The final chapter is about how the Christian worldview affects the lives of societal, personal, and cultural Christians throughout the world. The novel is meant be an educational and helpful to Christians on the basics of the Christian…
From a lamp post that was there from the beginning and the girl that finds it to a talking lion that all you want to do is love and a witch that had the power to free the world over C.S. Lewis has brought us one of the world's greatest book series, The Chronicles of Narnia. Although C.S. Lewis is recognized throughout the world as a great Christian thinker, philosopher, apologist and writer, his theology often fails to meet the standards of most Evangelicals and is often at odds with the broader Evangelical community. Lewis was born in Belfast, Ireland in the winter of 1898. Lewis was the son of a clergyman and a mathematician. Lewis’s father, Albert James Lewis, was a clergyman.…
Lewis’s persona is one that is factual and humble. Lewis wants the reader to perceive him as a discusser rather than a preacher, he explains this when he writes, “I hope you will not misunderstand what I am going to say. I am not preaching, and Heaven knows I do not pretend to be better than anybody else. I am only trying to call to attention to a fact,” (Lewis 7).…
John Lewis against segregation I believe there are key turning points for John Lewis in the book March by writers Lewis and Ayden book 1 and 2. In the book March John Lewis fights against segregation for equality. Initially, Lewis received a bible as a gift for his 4th Christmas. The trip he took with his Uncle Otis to Buffalo amplified his eagerness and interest for desegregation. Finally, his ambition to go to college which was ultimately denied by his parents, these events caused a change in Lewis and his determination for desegregation, this change also shaped his future for what was to come as SNCC Chairman.…
In his book, Mere Christianity, Lewis (1952) discusses the concept of humility from the perspective of pride, in such a way as to allow the reader understand what humility is not. For example, in the following statement Lewis attempts to explain that pride causes an individual to possess a superiority complex, which seems to remove them from any awareness of others and places focus only on themselves, “The real black, diabolical Pride comes from when you look down on others so much that you do not care what they think of you,” he continues by speaking specifically about Christians, “Whenever we find that our religious life is making us feel that we are good- above all, that we are better than someone else – I think we may be sure that we are being acted on, not by God, but by the devil The real test of being in the presence of God is that you either forget about yourself altogether or see yourself as a small, dirty object. It is better to forget about…
1. Why is Christianity being seen from the perspective of a devil? 1A. I believe that Christianity is being seen from this point of view because we can view and ask questions about the religion in new and innovative ways that would be impossible to achieve if Lewis was to go with a straight forward approach of looking at Christianity.…
However, during his teenage years, he became a professed atheist. Later in his life, he returned to Christianity and became famous for detailing his spiritual journey (Epperson, Gray, Hall, 45). In the article, “What Are We to Make of Jesus Christ” C.S. Lewis shares his personal beliefs about Christianity and provides valuable persuasions to refute certain non-Christian beliefs. The basis of C.S Lewis argument is that readers must accept or reject the story of what God intends to make of us.…
“There is one vice of which no man in the world is free; which every one in the world loathes when he sees it in someone else; and of which hardly any people, except Christians, ever imagine that they are guilty of themselves” (Lewis 121). Effectively drawing the reader in, C.S. Lewis opens the eighth chapter of the third book in Mere Christianity with this quote. Unfortunately, pride or self-conceit are vices that affect humans without exception. Lewis writes that all sin roots itself in pride. In reading this bold observation, one begs the question, “is pride really the root of all sin, or is the thought exaggerated?”…
The Roman church had not yet been visited and had no New Testament because the gospels were not yet being circulated in their final written form. Thus, this letter may well have been the first piece of Christian literature the Roman believers had seen. In Roman culture to choose to be a servant was unthinkable. Paul was a Roman citizen but chose to be entirely dependent on and abide in Christ Jesus (Romans 1:1). Paul’s impact was made known because of his citizenship and willingness to serve and obey Jesus…
Jian Lee attempts to show us through three different lenses or sections, those who are reframing, redefining and claiming their presence in the evangelical movement. Part one Conformists, part two Skeptics, part three, Radicals. As these titles suggest, this book takes us through the birthing pains of each person’s evangelical experience including her own. The stories contained within these pages, are of men and women who come from all areas of life.…
Through this form of academic debate, a deeper and fuller understanding of Christianity can be achieved. In order to comprehend the desired outcomes each author wishes upon their readers, it is quintessential to read the introduction to the book. Wright and Borg write together to explain their perpetual friendship and admiration of one another, regardless of the differences in viewpoints. They also go on to explain the goal of the following text, which was to show “how different visions of Jesus relate to different visions of the Christian life” (v).…
Turning Points: Decisive Moments in the History of Christianity is an over-arching study of Christianity beginning with the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70. It is organized around fourteen points considered by author Mark Noll to be the most critical to the formation of Christianity as we know it. This book serves those who are researching the topic in an academic manner or who wish to have a survey of Christian history in totality. This book is not for some who have a casual interest in the growth and change that the church has encountered, due to it is vast amount of material and somewhat confusing arrangement.…
During our time in the world, Christians often find themselves in close contact with skeptics- agnostics, atheists, or those people who simply don’t care about a spiritual life, who all have their own reasons to distrust the church and the Bible as a whole. The questions these people pose are not simple ones, not questions that can be answered by a simple “John 3:16” or a “Jeremiah 29:11.” How then should we, as a part of the body of Christ, react to and answer those people who desire more intellectual evidence than the common Christian idioms that are passed around in church? This question is given an answer in Dr. Gregory Boyd’s book, Letters From A Skeptic.…
In the 1700s during the Great Awakening hundreds of people were accepting Jesus Christ and becoming “born again”. During this time pastors were working to increase this number and convert more and more people. One of these pastors was Jonathan Edwards, who gave outstandingly intense persuasive sermons. In one of Mr. Edwards’s most famous sermons "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” he utilizes rhetorical devices pathos, logos, and ethos numerous times throughout the sermon to persuade the congregation to be “born again”. Through his fire and brimstone teachings Edwards evokes an immense amount of fear in his listeners.…
Theological perspectives will be considered, and a conclusion will be given offering an overview of the strength and weaknesses of Walls’ approach. Walls first published “The Gospel as Prisoner and Liberator of Culture” in 1982, and it offers a reflection on how the Christian faith has found expression across time and culture over two millennia in ways that at times seem ‘repellent’ to one another. Starting with the first…