Selected Product: | The Problem of Pain Paperback Author: C. S. Lewis Publisher: HarperOne Release Date: 2001-02 ISBN-10: 0060652969 ISBN-13: 9780060652968 List Price: $12.95 Average Customer Rating: | | A Grief Observed ISBN-10: 0060652381 ISBN-13: 9780060652388 List Price:$11.95 Mere Christianity ISBN-10: 0060652926 ISBN-13: 9780060652920 List Price:$12.95 The Great Divorce ISBN-10: 0060652950 ISBN-13: 9780060652951 List Price:$12.95 The Screwtape Letters ISBN-10: 0060652934 ISBN-13: 9780060652937 List Price:$12.95 The Four Loves ISBN-10: 0156329301 ISBN-13: 9780156329309 List Price:$13.00 |
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Why must humanity suffer? In this elegant and thoughtful work, C. S. Lewis questions the pain and suffering that occur everyday and how this contrasts with the notion of a God that is both omnipotent and good. An answer to this critical theological problem is found within these pages. c.s. lewis is a classic | Customer Rating: | | This book is amazing and it's very insightful. C.S. Lewis is very honest in this book and states clearly his view on pain. I truly enjoyed this book and recommend anything written by him. | The Probelm of Pain | Customer Rating: | | This is an awesome book. I cant say anymore about it or I would take away from it. If you are struggling to understand why a loving God would allow pain and suffering, then you need to read this book. | Problem Addressed Amiably - But Solved? | Customer Rating: | On a recent trip from Europe to Australia, I re-read "The Problem of Pain" and was - as several years before - once again pulled in by Lewis' exquisite prose.
He starts off with a bang by describing how he used to see the world when he was an atheist, painting a bleak picture of the kind of universe we live in.
Most of it is empty space, he says, dark and cold. The heavenly bodies are really no more than a little dust in this great emptiness. Even if every speck of this dust were inhabited with happy creatures, "it would still be difficult to believe that life and happiness were more than a by-product to the power that made the universe."
As it is, however, so far Earth is the only speck we know of that is inhabited at all, and it is far from being a happy place. It is arranged in such a manner that every creature can only survive by annihilating other creatures. Lower forms of life are caught in this vicious cycle as much as higher forms, except that higher forms are so unfortunate as to experience years of pain before annihilation.
The most complex creatures of all - human beings - are beset with yet another curse, namely the ability to foresee their own suffering and death, which extends their physical pain into the mental arena. It also enables them in this vicious battle of mutual annihilation to come up with many cruel devices to inflict even more pain, both on one another and on less complex forms of life.
The conclusion of the old, atheist Lewis: "If you ask me to believe that this is the work of a benevolent and omnipotent spirit, I reply that all the evidence points in the opposite direction. Either there is no spirit behind the universe, or else a spirit indifferent to good and evil, or else an evil spirit."
Today's atheists such as Christopher Hitchens still make this same point, so "The Problem of Pain" has not lost its applicability in our times. It addresses a timeless theme.
But does Lewis succeed in providing an answer? That, I am not entirely sure of. Yes, I did feel myself being convinced by Lewis' force of writing, but I also couldn't help wondering whether that was due to his ability as an author or due to the actual points he was making. If you put down Lewis' main arguments in an unadorned list, would they still be convincing? Some, probably, but I fear not all.
Lewis himself said in a letter years after publishing "The Problem of Pain" that he wished he had known more when he wrote the book. It is, therefore, by Lewis' own admission, far from being a perfect work. For me, even after reading the book more than once, there still is a problem of pain.
But the book should be applauded all the same for its attempt to address the problem of pain and evil honestly, and it is definitely worth reading and re-reading.
- Jacob Schriftman, Author of The C. S. Lewis Book on the Bible: What the Greatest Christian Writer Thought About the Greatest Book | Of Human Suffering | Customer Rating: | The question or 'problem' that C.S. Lewis sets out to answer in "The Problem of Pain" is one that has confounded believers and non-believers alike: if God is good and loves his creation, why does he allow such pain and suffering to exist? How can that be good and exist within his creation? While Lewis' ponderings may not seem like straightforward answers to those questions, he paints a picture of a God revealed through his creation where even pain and evil can exist.
C.S. Lewis is perhaps the best person to examine this topic: a former atheist, he commences the book by speaking of what his former answer to that question would've been. It is only through his eventual conversion to a belief in Christ that he is able to see the order behind the seeming chaos. Lewis examines an array of issues, covering commonalities between religions but what sets Christianity apart, the Fall of Man, and why Heaven and Hell must exist. Moreover, he examines the distinct individuality that plays a role in our relation to our Creator.
Lewis' prose has the contradiction of being both dense and enlightening. His examinations are not necessarily for the ordinary reader, nor are they too lofty either, but they require a great deal of thoght and reflection. Therefore, "The Problem of Pain" is best read perhaps a chapter at a time, allowing the reader to meditate on what has been presented. The ultimate irony of human suffering might be that as believers, we have had every opportunity to not experience suffering, since Christ has already suffered supreme - but because of how God created us, we have the will to choose, no matter what that choice might be. | Pain: A Spiritual Journey | Customer Rating: | Punctuated with a thin veil of lyricism and argued from a Christian perspective, C. S. Lewis does not only explore the psychological ramifications of experiencing pain (suffering) but also provides an intellectual discussion geared at reconciling theological tenets about the relationship between God as the essence of love and individuals stricken by sorrow. His views are very theoretical since the book was written many years before his beloved wife died. However, the book raises interesting questions relevant to the role of pain in our lives and misconceptions of what happiness and love are. During his compelling analysis of the Christian dilemma, Lewis journeys from atheism to Christianity with masterful clarity and empathizing inquiry into the Christian doctrine of a loving God in a world plagued by suffering. |
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