Perelandra is CS Lewis’ most underappreciated work of fiction. It’s the 2nd book in his Space Trilogy series, where protagonist Elwin Ransom finds himself trapped on the planet Perelandra with the Devil.
The plot of this book is simple — the Devil is trying to seduce this planet’s Queen (who is without sin) to disobey God and fall from grace. Ransom’s task is to outwit the devil. He must protect the Queen, Perelandra, and Paradise lest mankind suffer a second fall.
At its core, this novel helps you understand your identity as a “Fallen Man,” and the very temptation that threatens paradise. Even better, Perelandra gives CS Lewis’ jarring but brilliant defense of how to defeat the devil himself in spiritual warfare…
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Pre-Fallen Paradise
As stated earlier, the novel takes place on the planet of Perelandra (Venus).
Dr. Ransom arrives via space travel and finds a paradisal utopia. The surface of the planet is a bed of ocean water, with floating islands of vegetation drifting across the seas unmoored. The planet has a vigor and freshness as if it had only just emerged from its own seven days of creation.
After exploring, Ransom meets the Queen of the planet — a woman with Pre-fallen innocence and no knowledge of evil. Her husband, the King, is away on another planet, so she tends to Perelandra by herself. That said, Perelandra doesn’t remain a peaceful paradise for long.
Soon, Ransom and the Queen are visited by a demon possessed human, formerly known as Weston.
Lewis writes:
“[Weston] was unrecognizable. He did not look like a sick man: but he looked like a very dead one. The face had that terrible power which the face of a corpse sometimes has of simply rebuffing every conceivable human attitude one can adopt towards it. The expressionless mouth, the unwinking stare of the eyes, said clearly:
I have features as you have, but there is nothing in common between you and me.”
The devil, smirking at Ransom, turns to the Queen and begins tempting her to damnation.
The Serpent’s Tongue
Earlier, the Queen revealed that there is only one law on Perelandra — that she cannot spend a night on the fixed land. For simplicity, consider this the equivalent of Eve’s forbidden fruit in Eden.
The devil begins tempting the Queen to disobedience:
“Your deepest will, at present, is to obey [God] — to be always as you are now, only His beast or His very young child. The way out of that is hard. It was made hard that only the very great, the very wise, the very courageous should dare to walk in it — to go on out of this smallness in which you now live — through the dark wave of Hid forbidding, into the real life, Deep Life, with all its joy and splendour.”
The Queen is intrigued, but Ransom intervenes, reminding her that obedience to God promises her salvation. What follows is a days long, back and forth battle of wits between the Devil and Ransom.
Though Ransom has delayed the Queen’s Fall, he feels himself losing ground:
“[Satan] began to teach her many new words: words like Creative and Intuition and Spiritual…
When she had at last been made to understand what “creative,” meant she forgot all about the Great Risk and the tragic loneliness and laughed for a whole minute on end.”
Lewis stresses that curiosity, unmoored from God, was the fatal fault that preceded the Fall of man. This echoes St. Augustine, who himself called curiosity a, “vain desire cloaked in the name of knowledge,” that moves man to grave error.
So the Fall of man isn’t a condemnation of knowledge, but a curious desire for a knowledge divorced from God and Goodness. In other words, a desire for evil, preceded by an “innocent,” curiosity.
Meanwhile, Ransom despairs. He cannot outwit the Devil. His battle is lost, and he’s only delaying the inevitable fall. Yet in his darkest hour, Ransom discovers an unlikely solution.
Though his resolution makes some Christian readers uncomfortable, Lewis insists it’s the only answer to fighting evil incarnate…
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