Man exists upon a continuum of existence and nonexistence. Throughout the works of C.S. Lewis, one unearths the notion that God beckons man higher into a greater reality, one in which man is both more independent and more united with God; meanwhile, Satan attempts to drag man downward into increased nonexistence. Man is called into a higher existence, but God is not calling us to be Him. God is calling us to be more human, the humanity that He intended
In his Space Trilogy, C.S. Lewis speaks on the nature of demons and angels, revealing their interact...
This thesis will explore C.S. Lewis’ theology of supernatural providence as depicted in Perelandra, ...
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell by William Blake the Romantic, proffers a Romantic vision of hell, a...
This thesis is a discussion of C.S. Lewis’s unique eschatological concept, the temporal-eternal cont...
Man’s relationship to a Divine Being is one of the persisting concerns of literature, with modern le...
Purgatory figures significantly as a theme in the writing of C.S. Lewis. The Great Divorce represent...
How to think of Heaven then, which Lewis says “is, by definition, outside our experience,” when the ...
I shall attempt to show how Lewis’s fusion of Platonism with Christianity gives rise to his belief, ...
The Logic of Purgatory in C.S. Lewis: Why There Can Be No Spiritual Formation Without It - Robert M...
A Meaningful Hierarchy: How C.S. Lewis Perceives Humanity\u27s Significance - Zachary A. Rhone Hum...
After describing the belief in the Angelic Hierarchy as central to ancient spiritual cosmology, bo...
For years readers have practiced spiritual formation through C.S. Lewis, without using that term. Th...
Humans are amphibians -- half spirit and half animal, writes Screwtape. In Mere Christianity, C.S. ...
C.S. Lewis’s standalone title Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold transforms the Greek mythos “Cupid a...
Lewis acknowledged he lacked professional credentials to write popular theology. But he also argued ...
In his Space Trilogy, C.S. Lewis speaks on the nature of demons and angels, revealing their interact...
This thesis will explore C.S. Lewis’ theology of supernatural providence as depicted in Perelandra, ...
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell by William Blake the Romantic, proffers a Romantic vision of hell, a...
This thesis is a discussion of C.S. Lewis’s unique eschatological concept, the temporal-eternal cont...
Man’s relationship to a Divine Being is one of the persisting concerns of literature, with modern le...
Purgatory figures significantly as a theme in the writing of C.S. Lewis. The Great Divorce represent...
How to think of Heaven then, which Lewis says “is, by definition, outside our experience,” when the ...
I shall attempt to show how Lewis’s fusion of Platonism with Christianity gives rise to his belief, ...
The Logic of Purgatory in C.S. Lewis: Why There Can Be No Spiritual Formation Without It - Robert M...
A Meaningful Hierarchy: How C.S. Lewis Perceives Humanity\u27s Significance - Zachary A. Rhone Hum...
After describing the belief in the Angelic Hierarchy as central to ancient spiritual cosmology, bo...
For years readers have practiced spiritual formation through C.S. Lewis, without using that term. Th...
Humans are amphibians -- half spirit and half animal, writes Screwtape. In Mere Christianity, C.S. ...
C.S. Lewis’s standalone title Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold transforms the Greek mythos “Cupid a...
Lewis acknowledged he lacked professional credentials to write popular theology. But he also argued ...
In his Space Trilogy, C.S. Lewis speaks on the nature of demons and angels, revealing their interact...
This thesis will explore C.S. Lewis’ theology of supernatural providence as depicted in Perelandra, ...
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell by William Blake the Romantic, proffers a Romantic vision of hell, a...