Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The weight of sin: C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce has been adapted for the stage
The weight of sin: C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce has been adapted for the stage
Jun 16, 2026 10:53 PM

If you thought good and evil were superstitious binaries that will one day be married, a new theatrical adaptation of Lewis’ parable will have you pining for a divorce.

Read More…

Humans are incredibly skilled at rationalizing sin. We prefer to gloss over sin rather than face it. And for good reason! To grapple with the true weight of our sin is a heavy burden indeed. And even when we do recognize sin, we are more likely to note the sin of others and explain our own away. In the classic fable The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis deftly pulls back the curtain to reveal the workings of sin behind what might first be seen as excusable behavior. He is especially skilled at showing our rationalizations and the true darkness that inspires them. We might think we understand the doctrine of sin, but seeing it unfold through a story can help us grasp it at a deeper level. An adaptation of the story from Max McLean and the Fellowship for Performing Arts masterfully draws out Lewis’ themes and brings them afresh to a new audience.

McLean’s version maintains the magic of Lewis’ masterpiece and even adds new vitality and immediacy. The story follows a group of passengers who travel on a bus from Hell to Heaven. Once they arrive, they can choose whether to go or stay. But if they stay, they must accept the love offered to them and relinquish the fears and desires that ruled them on Earth and that continue to rule them in Hell. The conversations between the passengers from Hell (ghosts) and the heavenly beings (spirits) are really the core of the original book and the vehicle through which Lewis develops his ideas. The conceit of this particular adaptation is that the more than 20 characters are played by just four actors, which works surprisingly well. The medium lends itself to the message of the story. Seeing the characters on stage heightens the stakes because it helps the audience picture them as actual people and not just characters. It also brings an immediacy to their decisions that helps the audience grasp their import at a deeper level.

The true heart of the production is a pair of conversations, each with a ghost, both played by Carol Halstead. In one of these scenes, a mother who lost her son pleads to be brought to see him. When we first meet her, we might relate with her side. This surely is a cruel providence that keeps her apart from her son. Why can’t she see him? The spirit tells her that first she must love something else besides her son: She must “love God for his own sake … You cannot love a fellow-creature fully till you love God.” (I’ll be quoting from the book, as does much of the material in the play.) We may think that the spirit is torturing her, not allowing her to see her son. But the spirit is trying to get her to see the true nature of her desire. Her inmost thoughts are later revealed as she demands to have him:

Give me my boy. Do you hear? I don’t care about your rules and regulations. I don’t believe in a God who keeps mother and son apart. I believe in a God of love. No one had a right e between me and my son. Not even God. Tell Him that to His face. I want my boy, and I mean to have him. He is mine, do you understand? Mine, mine, mine, for ever and ever.

Here, the true weight of sin is felt through her demand. What at first could be dismissed as a simple innocent longing es something much darker. She would rather take her son back with her to Hell than be separated from him in Heaven. Her love has e rotten to the core. To even call it love is no longer accurate. She does not truly care for her son; instead she wants ownership over him. To desire control over someone is not loving the other; it is self-love attempting to override the will of another with one’s own will.

Any love can e destructive when pushed outside its natural boundaries: Each conversation is in some way a development of that theme. The idea of ownership is repeated from another monologue, also by Halstead. A wife pleads with an unseen spirit, staged intriguingly so she seems to be begging directly to the audience. She begs for her husband to be returned to her. But, like the mother, what she really wants plete control over him, effectively to torment him forever. “There’s lots, lots, lots of things I still want to do with him.” In a conversation with an artist, we learn how love of beauty in the natural world expressed through art is a good thing. But it can e perverted into a love of art for its own sake and a grasping desire for fame. Then we meet a Bishop, who loves talking about theory so much that he misses the object of that theory.

Each character, in his or her own way, affirms Milton’s phrase “Better to reign in Hell than to serve in Heaven.” It’s a revelation to hear the line read aloud: In the voice of George MacDonald, played by Jonathan Hadley, the line es a booming rollicking pronouncement. (Try saying it aloud in MacDonald’s Scottish accent.) Each of us must choose whether we will serve or be served, with eternal consequences.

The Reformed theologian John Calvin emphasized how sin pervades every part of our being; our thoughts, desires, and will are all corrupted by sin:

For man has not only been ensnared by the inferior appetites, but abominable impiety has seized the very citadel of his mind, and pride has penetrated into the inmost recesses of his heart; so that it is weak and foolish to restrict the corruption which has proceeded thence, to what are called the sensual affections, or to call it an incentive which allures, excites, and attracts to sin, only what they style the sensual part.

Although Lewis was no Calvinist, The Great Divorce is at least that e to life. We see the choices each individual makes to embrace evil or yield to the good. Through these vignettes we understand sin, and God’s response to it, in a new way. A good God must not allow such perverted love to continue. He must effect a final separation between good and evil. In fact, Lewis wrote The Great Divorce in response to William Blake’s argument that there will be a final reconciliation between good and evil. municating the true nature of sin, Lewis shows how good and evil can never be reconciled. Once we understand the true nature of the mother’s “love,” we no longer want her to be reconciled with her son. A final separation is necessary.

