from a different angle. But he's not actually saying things are changed, just say, let's look at it from this angle, from then from another. In the Chronicles of Narnia, he said to a number of people who thought they were allegories, he said, no, they're not allegories. It's a suppos. He said, let us suppose that Christ, that the second person of the Trinity, not Jesus, but the Son of God in heaven, came down not to earth, but to a land of talking beast and became a lion there.
Starting point is 00:38:42 What happened? Well, that's the quanticles of Narnia. So we see Christ living out his life as a talking beast as a lion. And many people, of which I am certainly one, in one way, I cannot now separate my love of Jesus from my love of Haslam, because they have the same. Well, I mean, this gets to the other point or to another point regarding Lewis is the power of his imagination to dare to begin to think about this supposal. I don't know that there's anyone who ever lived capable of doing it. It's such a powerful work of imagination, especially for someone who values theological orthodoxy.
Starting point is 00:39:38 It's an extraordinary thing. Bonhofer said that every sermon should have a shot of heresy in it, which means that to really speak the deepest truth, we have to almost flirt with heresy. We have to be willing to go out on a limb. Some people won't be able to follow us out on that limb, but if we really know what we're about, we can get away with it. Lewis could get away with it. And there were people, and there still are people, who couldn't follow him out on these limbs.
Starting point is 00:40:10 They're mortified that he would do this. They think of it as blasphemous. But the rest of us are able to see more deeply into these truths because he's enabled us to do that. But there have been very few people in history in the world of letters who've been able to pull this kind of thing off. Well, I think one of the reasons I know that he's succeeded with children is that children still write to him. And I'm replying to those letters. I'm still letting his secretary or 50 years later.
Starting point is 00:40:43 This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Mataxis show. There is more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next. You're listening to a special Socrates in the City edition of the Eric Metaxus show from Oxford, England. Let's continue my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper. One of the reasons I know that he succeeded with children is that children still write to him, and I reply to those letters. I'm still letting his secretary, or 50 years later. And I put most of those letters going to the body in library. but one of the sweetest I think I've ever had
Starting point is 00:41:51 was from a little boy called Josh and the teacher said that she had these I think they were five or six year old boys in her class and she told them that Lewis had died but they wrote to him anyway and little Josh said in his letter Dear Mr. Lewis I'm sorry you've died I just want you to know how much I love Aslan
Starting point is 00:42:17 But I mean, his love of Aslan was much more on his mind than the death of the author. He didn't quite understand what happened to him. They're just sorry he died. Amazing. But that's in the Bodleian Library. But so one of the things, I go back to that period of the Vatican Council, one of the things that interested me very much with the decree on Acumen, when it points out in the decree on communism that there's truth in other Christian beliefs other than Catholicism.
Starting point is 00:42:58 And this made it possible for Catholic readers and admirers of Lewis to like his works because it was now possible for Catholics to realize that there was truth in other works of Christian works as well as being Catholic. And, you know, I think it's probably a good thing that Lewis was an Anglican at that time because no Catholic writer would have been encouraged to take such liberties as Lewis did. Yeah. Well, also, he didn't come across as a particularly staunch Anglican. I mean, he came up with the term mere Christianity. Yep, yes. And I, you know, if I'm pushed, I would.
Starting point is 00:43:47 describe myself as a mere Christian. You know, that's my denomination. And I think Lewis helped people, in some ways, avoid, you know, the straight jacket of a particular denomination. And just to say that I'm, I'm with Lewis, I'm with historical Christianity, I'm with traditional Christianity. I think that that's something he may have intended to some extent. Do you think that that was intentional because he is so appreciated across the spectrum?
Starting point is 00:44:22 Well, he told me one time, we were talking about near Christianity, but he said, suppose, you know, the main street is the corn market. Suppose a group of Martians suddenly appeared in the corn market street, right in the heart of Oxford. And they said to the people who, who, who, who, start out to talk to these Martians. We've only just got a minute. Can you tell us what Christianity is? We've heard about it from Mars,
Starting point is 00:44:56 but we want to know what it is. He said, I'm afraid that one would say, well, down there, they put too many candles on the altar and down here, they don't really do anything like that. And so it would be one, you know, denomination talking about how awful the others are. And he said, I fear that the Martians would have to go back without discovering what the faith is. Folks, you've been listening to a special Socrates in the city event from Oxford, England,
Starting point is 00:45:28 and it's my privilege to share these events, these conversations, with you, my radio audience. I hope you've been enjoying them. We've got more coming up in the next hour. This is a special English version of the Eric Metaxus show. Stay tuned.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.