The analogy
Lewis presents is of human beings resembling a fleet of ships sailing in
formation. The fleet may be unsuccessful because of internal failures within
the ships, or it may fail because the formation of the fleet is upset:
"The voyage will be a success only, in the first
place, if the ships do not collide and get in one another’s way; and, secondly,
if each ship is seaworthy and has her engines in good order. As a matter of
fact, you cannot have either of these two things without the other. If the
ships keep on having collisions, they will not remain seaworthy very long. On
the other hand, if their steering gears are out of order, they will not be able
to avoid collisions."
We all know
this is true about both individuals and groups alike - be they religious
congregations, political parties, office teams at work, and so forth. If a group
is not in a decent state of harmony, with the individuals in order with each
other, then it will be an unsuccessful coalition. And if the individual's inward
machinery is not in a good state then personal failures upset the cooperation
of the group. But here is where things get even more interesting, because while
both Christians and non-Christians alike pretty much agree on the wisdom of the
above, there is a third element to the analogy upon which they may disagree -
the question of whether the fleet of ships is heading where they ought to be
heading.
This is where
C.S Lewis tries to draw out the distinction between the Christian narrative and
ordinary human progression. Ordinary human progression may result in our ships
working fine internally, and many may even sail in proper fleet formation, but
alas they still may not arrive in the right place at the end of their journey.
Now all
analogies come with limitations, and sometimes Lewis's are overly simplistic,
but this one has some interesting connotations, because purely in
considerations of human morality (which I think is a human invention in its
entirety) the direction of the fleet is more of an unplanned one with no
observable end destiny. That is to say, if you'll forgive the introduction of another analogy, human progression is more like the
formation of a grand, sumptuous ensemble musical piece over time - it evolves
gradually with plenty of bum notes and discordant chords, but along the way the
more pleasing sounds survive and are added to the mix as we retain the good and
throw out the bad over a long evolutionary percentage game.
The Christian
narrative, then - being a grace-centred narrative - must, as far as I can see,
be equivalent to God using the internal machines of our ships and the evolved formation
of the fleet to steer us all in the direction of the destiny of grace-inspired
salvation for all (Eventually! There will doubtless be some huge struggles of
resistance at the end, rather like stubborn patients who won't take the medicine
that will make them better).
Observing the
rough waters from above, it certainly will look as though among the fleets of
harmony there are all kinds of groups heading off from the main trajectory: and
if we zoomed in further we would see all kinds of bad machinery in the internal
workings of the individual ships. But to me, Christianity speaks the truth
about God's amazing love and grace in promising us all the free gift of
salvation in the shape of a secured and assured destiny for our ships to travel
towards - a destination guaranteed 2000 years ago on the cross.
That, for me,
is how we disentangle the knotty issue of Christian goodness and what for many
people seems to be a human set of moral and ethical ideas that appear to serve
God His redundancy notice. Looked at properly, human morality is analogous to
the individual interworkings or our ships and the fleet trying to sail harmoniously
together. And the destination to which we are all headed is the universal free
gift of salvation awaiting us at the end of the journey. And if that seems like
a strange mixing of two distinct narratives, remember that the Bible is full of
examples of God using human ideas to convey His love for us - most prominently
the crucifixion, which is a human invention but one which God uses to show
humankind that we are all included in His love and grace.