Love, Actually: Pat Robertson vs. C.S. Lewis on Real Love

Recently Pat Robertson has hit the media with a crazy statement. Some of you may not be surprised. When he’s not calling on American military to perform an assassination or suggesting that the gay pride parade in Orlando might be the causative event that creates an earthquake or meteor, Pat Robertson is a mild-mannered Christian TV superstar. He is a remarkably quotable American fundamentalist, and his most recent comments about marriage and alzheimers has really caused a pundit firestorm.

You can view the link here, but the advice that Robertson gives to a husband whose wife is “pretty much gone already” from the mental world seems to be that he should divorce her to see other people. People are in a fury that Robertson would suggest this, and this vacuous advice confirms our suspicion that Robertson and his friends have created an American consumer religion with a “me first” mentality that masquerades as conservative historic Christianity. It is certain that Robertson gives no thoughtful consideration of the gospel or political history when he comments on American policy, and his moral tirades sound more like octogenarian indignation than intelligent biblical critique, so most see this offhanded divorce comment in the same light. What else should we expect from Pat Robertson, after all?

Of course what he said was not what people are actually presenting him as saying. He has been misquoted, misunderstood. In the letter he is responding to on air, the man with the wife disappearing to alzheimers has already begun dating someone. Robertson admits that it is a hard situation—it really is, considering the decade-long commitment that some family members show for a mentally disapparating loved one—and says that if he is seeing someone, he should divorce his wife first. He has a responsibility to take care of his wife, but he shouldn’t be dating while married.

While it looks like Robertson’s comments are the end result of an express-line religion (and I think it is), the media has really misunderstood him. No, what he actually said is far more callous and unloving than the media’s misrepresentation. What Robertson suggests is that love does not have the power to struggle through the most difficult of times. Whatever else Robertson misunderstands about the world—and there is a great deal he doesn’t get; this guy compassionately understands that a man will struggle with alzheimers in his home, but blames the Haiti earthquake on a pact with the devil—Robertson doesn’t understand love.

And what is more central to the gospel than love?

While C.S. Lewis wrote entire books that would critique Robertson’s understanding of love, I think Lewis’ daily life is the greatest testimony. When he was in his mid-fifties, he was literally surprised by Joy: he met an American woman named Joy Davidman who intrigued him, and he slowly fell in love. The context of his love, though, is what is interesting. She had divorced her abusive husband, and his Catholic friends really struggled with the romance. Tolkien, in particular, thought it was wrong, and Lewis didn’t even tell him that the wedding had happened for fear of hurting his friend “Tollers”.

More than just sacrificing Lewis’ friendships, though, Lewis knew that he was falling in love with love with a dying woman. In 1956, he wrote a letter to his friend, Mary, the American Lady:

I may soon be, in rapid succession, a bridegroom and a widower. There may, in fact, be a deathbed marriage. I can hardly describe to you the state of mind I live in at present—except that all emotion, with me, is periodically drowned in sheer tiredness, deep lakes of stupour. … I am marrying a very sick, and perhaps a dying woman. (63-64).

Lewis did marry the dying woman. An Anglican priest consecrated their union in a hospital and they prepared for a honeymoon of convalescence.

There was, however, a reprieve for Lewis and Davidman, Jack and Joy as they called each other. By some miraculous hand her cancer rapidly went into remission. Her bones slowly became stronger, while Lewis’ weakened from taking care of her. Jack Lewis, though, didn’t think his osteoporosis worsened because of lifting her. He literally thought that her healing was accompanied by the transference of some of her pain to him. Scientifically, that’s hard to demonstrate. But for Lewis, that was the essence of love: taking your Beloved’s pain upon yourself and sharing it with her. After all, that was what God did in Christ upon the cross, in Lewis’ mind, the pattern and fulfillment of all real love.

Alas, the love story did not last forever. After a couple of years of walks and talks, they finally took their honeymoon to Greece—a trip that was a dream come true for Joy. Not long after they returned from Greece, Joy’s cancer returned. She quickly deteriorated and died in 1960 after three years or marriage.

With Joy gone, Jack’s life became one of pain and misery and loss. For months, he stumbled around in a fog. He records his journey in a collection of journal entries called A Grief Observed. It is a sensitive and honest struggle with loss he felt so keenly.

While he couldn’t have predicted the pain he would experience at Joy’s loss, Lewis knew that marrying her meant facing great difficulties he had managed to avoid his entire life. But, given the chance to avoid the grief he so deeply experienced in Joy’s death, would he have? Would he have left the patient at her bedside, choosing to avoid falling in love?

