Beliefnet asked me to contribute a short biography of C S Lewis to their "Narnia package", which just went live today:
My contribution is titled "The Relucant Convert". It looks like a great collection of articles.
expect Narnia saturation in the next couple of weeks! I will be going to see the movie at an advance screening this afternoon with my daughter Megan. I started recording the Narnia books on tape for the Maryland Radio Reading Network for the Blind a couple of years ago (at one hour per week, it takes awhile) and expect to finish "The Last Battle" before Christmas. The books are extraordinary, and even better when you read them out loud.
Also, there will be a six-minute segment on "The 700 Club" tonight about Lewis. I was interviewed for it last August, when I was at the Oxford conference of the C S Lewis Foundation. Here's the specifics, for both cable (ABC FAmily Channel) and satellite:
CABLE/SATELLITE
ABC FAMILY CHANNEL - East Coast Feed Galaxy 5, T 11 9am; 11pm; 3am EST CABLE/SATELLITE ABC FAMILY CHANNEL - West Coast Feed C-3; T1 vertical 9am; 11pm; 3am PST and finally, here's the bio I wrote for Beliefnet:
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C. S. Lewis: The Reluctant Convert In later life, C. S. Lewis - "Jack" to friends and family - would say that it all began with a toy garden. He was seven years old when his older brother, "Warnie", brought to their playroom a biscuit tin he had decorated with tiny twigs, moss and flowers. As Jack gazed at the miniature fairyland he was seized with wonder. The beauty was compelling and mysterious, even mystical, and before he could grasp exactly what it conjured in his spirit the sensation flashed away. This great inexpressible desire, even a desire for desiring, became the touchstone of Lewis' life. He called it Joy. Fifty years would pass before Lewis, childless himself, would complete the enduring classic of children's literature known as the Chronicles of Narnia. The initial volume, "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe," will no doubt find a whole new generation of readers when the movie version is released in December. But this one slim novel is only a tiny sample of Lewis' prodigious, and often profound, work. Lewis's large, stolid face filled the cover of Time magazine on Lewis began teaching at J.R.R. Tolkien, author of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, was to take a decisive role in the next step of Lewis' conversion. On a fall evening in 1931, Lewis had dinner with fellow professors Tolkien and Hugo Dyson. They walked through the college's park, talking, until the early hours of the morning. The conversation turned to mythology. Lewis felt that myths, despite their imaginative appeal, were, in the end, merely lies. Tolkien proposed instead that the beauty of Christianity is that it is a myth that happens to be *true.* The universal hunger planted in human beings by God, evidenced by all the world's mythologies, was made manifest in time and space. In Jesus Christ, God really did walk this earth, die, and rise again. These words must have rung an uneasy bell. Some years earlier a tutor in classical studies at A few days after the late-night walk with Tolkien, still pondering the conversation, Lewis got into the sidecar of Warnie's motorcycle for a trip to the zoo. He later wrote, "When we set out I did not believe that Jesus is the Son of God, and when we reached the zoo I did." It was a distinctly intellectual conversion, a laser-like search for Truth, unaccompanied by emotional tumult. Yet it seems somehow characteristic of Lewis-never one to stand on dignity--that it took place in a sidecar on the way to the zoo. Lewis could be jolly. He had a hearty appreciation of good food and drink, and his writings often pause to linger over detailed description of a meal. He was able to laugh at himself, as when describing his dilemma on finding he'd left the house with mismatched shoes, and was unable to sufficiently scuff the new shoe to resemble the old one. Yet he could be grave when the subject required it. Lewis took God seriously and himself lightly. His extraordinary mind mined deep levels of theology, but never as isolated theoretical study; whatever he wrote was grounded in honesty about his own life. This combination of profound thought, good humor, practical application, humility, and a knack for clear English communication, is what has made C. S. Lewis the most beloved of contemporary Christian authors. This winning combination was evident in Lewis' first major success, "The Screwtape Letters" (1942), a series of letters from a supervisory devil to an underling on how to corrupt a "patient." Lewis met each Thursday night with Tolkien and other Christian writers in a circle called the "Inklings," where members read and discussed works in progress (Dorothy Sayers was another good friend). The potential of fantasy and what they called "scientifiction" to carry theological ideas was being tested out. Lewis wrote a "space trilogy," concluding with the disturbing, dystopic "That Hideous Strength" in 1945. During World War II, Lewis was invited to deliver dozens of talks over the BBC in his deep, reassuring voice. Some of these later made up the volume "Mere Christianity," the most popular of Lewis' nonfiction works, and likely the most popular summary of Christian faith in print today, with sales in the multiple millions. In 1950, Lewis began the Narnia series with "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe." About this time Lewis' life took an unexpected turn: he was surprised, indeed, by Joy. Her full name was Joy Davidman Gresham. She was an American; she was a poet; and she was becoming a Christian, having previously been a secular Jew and Marxist. Theological exploration led Joy to Lewis' books, and then to correspond with him directly. Joy had a husband and two sons, but the marriage was troubled; in 1954, she would divorce William Gresham for desertion. On Six months later Joy was diagnosed with cancer. This stunning blow forced into the open the bond that was growing between them. A priest was called to Joy's hospital bedside, and the couple were united by the rites of the Anglican Church. When Joy left the hospital, she came home to Lewis' house. The couple asked a priest they knew, who was reputed to have a gift of healing, to pray for Joy. After that she entered a period of remission that both thought miraculous, and they enjoyed four vibrant years of marriage. "I never expected to have in my 60's that happiness that passed me by in my 20's," Lewis wrote; he and Joy "feasted on love." During this time Lewis gave talks which were collected into another of his landmark books, "The Four Loves." It presents four aspects of human love, and the eloquent chapter on Eros clearly draws from joyous experience. It would not last. On In the remaining years of his life, however, Lewis broke through grief to a tranquil faith, and reached new depths of spiritual insight. C. S. Lewis died on ********
Frederica Mathewes-Green www.frederica.com |
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