APOL 330 Quiz 2
APOL 330 Quiz 2 Liberty University
- According to Screwtape if a man can’t be cured of churchgoing, the next best thing is to send him all over the neighborhood to find the church that “suits” him
- Screwtape thinks that Wormwood should try to get the patient to go to a church that uses a lectionary.
- When it comes to the temptation of gluttony, Screwtape limits his focus to excess and neglects delicacy
- Screwtape thinks that vanity is a good tool for helping to turn men into gluttons.
- Screwtape thinks that mere excess in food is much more valuable than delicacy.
- Screwtape suggests that the chief use of excess in food is a kind of artillery preparation for attacks on pride.
- According to Screwtape, “The Enemy described a married couple as ‘one soul.’”
- Screwtape suggests that God’s real motive for creating humans is Love.
- Screwtape thinks that marriage is completely useless for his and Wormwood’s plans.
- According to Screwtape, “The real use of the infernal Venus is, no doubt, as wife.”
- Screwtape believes that the earliest believers were converted by a single historical fact (the Passion) and a single theological doctrine (Christology)
- Screwtape encourages investigations of the historical Jesus
- Screwtape desires for Wormwood’s patient to not think of himself as belonging to “we Christians” as much as “his set”
- Screwtape believes that a “patient” having a short life is usually in his and Wormwood’s best interest.
- The ambiguity of the word “love” can be used to make people believe that because of “love” they have solved problems that they have only pretended to deal with or have essentially kicked down the road
- Screwtape suggests that false spirituality is always to be encouraged.
- Screwtape believes that both an answered prayer and an unanswered prayer can be used to his advantage
- Screwtape wants people/patients to understand how their generation relates to previous generations
- Screwtape makes it clear that the patient’s immediate death is not a win for him or Wormwood
- In chapter 28, Screwtape wants Wormwood to put the “patient” in physical danger.
- What does Screwtape say knits a man to the world in chapter 25?
- What does Screwtape mean by “mere Christianity” in chapter 25?
- What is meant in chapter 27 about having people considering the “Historical Point of View”?
- Screwtape is ultimately pleased with Wormwood’s performance
- Screwtape and Wormwood’s plan was successful in the end because the “patient” died.
Set 2
- According to Screwtape if a man can’t be cured of churchgoing, the next best thing is to send him all over the neighborhood to find the church that “suits” him
- The kinds of churches that Screwtape encourages Wormwood to take the patient to are those that are watered down and inconsistent
- When it comes to the temptation of gluttony, Screwtape limits his focus to excess and neglects delicacy
- Screwtape’s strategy against marriage involves equating marital commitment with the feeling of “being in love “
- Screwtape believes that he has a real handle on why God created human beings
- Screwtape believes that he can use both unchastity and marriage (given the right circumstances) to his advantage in oppressing the patient
- According to Screwtape, in the campaign of sexual temptation, the role of eye plays an exceedingly large role, especially in attacks against men
- Wormwood is encouraged to have the patient convinced that time is not his own
- According to Screwtape, the sense of ownership ought to always be encouraged
- Screwtape believes that the earliest believers were converted by a single historical fact (the Passion) and a single theological doctrine (Christology)
- Screwtape encourages investigations of the historical Jesus
- Screwtape desires for Wormwood’s patient to not think of himself as belonging to “we Christians” as must as “my set” within the greater body of Christ
- The “defect” that was present in the patient’s mistress that Screwtape hopes would grow into a “most beautiful vice” is
- Screwtape is always very interested in the particulars of the war that is going on in the patient’s context
- The ambiguity of word “love” can be used to make people believe that because of “love” they have solved problems that they have only pretended to deal with or have kicked down the road
- Screwtape and his colleagues have been successful at turning the pleasure of eating into gluttony and the pleasantness of change into the pursuit of
- Screwtape believes that both an answered prayer and an unanswered prayer can be used to his advantage
- Screwtape wants people/patients to understand how their generation relates to previous generations
- Screwtape makes it clear that the patient’s immediate death is not a win for him or Wormwood
- The general rule which has been established by Screwtape’s organization concerning the perception of reality is that in all experiences which can make patients happy or better only the physical facts are “real” while the spiritual elements are “subjective.”
- How has Screwtape and his band disguised gluttony in chapter 17?
- What does Screwtape mean by “mere Christianity” in chapter 25?
- What is meant in chapter 27 about having people considering the “Historical Point of View”?
- Screwtape is ultimately pleased with Wormwood’s performance
- I have read the entirety of Screwtape Letters