C.S. Lewis’s work was hampered by this 30+ year thorn in his side

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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    Series: How God's Word Shaped C.S. Lewis's Work
    Devotional: 2 of 4
    Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God-this is your true and proper worship. (Romans 12:1)
    Before heading off to WWI, C.S. Lewis made a pact with his friend, Paddy Moore: If either were to die on their respective battlefields, the survivor would look after the deceased’s families.
    Shortly thereafter, Paddy died; and after being discharged on account of a war injury of his own, Lewis made good on his promise and moved in with Paddy’s sister and mother.
    At first, the Lewis/Moore household was a happy one. But over time, Mrs. Moore became a thorn in Lewis’s side. According to one Lewis biographer, “He would be writing or studying in his room when he would suddenly hear a terrible crash from somewhere downstairs and a plaintive cry from Mrs. Moore. In great anxiety, he would run down to find that she had tripped over something and was not in the least hurt but very ‘shaken.’ [Lewis] would bustle about setting all to rights again and then return to his work, only to be summoned again ten minutes later to go out and buy something or to perform some other minor and largely unnecessary task.”
    Life went on like this for more than thirty years, and yet, according to multiple Lewis biographers, "no breath of complaint" was ever uttered by Lewis against Mrs. Moore.
    Why? Because according to Lewis, true "happiness…lies in the path of duty” to God. And what is that duty? Paul answers that question in today’s passage: “in view of God’s mercy…offer your bodies as a living sacrifice.”
    C.S. Lewis modeled this command exceptionally well in two ways. The first we’ve already seen. While Lewis was intensely serious about his work, he recognized that people are just as much “the work” we’re called to as are the tasks on our to-do lists. And so he sacrificed his productivity without complaint.
    Second, Lewis was sacrificial with his money. According to one Lewis biographer, “he would gladly give to anyone who asked,” which is all the more extraordinary considering that Lewis remained “convinced of his own poverty” until the day he died.
    C.S. Lewis understood that because Jesus was a dying sacrifice, you and I are free to be a living one. Go sacrifice greatly for the glory of God and the good of those you work with today!

Комментарии • 7

  • @barberton3695
    @barberton3695 Год назад +5

    Wow what an example

  • @danieldaniel7724
    @danieldaniel7724 15 дней назад

    Well Our Lord Christ Jesus is still THE WAY. Men still try to put each other ahead of Our Christ… and profit off it..

  • @anal.mendoza
    @anal.mendoza Год назад

    Blessings and greetings from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. I really loved this video!

  • @DanielERodriguezMusic
    @DanielERodriguezMusic Год назад +2

    Douglas Gresham his stepson, wrote a good biography on Lewis and included a very detailed account about Lewis’s domestic situation especially about his “mother.”
    Tolkien wrote somewhat on the same topic in his short story:
    Leaf by Niggle.

    • @JordanRaynor
      @JordanRaynor  Год назад +1

      Love Doug Gresham's biography! That's where a lot of my source material comes from.

  • @terri2494
    @terri2494 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this. It seems to me that I may have heard about him looking after his friend’s mom but I don’t remember him living with her for thirty years - and without complaint, no less. I wonder if losing his own mother as a child made him more patient and appreciative of the situation. That and the horrors and uncertainty of The Great War.

  • @erikgriffith8857
    @erikgriffith8857 Год назад +5

    For a good portion of that time, Lewis had yet to convert to Christianity.