For those who aren’t familiar with the God-blessed work of this amazing man of faith, let’s take a journey into C.S. Lewis’ life and work – who he was, what he stood for, and why his legacy still impacts people for the better today.
With a new C.S. Lewis movie out on streaming and two more movies in the works, it's a great time to revisit his work. Here are 50 thought-provoking quotes by C.S. Lewis' that you may not have heard before.
The appeal of The Chronicles comes back to a single character. Aslan, the Great Lion, who calls the children into Narnia, plays the central role in each adventure. It’s not exactly correct to call Aslan an “allegory” of Jesus. Lewis might prefer that we instead think of Aslan as Christ transposed into a Narnian key, a Creator and Lord fit for a world primarily inhabited by talking animals.
C.S. Lewis is the subject of the new film The Most Reluctant Convert, which follows Lewis from his childhood, to his teenage years, to his time at Oxford as a young adult, when he converts to Christianity and becomes a world-famous apologist. Here are three things you should know about the film:
Lots of people talk about C.S. Lewis' friendship with J.R.R. Tolkien, and their part in the Oxford writers' group called the Inklings. But who were the other 17 members of the Inklings?
C. S. Lewis - writer, poet, scholar, Christian apologist, Oxford professor, and theologian – continues to be remembered as one of the most quoted and well-known authors of all time.
C.S. Lewis is perhaps the most recognized name in all of Christian literature. His fantasy series, The Chronicles of Narnia, is beloved by children and adults the world over.
Every year I attempt to answer this question for a lecture hall filled with high school seniors who are more interested in reading text messages than reading books. I require my senior Bible students to spend an entire semester reading Lewis. Here's why.
There are disagreements as to what order newcomers should read the Chronicles of Narnia in. Should they follow the original publication order, or should they follow the “George Lucas model”—i.e., a chronological order?
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