Folks, you really can't make this stuff up.


Right, totally extreme. I get it. I mean, who is this much of a fan boy for anything? Not even Will has saved his pennies for a trip to Red Square. But imagine how dangerous it would have been to have been standing in the isle of that church when somebody calls from an open door at the back, "we're going for ice cream, better hurry! The clotted cream and blackcurrant goes fast!"Doctor Scratch wrote:going to go to the same church (from an "apostate" sect, I might add) that Lewis used to attend, and he's going to sit in the exact same pew that Lewis used to occupy--right near the so-called "Narnia window."
Not exactly a glowing endorsement of organised religion. Does Peterson see himself as having a sort of spiritual gaucherie perhaps? Hence why a senior mission is still absent from his resume…Lewis wrote in Surprised by Joy:
“As soon as I became a Theist I started attending my parish church on Sundays and my college chapel on weekdays; not because I believed in Christianity, nor because I thought the difference between it and simple Theism a small one, but because I thought one ought to “fly one’s flag” by some unmistakable overt sign. I was acting in obedience to a (perhaps mistaken) sense of honour. The idea of churchmanship was to me wholly unattractive… though I liked clergymen as I liked bears, I had as little wish to be in the Church as in the zoo. It was, to begin with, a kind of collective; a wearisome “get-together” affair. I couldn’t yet see how a concern of that sort should have anything to do with one’s spiritual life. To me, religion ought to have been a matter of good men praying alone and meeting by twos and threes to talk of spiritual matters. And then the fussy, time-wasting botheration of it all! The bells, the crowds, the umbrellas, the notices, the bustle, the perpetual arranging and organizing. Hymns were (and are) extremely disagreeable to me. Of all musical instruments I liked (and like) the organ least. I have, too, a sort of spiritual gaucherie which makes me unapt to participate in any rite”
It's blown off lately as baiting the crazies on a message board elsewhere, but let's not forget the commentary didn't arise out of a vacuum. It had been noticed by many that an individual who claims that materialism trivially amounts to nihilism is himself living for nothing beyond materialistic goals. Materialism was preached to Gemli regularly. Gemli was to know that the afterlife will be filled with the material pleasures of this life and this is so important that an immortality with unbounded consumption is necessary to even make this life meaningful at all. In other words, the entire time, he was more of a materialist than Gemli ever was. Gemli claimed that one day our consciousness could be uploaded to a MacBook so he technically wasn't a materialist.Doctor Scratch wrote: ↑Fri May 22, 2026 3:06 amDoes the Afore deserve credit for exercising restraint? I.e., by *not* announcing that he ate? Well, there is a difference between telling the whole wide world *that* you ate, versus admitting to *what* you actually ate. And omitting both? That is another, very telling admission.
We win again, in other words.
I am assuming that *part* of this is true. I think that he very likely *was* given food by others. Did it feed his “addiction,” though? I’m inclined to doubt it. Was he fed deep-fried, high-sugar foods? If not, then “No”—his “addiction” was not being propped up by these other Latter-day Saints.(My addiction to eating every single day has reduced me now to shamelessly accepting donations of food from others, invading their homes to get my daily fix.)
I am reminded of lines that Lewis wrote in 1955 letters:I Have Questions wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2026 8:54 amI doubt CS Lewis would have found Mormonism an attractive proposition, given the sentiments he expresses and which are quoted hereNot exactly a glowing endorsement of organised religion. Does Peterson see himself as having a sort of spiritual gaucherie perhaps? Hence why a senior mission is still absent from his resume…Lewis wrote in Surprised by Joy:
“As soon as I became a Theist I started attending my parish church on Sundays and my college chapel on weekdays; not because I believed in Christianity, nor because I thought the difference between it and simple Theism a small one, but because I thought one ought to “fly one’s flag” by some unmistakable overt sign. I was acting in obedience to a (perhaps mistaken) sense of honour. The idea of churchmanship was to me wholly unattractive… though I liked clergymen as I liked bears, I had as little wish to be in the Church as in the zoo. It was, to begin with, a kind of collective; a wearisome “get-together” affair. I couldn’t yet see how a concern of that sort should have anything to do with one’s spiritual life. To me, religion ought to have been a matter of good men praying alone and meeting by twos and threes to talk of spiritual matters. And then the fussy, time-wasting botheration of it all! The bells, the crowds, the umbrellas, the notices, the bustle, the perpetual arranging and organizing. Hymns were (and are) extremely disagreeable to me. Of all musical instruments I liked (and like) the organ least. I have, too, a sort of spiritual gaucherie which makes me unapt to participate in any rite”
Posted from Crumbl Cookie Creek, UtahIt is right and inevitable that we shd. [should] be much concerned about the salvation of those we love. But we should be careful not to expect or demand that their salvation shd. conform to some ready-made pattern of our own. Some Protestant sects have gone very wrong about this. They have a whole programme of conversion etc. marked out, the same for everyone, and will not believe that anyone can be saved who doesn’t go through it ‘just so’. But … God has His own way with each soul. There is no evidence that St. John had the same kind of ‘conversion’ as St. Paul…. I’m afraid I am not going to be much help about all the religious bodies mentioned in your letter of March 2nd. I have always in my books been concerned simply to put forward ‘mere’ Christianity, and am no guide on these (most regrettable) ‘inter-denominational’ questions. I do however strongly object to the tyrannic and unscriptural insolence of anything that calls itself a Church and makes teetotalism a condition of membership. Apart from the more serious objection that Our Lord Himself turned water into wine and made wine the medium of the only rite He imposed on all His followers), it is so provincial (what I believe you people call 'small town'). Don't they realize that Christianity arose in the Mediterranean world where, then as now, wine was as much part of the normal diet as bread? It was the 17th Century Puritans who first made the universal into a rich man's luxury.