Twice in his life C. S. Lewis encountered—and greatly admired—authors involved in occult theory and practice.1 The first such figure was William Butler Yeats, the second, more than two decades later, Charles Williams. Lewis reacted to their occult preoccupations in quite different ways, even while acknowledging his continuing fascination with the subject
In his autobiography Surprised by Joy, C. S. Lewis recounts a seminal moment that occurred quite ear...
Lewis did nothing to conceal his admiration of—and theological pedigree to—Augustine: as he wrote, A...
found myself profoundly frustrated with the polarization that became evident between Lewis’ friends ...
The theosophical systems formulated by great poets, such as William Butler Yeats, represent a person...
Recounts the beginnings of the friendship of Lewis and Williams and Williams’s later association wit...
After a brief consideration of Joad’s life and career this essay will examine the events that led to...
In his Space Trilogy, C.S. Lewis speaks on the nature of demons and angels, revealing their interact...
When he was a student at Oxford University, C. S. Lewis wrote to a friend expressing his great admir...
In this article, we argue that, from a few hints in the Bodleian archive and elsewhere, we have disc...
After describing the belief in the Angelic Hierarchy as central to ancient spiritual cosmology, bo...
C. S. Lewis experienced several moments of Sehnsucht in his life. In one incident, he reported “suc...
The Influence of G. K. Chesterton upon C. S. Lewis - Will Vaus When C. S. Lewis went up to Oxford f...
Lewis’ published correspondence provides a kind of autobiography-in-progress, and it offers a reveal...
Review of: Colin Manlove. C. S. Lewis: His Literary Achievement (Cheshire, CT, 2010). 256 pages. $1...
Review of James Como, Mystical Perelandra: My Lifelong Reading of C. S. Lewis and His Favorite Book ...
In his autobiography Surprised by Joy, C. S. Lewis recounts a seminal moment that occurred quite ear...
Lewis did nothing to conceal his admiration of—and theological pedigree to—Augustine: as he wrote, A...
found myself profoundly frustrated with the polarization that became evident between Lewis’ friends ...
The theosophical systems formulated by great poets, such as William Butler Yeats, represent a person...
Recounts the beginnings of the friendship of Lewis and Williams and Williams’s later association wit...
After a brief consideration of Joad’s life and career this essay will examine the events that led to...
In his Space Trilogy, C.S. Lewis speaks on the nature of demons and angels, revealing their interact...
When he was a student at Oxford University, C. S. Lewis wrote to a friend expressing his great admir...
In this article, we argue that, from a few hints in the Bodleian archive and elsewhere, we have disc...
After describing the belief in the Angelic Hierarchy as central to ancient spiritual cosmology, bo...
C. S. Lewis experienced several moments of Sehnsucht in his life. In one incident, he reported “suc...
The Influence of G. K. Chesterton upon C. S. Lewis - Will Vaus When C. S. Lewis went up to Oxford f...
Lewis’ published correspondence provides a kind of autobiography-in-progress, and it offers a reveal...
Review of: Colin Manlove. C. S. Lewis: His Literary Achievement (Cheshire, CT, 2010). 256 pages. $1...
Review of James Como, Mystical Perelandra: My Lifelong Reading of C. S. Lewis and His Favorite Book ...
In his autobiography Surprised by Joy, C. S. Lewis recounts a seminal moment that occurred quite ear...
Lewis did nothing to conceal his admiration of—and theological pedigree to—Augustine: as he wrote, A...
found myself profoundly frustrated with the polarization that became evident between Lewis’ friends ...