That’s what Pat Robertson suggests. He suggests that the difficult way forward is not worth love’s risk. Or worse, Robertson believes that there is no love that can be completed and fulfilled at the bedside of a dying woman.

Here is where I think the very substance of our religions to be different, and where C.S. Lewis’ faith is more true to the centre of the gospel. For Robertson, it is more loving to scream at homosexuals or prevent immigrants from finding a home than it is for a husband to fulfill the vows he made to his wife. For Robertson, the legal rules about marriage are more important than the love therein. But Lewis lived an entirely different reality. He lived love, embracing the pain, sacrificing his life for his beloved.

What is love, actually? I’ll take awkward gait and struggling faith of C.S. Lewis over Pat Robertson’s shiny religion any day.

About Brenton Dickieson

“A Pilgrim in Narnia” is a blog project in reading and talking about the work of C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, the Inklings, L.M. Montgomery, and the worlds they created. As a "Faith, Fantasy, and Fiction" blog, we cover topics like children’s literature, myths and mythology, fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction, poetry, theology, cultural criticism, art and writing. This blog includes my thoughts as I read through my favourite writings and reflect on my own life and culture. In this sense, I am a Pilgrim in Narnia--or Middle Earth, or Fairyland, or Avonlea. I am often peeking inside of wardrobes, looking for magic bricks in urban alleys, or rooting through yard sale boxes for old rings. If something here captures your imagination, leave a comment, “like” a post, share with your friends, or sign up to receive Narnian Pilgrim posts in your email box. Brenton Dickieson (PhD, Chester) is a father, husband, friend, university lecturer, and freelance writer from Prince Edward Island, Canada. You can follow him: www.aPilgrimInNarnia.com Twitter (X) @BrentonDana Instagram @bdickieson Facebook @aPilgrimInNarnia
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9 Responses to Love, Actually: Pat Robertson vs. C.S. Lewis on Real Love

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  2. Duffy says:

    I was reading a book last night and the dude said “having a successful marriage did not depend on finding the right person. Having a successful marriage depended on being the right person.” I thought it quite true, and realized what impure motives I had for wanting a spouse in the first place. Good thing God is always perfecting the good work He started in us.

    • Sarah Williams, a historian at Regent College, said, “We always marry the wrong person.” It’s true, I think. And I feel back for the guy that has a wife disappearing before she dies. But part of our formation as people is becoming partnered with our partners.

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  7. Elizabeth Bordeaux says:

    I seriously doubt Pat screams at anyone. What I have observed if everyone doesn’t totally embrace the “gay” life style they are immediately considered an enemy to be attacked and discredited. Maybe Pat’s objections stem from taxpayer financed illegals. If you want to support them go right ahead but along with being gay stop trying to cram it down everyone else throat.

    • Well, I presume you are simply bombing comments on a 12-year-old post. My only television viewing of Robertson was him yelling at the screen, so you may be right that his demeanour is more typically calm. It is really a theological principle I am tackling here: Pat Robertson’s beliefs do not show Christ-like love, which is transformative, powerful, hard as nails and hot like fire, prophetic, dangerous, and is always–without exception–pictured in Christ dying for the sake of the world on the cross. Pat Robertson’s advice and condemnation and leadership looks more like the Romans putting Christ on the cross–people exerting power and control and more interested in violence than compassion or reason–than Christ drawing the violence of the world into his body and dying for our forgiveness of sins and the redemption of the universe.
      I am not gay, nor cramming down anyone’s throats gayness or my biblical Christian faith or my belief that leaders like Robertson should conform to Christ-like moral leadership or C.S. Lewis’ prophetic and relevant teaching about love. I’m simply writing. I have the capacity to throat-cram, but I choose not to.
      I do support, for the most part and with great exception, many claims to status and work and life for non-citizens of various kinds. However, I am more of a conservative, economically speaking. Beyond refugees, which is a moral and community responsibility, I support Canada’s approach to immigration, which is broadly economic and targeted to community and economic need. It is a robust, effective program, giving access to millions of potential citizens and providing workers in jobs that are hard to fill (construction, food processing, medical specialties, etc.), keeping jobs in the country that might migrate elsewhere (especially tech and business), and providing investment for new business ventures. I worked on that policy in my province and helped to see it continue effectively (though I was of no real importance). And, of course, these people are taxpayers–rather than a system that allows for so many people to slip through.
      So while I support refugees and many claims of displaced persons on a moral level and out of Christian compassion and the biblical constant remind to “remember the foreigner, for you were once slaves and sojourners,” a much greater case for stronger immigration access and control is truly one of economic strength.

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