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Do Animals Go to Heaven? C.S.

Lewis on Animal Immortality


When a beloved pet dies people can feel desperate to know if animals, at least some animals, have
an eternal destiny. The Bible does not say one way or the other, but C.S. Lewis gives animal lovers
reason to hope. Although he acknowledges that his ideas are only guesses, what compelling guesses
they are, and how comforting to those of us who have loved an animal. Lewis discusses animal
immortality in Chapter 9 of his book The Problem of Pain, in which he discusses the theological
issues involved in animal suffering. Lewis asks the question of how we can reconcile God's justice
with the pain of innocent creatures who can neither benefit from nor understand their suffering, and
finds no answer in this world. Therefore, he ventures forth to consider the mystery of animal
immortality and how it might work.
Lewis jokes that he has been warned, presumably by his colleagues in academia, that expressing
theories about animal immortality will put him in "the company of old maids" - in other words, saddle
him with the stigma of sentimentality. Lewis defends the value and intelligence of old maids, states
that he has no objection to their company, and then proceeds to present his ideas on the topic: "The
complete silence of Scripture and Christian tradition on animal immortality is a more serious
objection," he says. However, this silence does not mean it is not true. God simply does not reveal
any information to us about the purpose or destiny of the animals: "...the curtain has been rent at
one point, and one point only, to reveal our immediate practical necessities and not to satisfy our
intellectual curiosity."
Animal immortality connected with a sense of self
Lewis explains that immortality would have no meaning to a newt if the newt had no sense of self.
However, a higher animal with some awareness of self might benefit from continued existence after
death. There has to be something of an individual entity there in order to have something to
continue. Lewis conjectures that as Man is understood by his relation to God, perhaps beasts can be
understood by their relation to Man, and through Man, to God. In opposition to the naturalist view
that the taming of animals is interfering with their rightful natural state, Lewis presents an
alternative view of the relationship between human and beast:
"Man was appointed by God to have dominion over the beast, and everything a man does to an
animal is either a lawful exercise, or a sacrilegious abuse, of an authority by Divine right. The tame
animal is therefore, in the deepest sense, the only 'natural' animal--the only one we see occupying
the place it was made to occupy..."
Animals receive sense of self through contact with humans
Lewis believes that animals receive a sense of self or personality from association with their human
masters. We give our pets names and they answer to those names (hopefully), and perhaps
recognize themselves by them. "If a good sheepdog seems 'almost human' that is because a good
shepherd has made it so," says Lewis. Lewis suggests, acknowledging that he is going out on a
theological limb, that animals "attain a real self in their masters in a sense similar to the way human
attain real life in Christ." "And in this sense," suggests Lewis, "it seems to me that certain animals
may have an immortality, not in themselves, but in the immortality of their masters."
The picture of the good man/dog relationship, admits Lewis, is an ideal one. It does not explain the
destinies of wild animals or of badly treated domestic animals. But in his view, this is the natural
relationship between man and beast, the relationship that would be normal in an uncorrupted world.
Immortality for wild beasts?
Lewis admits that immortality may seem like a rather clumsy solution to the problem of animal
suffering. Even if animals that suffer pain in the wild or ill treatment by humans are granted happy
pastures in an afterlife, this sort of compensation does not seem quite worthy of a just God who
might have prevented the suffering to begin with. But if, he suggests, animals naturally receive
immortality through a relationship with man, it is not necessarily an injury/compensation system at
all, but rather, the natural way the system is designed to work: "...part and parcel of the new heaven
and new earth, organically related to the whole suffering process of the world's fall and
redemption."
Lewis says however, that his theory does not allow him to believe that many animals in the wild state
attain a self that is sufficient to achieve immortality. However, it may be God's pleasure to endow
beasts with qualities such as courage or humility that can survive into eternity. Even if such is the
case, Lewis believes that the animals' immortality would somehow relate to the value humans place
on it for certain perceived spiritual values that it embodies.
Hope for animal immortality
Lewis readily admits that all of this is guesswork: "When we are speaking of creatures so remote
from us as wild beasts, and prehistoric beasts, we hardly know what we are talking about." For all
we know, these beasts have a corporate self: it will not be the individual lion that survives, but some
sort of "Lionhood" that will enter into eternal life. This surviving entity may be something that is
simply beyond the scope of our corporal understanding. Animals that have enjoyed a positive
personal relationship with a human, Lewis believes, have a better theological chance at immortality.
So we just don't know for sure whether our dog went to heaven, but scripture does not deny the
possibility, and C.S. Lewis gives us some imaginative ideas to give us hope that we may see Bruno
again, running toward us across a green field in Paradise, tail wagging.
Source:
Lewis, C.S. The Problem of Pain. Kindle edition. HarperCollins e-books, 2009.

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