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A collection of letters from Screwtape, a demon, to his nephew Wormwood, detailing strategies to corrupt a young man's faith. The letters provide insights into the demonic perspective on human spirituality and the tactics used to lead individuals away from God.
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Book Summary
Screwtape Letters – Week 1
Letter 1 – Reason and Reality
In this letter, we learn that Wormwood has been making sure that his patient spends plenty of time with his materialistic friends. Wormwood believes that by using reason and argument he can keep the man from belief in God. Screwtape does not disagree that it is good to influence the man’s thoughts, by he reminds Wormwood that his main job is to keep the patient from thinking too deeply about any spiritual matter. Instead he should use ordinary everyday distraction to mislead the man.
Letter 2 – Distracting the Christian Mind
Screwtape beings this letter by rebuking Wormwood for letting his patient escape him and become a Christian. However, not all is lost. If he can cause the man to be disillusioned with the church by highlighting the strange habits and hypocrisies of it members
Wormwood still might succeed. Screwtape tells Wormwood to attack the man’s spiritual immaturity in an effort to win him back.
Letter 3 – Relationships In this third letter, Screwtape suggest that Wormwood focus on the patient’s relationship with his mother. By cooperating with Glubose, the demon with is working o the mother, Screwtape imparts secrets on how to slowly deteriorate the relationship.
Screwtape Letters – Week 2
Letter 7 – Extremism
When asked about revealing himself to his patient, Screwtape reminds Wormwood of the policy to keep humans ignorant of their existence. Also it matters not if the patient is pushed to pacifism or patriotism only so long as he doesn’t think about God or others.
What is the “cruel dilemma” for Screwtape?
What is the suggestion to squash suspicion of demon existence?
What has the church had to watch out for since the days of Paul and Apollos?
What matters most in pursuing a “worldly end”?
Letter 8 – The Rule of Undulation Screwtape explains the law of Undulation, The Enemies master plan for humans, contrast them the plan of Our Father Below
What is the law of Undulation?
What does the Enemy use more, troughs or peaks?
Why does the enemy withdraw His hand?
Letter 9 – Pleasures Screwtape explains how to exploit the spiritually dry period with sensual pleasures and then attack the faith.
What is the basic principle of exploiting the dry period?
What is the source of pleasures?
What are two other possible uses of the dry period?
Letter 10 – Bad Friends Screwtape approves the efforts to encourage a spiritually harmful relationship, and advises Wormwood to use it to his advantage by encouraging a double life
What do we mean by “the world” when we talk about it as a source of temptation? “The Devil, the world and our own sinful nature?”
How can the patient’s vanity be exploited?
What is the best if he spends more time with the new couple?
Letter 11 – Laughter
Screwtape loves the new sophisticated friends because they are consistent scoffers and worldings, but also warns Wormwood about laughter.
What are the four categories that Screwtape divides human laughter into?
What doesn’t he like about the laughter of Joy?
Why is flippancy the best?
Letter – Nothing Screwtape expresses concern about the pace of the patients drifting away. The safest path to Hell is the gentle slope without milestones or signposts.
What is the danger if the patient becomes too aware of the drift away from the sun?
What effect does a dim uneasiness have?
How does Jesus warning to the church in Laodicea play into this letter? “I know your works: you are neither cold nor hot. Would that you were either cold or hot!” Rev. 2:
Letter 16 – Churches Church hopping should be encouraged, so make sure the patient becomes critical and dissatisfied with his present church.
What are two reasons to encourage church shopping?
What are the “strengths” of two other possible churches for the patient to attend?
What does Paul teach about food and other unessentials?
Letter 17 – Gluttony
Gluttony isn’t only about the quantity of food, but also by being controlled by what one eats and inconvenient demands on others.
What reverse gluttony practice has taken hold?
If quantities don’t matter, then what does?
It wasn’t that in the past the servants got it right, but rather that in the past....
Letter 18 – Love and Marriage Screwtape waxes elegant on the different perspectives of God and Satan on the designs for sexual unions.
What have the poets encouraged to help with unchastity?
What is an image of the triunity of God?
What does the Enemy endue mere copulation with?
What are two advantages to “being in love” as the highest reason for marriage?
Screwtape Letters – Week 4
Letter 19 – Using Love
Screwtape has spoken heresy by referencing the love of God for his creatures. He also admits that marriage can be useful even though it is the Enemy’s invention.
What does Screwtape say the real issue between “Our Father’s” quarrel with the “Enemy”?
What is the only thing that matters to Screwtape regarding love, patriotism, et al.?
What are two different uses for love?
Letter 20 – Sexual Taste
Wormwood should attack chastity and capitalized on the work of the lower demons who manipulate the ideal woman through the media. Failing all direct the patient to look for the wrong woman to marry
What is the point of the “lowerachy” manipulating the image of the ideal woman?
What is the ultimate goal of the “boyish” trend?
What is the difference between the terrestrial and infernal Venus?
Letter 21 – Entitlement Make the patient believe that his time is his own, ad when unexpected demands encroach on his time, he has the right to become angry, exasperated, and impatient.
What should Wormwood “zealously guard” in his patient’s mind?
What is the truth of the matter concerning time?
What sounds equally funny Heaven and Hell? In what word does the joke lie?
How would the Enemy have us use word “mine”?
Screwtape Letters – Week 5
Letter 25 – The Same Old Thing
Wormwood should increase the patient’s natural desire for change to make him restless always searching for something new and exciting.
What does Screwtape say the Enemy has balanced a love of change with? Example?
How can this love of change be corrupted?
What are some ways this demand is valuable?
Letter 26 – Unselfishness
Wormwood should use the enchanting early days to sow seeds of unselfishness that can hopefully cause marital discord later on.
What is the difference between “Charity” and “Unselfishness”?
What is the difference between the sexes concerning unselfishness?
How can “unselfishness” wreak havoc and create strife?
Letter 27 – Answers Wormwood is to corrupt the prayer life of the patient by making him question how the Enemy could incorporate everyone’s prayers into the running of creation.
What is the demonstration that Wormwood has failed?
What is the “heads I win - tails you lose” argument?
What is the real problem of petitionary prayers?
What is the historical point of view?
Letter 28 – Perseverance Failures have been mounting and now Screwtape has to remind Wormwood that he should endeavor to keep his patient alive to corrupt him later in life.
What should Wormwood’s chief aim be the same as the patient’s lover and mother? Why?
What is the temptation of middle age?
What is the temptation of propserity?
Letter 29 – Cowardice
Here we revisit fear and how to bring about shame through cowardice.
What is one vice that is still a vice?
What is the dilemma created by this vice?
What is the great triumph of cowardice?
In the explanation to the Sixth Petition, “lead us not into temptation” what do we want God to guard and protect us from?
Letter 30 – Fatigue
Wormwood is to work the fatigue of war to his favor and play with reality.
What does Screwtape say is the best way to use fatigue?
Failing an intellectual attack on the patient’s faith, what is another route of attack?
What are two way “real” can be used?
What are some of the examples of using “real” for destructive purposes?
What should Wormwood encourage in the patient?
Letter 31 – The Other Side The view of death and life from Screwtape and Wormwood’s perspective.