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Category: Media / Topics: Animals • Personal Stories (Biography/Autobiography) • Faith • History • Movies • Popular Culture • Psychology, Psychological Health • Spirituality, Seeking God
Freud's Last Session Movie
by Rusty Wright
Posted: January 19, 2024
Freud and C.S. Lewis square off…
(This article first appeared on WashingtonExaminer.com.)
Harvard  psychiatrist Armand Nicholi taught a  popular course on "The Question of God," examining Sigmund Freud's  atheism and C.S. Lewis' faith. Now a related Sony theatrical film imagines that  the two met in London shortly before Freud's death. The result is a fascinating  historical drama probing their intellectual, emotional, psychological, and  spiritual development. Anthony Hopkins is masterful as Freud. Matthew Goode  plays Lewis. 
  
Nicholi's  course inspired a book, television series, and  stage play, from which this film derives. Amid Nazi advances, Freud moved from  Vienna to London in 1938. Lewis taught at Oxford. There is no record of them  ever meeting, but the film is a valuable tool to show how their beliefs and  psyches might have weathered careful mutual scrutiny … and to understand two  competing worldviews, atheism and theism. 
Personal pain
The  father of psychoanalysis had many reasons for rejecting God. The film depicts a  common one, disillusionment over disappointing life circumstances. He lost his  daughter Sophie and favorite grandson to illness. In the film, he shows their  pictures to Lewis, expressing his frustration. 
  
"How  could God allow this?" is a question many raise when tragedy strikes. I  certainly have. "Either God's not loving, or not all powerful, or doesn't  exist." 
Freud wrote, "…it  was a senseless, brutal stroke of fate that took our Sophie from us… we are …  mere playthings for the higher powers." 
Antisemitism, but a bright spot
Rampant  antisemitism in his native Austria – Freud was raised Jewish – also influenced him.  In 1937, he told an  Austrian colleague that his "true enemy" was not the Nazi's but  "religion," the Christian church. Religion to him was wish  fulfillment that humans invented to meet their security needs. 
  
Freud's  life had some spiritual bright spots (which the film omits, perhaps for time  reasons). Most notable was his 30-year friendship with Swiss pastor Oskar  Pfister, about which I've written more elsewhere. 
Freud felt Pfister was "a remarkable man… a true servant of God, …[who] feels the  need to do spiritual good to everyone he meets. You did good in this way even  to me." 
A skeptical youth
Born in  Ireland in 1898, C.S. Lewis lost his mother at age 9. By age 17, he declared  himself skeptical about all religions. World War I battlefield experiences  affected him deeply. Reading and Oxford friendships with J.R.R. Tolkien and  others prompted him to consider faith. 
  
In  1929, he says, "I  gave in, and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed: perhaps, that  night, the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England."  He became a widely respected novelist, Christian  apologist, and broadcaster. His The Problem or Pain aims to help unravel God-and-suffering complexities. 
His argument that Jesus' claims to deity make him either liar, lunatic, or Lord has been broadly  influential:  "A man who was merely  a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral  teacher. He would either be a lunatic — on the level with the man who says he  is a poached egg — or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your  choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or  something worse…."
Meeting at Freud's London home
Freud's  London home still exists as a museum. The film's portrayal of Lewis taking the train from Oxford  to Freud's London home reminded me fondly of my identical research journey. 
  
So,  there you have it: A strident, wounded atheist (with a soft spot for at least  one Christian). A reluctant convert who believes in Jesus as God. They meet at  the former's home. Fasten your seatbelt for 108 minutes of skillfully crafted intellectual  and psychological drama.
Viewers  familiar with Freud and Lewis will recognize numerous situations, people, and arguments  in the film. Others can discover from the dialogue what drove these two  intellectual icons. 
Rated (USA) PG-13 "for thematic material, some bloody/violent images, sexual material and smoking."
www.sonyclassics.com/film/freudslastsession Opens wide in the USA January 19, 2024.
International release dates (North America, Europe, Asia, Australia)
Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. His MTh dissertation is on Freud's reaction to Christian faith. www.RustyWright.com
Copyright © 2024 Rusty Wright
Search all articles by Rusty Wright
Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. www.RustyWright.com • E-mail the author (moc.loa@thgirwytsur*) • Author's website (personal or primary**)* For web-based email, you may need to copy and paste the address yourself.
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        Posted: January 19, 2024   Accessed  563 times
		
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