Of course, Lewis doesn’t leave us only with the story of sin, and I would be remiss to do so. Once we realize our sin, as Calvin explains, “we are inflamed with fresh ardour to seek after God, to recover in him those excellences of which we find ourselves utterly destitute.” Only in knowledge of our sin can we then turn to God. One self-righteous character in the play sneers “I’m not asking for anybody’s bleeding charity.” But the spirit responds, “Then do. At once. Ask for the Bleeding Charity. Everything is here for asking and nothing can be bought.” A great line in itself, but in front of a live audience you get the whole irony and humor of it. Lewis’ words in the mouth of living, breathing humans e even more deadly. We can be face to face with the truth and still fail to grasp it. If you can see the play in person, do so. It won’t disappoint. If not, Lewis’ original still packs a punch.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Turning points in Catholic social teaching
In a recent Acton Line podcast I began by asking Father Robert Sirico the very large question, what is Catholic social teaching and why is it important today? He answered that the Church has always had a social teaching but that when we usually discuss Catholic social teaching today we begin with Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum Novarum. George Weigel’s latest book, The Irony of Modern Catholic Historysheds much historical and theological light on just why that is. Francesca Murphy,...
A new collection of essays on Catholic Social Teaching
The inauguration of modern Catholic social teaching that occurred when Pope Leo XIII published the first modern social encyclical Rerum Novarum in 1891 marked a new stage in the Catholic Church’s engagement with the modern world. It also breathed life into mentary on numerous political, social and economic questions. Exploring, analyzing and critiquing that tradition is the focus of a new collection of essays on Catholic social teaching, entitled Catholic Social Teaching: A Volume of Scholarly Essays (Cambridge University Press,...
The cautionary tale of ‘government cheese’
When President Jimmy Carter first took office in 1977, America’s dairy farmers were struggling. Throughout the economic disruptions of the 1970s, the country had seen a shortage of dairy products, followed by a 30% spike in prices (due to government-inspired inflation), followed by a drastic decline in prices (due to government-inspired intervention). To solve the problem, President Carter and Congress took to a predictable solution: yet more government intervention. As part of the Food and Agriculture Act of 1977, the...
Think like Lenin
Gary Saul Morson has excellent and enlightening piece at the New Criterion on Vladimir Lenin and what he calls Leninthink. “Lenin did more than anyone else to shape the last hundred years. He invented a form of government we e to call totalitarian, which rejected in principle the idea of any private sphere outside of state control.” As we approach the 150th anniversary of Lenin’s birth, understanding him grows ever more important. Despite the fall of the Soviet Union, Leninist...
Acton Line podcast: Breaking down Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society with Amity Shlaes
On May 22nd, 1964, Lyndon B. Johnson launched his program for a “Great Society” in a speech at the University of Michigan. “The Great Society rests on abundance and liberty for all,” Johnson began. “It demands an end to poverty and racial injustice, to which we are mitted in our time. But that is just the beginning.” 84 bills later, Johnson’s war on poverty was in full effect, expanding to sectors in education, medicine, housing, and many more. Did the...
What Churchill knew about tariffs could fill a bucket
Winston Churchill, like Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain, has been the putative source of many a pseudonymous or misattributed quotation. However, one of his best-known aphorisms about taxes is authentic – but misunderstood. Churchill did, in fact, say, “To think you can make a man richer by putting on a tax is like a man thinking that he can stand in a bucket and lift himself up by the handle.” The quotation has had a long and storied history in...
Acton Commentary: How socialism causes atheism
Most socialists have been atheists, but does accepting socialist economic principles make believers more likely to e atheists? This week’s Acton Commentary, which is the cover story of the newest issue of Religion & Liberty, explores survey data and anecdotal evidence that a socialist worldview can lead believers to lose their faith. A growing body of research reveals that as the welfare state grows, the church shrinks. Adam Kay of Duke University discovered that church and state have a “hydraulic...
What happens when reason and faith are separated: An interview with Samuel Gregg
In a new interview on his book, Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization, Samuel Gregg lays out how crucial the integration of reason and faith is to the West and what specific consequences result when reason and faith are separated from each other. When reason and faith e “untethered” from each other, distortions, or “pathologies,” of reason and faith take shape. One such example is the “psuedo-religion” of Marxism. “Marxism, in one sense, is a pathology of reason,...
A war on freelancers is a war on women
This year, California’s progressives decided to wage war on the nightmare of being your own boss. A new state law aimed at limiting the gig economy has already cost hundreds of people their jobs – and had a seriously harmful impact on women’s earnings and long-term happiness. Assembly Bill 5 curbs the ability panies like Uber and Lyft to classify their workers as independent contractors. The law, which codifies the California Supreme Court’s Dynamex decision into law, panies in the...
A British perspective on the UK’s 2019 general election
Voters in the UK gave Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party its largest majority in more than 30 years. With one seat yet to report, the Tories added a smashing 47 seats. A victory of this magnitude presents Prime Minister Johnson with sweeping opportunities, but hidden pitfalls also lurk in plain sight. “Lesson one of this election is that you ignore the votes of such a large number of your core voters at your peril,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull, the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved