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So you want to know more about C.S. Lewis?
Apr. 30, 2009
C.S. Lewis's Family Values
Clive Staple Lewis had a relatively happy childhood spending most of his days with his brother, Warnie, where storytelling and a love of art were family pursuits. He was also very close to his mother, so much so that her death left young Lewis devastated at age 10.
Lewis was raised in a Protestant family where his strong values in the belief of God and work were rooted. This was shattered after the death of his mother. He suddenly felt that God either did not exist or was harsh and without compassion.
After his mother’s death, his father, Albert Lewis, started to focus more on Home Rule debate as well as politics, and C. S. Lewis was sent to a boys boarding school in England. It was during his school days that he began to assert himself, standing up against accepted rules and regulations. His beliefs began to take a different direction, and Lewis found himself turning his back on religion – staunchly declaring that God was a mere myth. This pronouncement was later seen to be based from his past grievances, mainly the sorrow he felt in believing that God did not look after his mother. As a young man, Lewis was not without his issues, compounded with the fact that he was also angry with his father for sending him away to school.
The religious values he grew up with had indeed started to slip away during these difficult early years. Later on, Lewis changed his faith from Christianity to Idealism with no absolute idea of a personal god.
This all changed when Lewis met Nevill Coghill. Coghill introduced Lewis to his unique perspective on Christianity, which profoundly changed the way Lewis viewed life. Charged with a heightened curiosity on the subject, Lewis embarked on a theological study, and he began to read the works of Christian authors. His impassioned search for God lead him to become a Pantheist, whose beliefs declare that there is an impersonal God in everything.
In 1929 he became a theist. Theism is the belief in one or more gods and goddesses. After two years, he converted back to being a Christian and this was the start of his great writings.
Although he eventually converted back to his original Christian beliefs and values, Lewis always believed that human emotions were something uncomfortable, embarrassing and to be avoided. A belief also thought to have been rooted with the death of his mother, and the enormous pain he suffered as a child. Life took a turn for the worse for Lewis, when his wife died of cancer at a young age, causing him unbearable suffering again. Losing Joy, who was the love of his life, confirmed Lewis’s resolute on emotions.
However, instead of turning his back to God once more, Lewis dealt with his grief by writing a moving argument with God about death in his book entitled A Grief Observed and eventually made his peace with God.
One can see Lewis’s core values by looking at his work as most of these brilliant and often touching writings address ethical and Christian themes, some, like The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and other Chronicles of Narnia, in the context of imaginative fiction.
This was originally by Duncan Rize.
~Mandy
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Apr. 10, 2009
Lewis's Continuing Legacy
By Duncan Rize
Although C.S. Lewis is known to many as one of the most powerful literary voices of conservative Christianity, some scholars feel his view of salvation is much more liberal than one would expect. In fact, it would be safe to say that he argued more for a universal interpretation of salvation, the idea that Christ’s death enabled all of humanity’s salvation, not only people of the Christian faith. In fact, his The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe series are, say some scholars, trying to convert the reader by “baptizing” the imagination through literature with the hope that “reason” will follow.
Lewis’s legacy is still strong, and young readers around the world can become enraptured in this story of adventure, intrigue, and salvation alike. It is what makes the book series so remarkable and so “reachable” to those of all ages (especially young adults) for all time. That is what makes a classic.
It is also no secret that Lewis’s successful books are not the only part of his life that holds true to his legacy. In fact, the story of his life and how he was drawn to Christianity may in fact be more of a testament to his young readers than even the books themselves.
While he was studying at Oxford, he befriended J. R. R. Tolkien, author of the Lord of the Rings series, in a meeting of literary “loose” Oxford friends called “The Inklings,” where they both met for drinks, conversations, and readings of each other’s works. He became a very close friend of Tolkien, who was a devout Catholic. At the time, however, Lewis was not religious, and was in fact an agnostic. Amazingly enough, Lewis was known to dismiss myths and fairy tales as children’s stories and nothing else.
Later in his adult life he was converted to Christianity on a motorcycle ride. The rest of his legacy is history. The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe is by far his most famous achievement, and over fifty years later, these books still enchant the minds of children and adults across the world. Lewis wrote stories that are even now relevant to anyone that ever undergoes change. But what makes his writing even more inspiring is that it reaches out and touches those readers who have never read the Bible, or to those who have never felt the teachings of Christ touch their hearts. It brings the Christian message into their hearts, and into their minds, through, as Lewis put it himself, the “baptism” of the imagination, which makes these books more than just a legacy, but a living and inspiring history and testament to the Christian faith.
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Apr. 10, 2009
Contest #2 Winner!
Hullo, everyone. I'm so sorry I haven't been on my blog for so long - I've been dreadfully busy. It's awful! Anyways, I am here to announce the winner of Contest #2! Congrats Earthling!
The Question was:
"Besides Lewis and Tolkien, can you name 2 other members of the Inklings?"
Earthling's answer:
"I believe Owen Barfield was one? And I'm not sure, but I think Roger Lancelyn Greene?"
The Correct Answer:
"Owen Barfield, Roger Lancelyn Greene, Charles Williams, Adam Fox, Hugo Dyson, Christopher Tolkien, Robert Havard, Warren "Warnie" Lewis, and more."
Congradulations on a good guess to narnialover95 also!
Below is the Winner award for Earthling. And a contestant award for narnialover95. =)


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Feb. 27, 2009
Narnia, Christianity and the Rebirth of the 'Faery Tale'
Lewis did not take his religion lightly, describing himself in his book Surprised by Joy as 'perhaps the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England'. He struggled with his beliefs, constantly pushing himself to expand his understanding beyond that which he had been taught about reality and logic, and trying to reconcile these beliefs with those imaginative passions that had been the focus of his life.
The results of this struggle are nowhere more evident than in his creation of Narnia. The overwhelming message of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Lewis's first Chronicle, is a summation not only of Lewis's own road to religion, but of the wider tenets of the Christian faith: the entrance to Narnia is closeted and hidden; an unexpected door to wonder through which a person can step if they can only learn to look beyond the mundane and real.
Lewis looked beyond his own reality and modality, finding Christianity in the same way that the child-protagonists Lucy, Edmund, Peter, and Susan look beyond the reality of the wardrobe to reveal Narnia, a land of magic and fantasy. As did Lewis, they go about exploring this new world with wonder and delight.
So Lewis filtered the Christian message through fantasy, weaving biblical allegory together with modern myth in seamless fashion. Fittingly for Lewis's first Chronicle, the underlying message of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is the ultimate allegory: the love, sacrifice and rebirth of the lion, Aslan for the sins of Edmund.
Though Tolkien disapproved of Lewis's mixture of Christian imagery and mythological figures, and disagreed with his use of fiction to discuss religion – believing that to be a subject better suited to theologians - The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe works not because of or in spite of Lewis's Christian symbolism, but because it is first and foremost a wonderfully woven story. Lewis's search for the 'modern faery tale', which had begun through his friendship with Tolkien, had finally taken shape.
In Narnia, the mixture of truth and myth catches the imagination and the soul whilst enlightening the spirit; bringing some of the most important Christian teachings to generations of children and adults alike, and inviting all to delight in the telling.
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About Me
Enter the Wardrobe and find out all of the things you wished you knew aobut Narnia! In the posts that follow, accompany me as I rediscover The Chronicles of Narnia, providing summary, analysis, and a series of activities that will enrich your Narnia experience. Whether you are completely new to the world of Narnia or are a seasoned reader of Lewiss Chronicles, I believe you will find much to love in my online wardrobe. So please, ask questions and comment on what you think about my exploration of the Findings of Narnia. I give thenarniaacademy.org all credit for the inspiration of this blog. Copyright © 2005 Electronic Learning Resource Network, Inc., and other copyright holders. All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 1999-2005 Learning By Grace, Inc. All Rights Reserved. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . You Might Know Me Best As maidenofvirtue. Please visit my other blogs: maidenofvirtue, horsebackriding, and radiantpurity. Also my sister and I's blog: farmgirlsisterchicks. And my Mother's: keeperofthefires. THANK YOU!
Narniaexposed's favorite quotes"We're free Narnians, Hwin and I, and I suppose, if you're running away to Narnia you want to be one too. In that case Hwin isn't your horse any longer. One might just as well say you're her human."— C.S. Lewis
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