USSRGirl wrote:REAAALLY? I know Screwtape is pretty much his most popular book... but honestly I didn't think it was that great. Maybe it's because I read it last and heard the same kind of arguments in his other books. Still... I think it was done better in the other books than Screwtape.
...and...would someone PLEASE explain to me the random centipede outburst midway through Screwtape Letters? I've heard it was from Milton... that he thought demons could turn into bugs or something. *shrug* Can you say RANDOM?
USSRGirl wrote:I never said Screwtape wasn't good, Kokhiri, just not as good as his others like Great Divorce and Pilgrim's Regress in my opinion.
USSRGirl wrote:To get Screwtape that worked up, it would seem that this kind of person is also the only kind that actually makes the devil a bit nervous - even scared. He realizes he's about to lose his hold over the main character.
mitsuki lover wrote:Perhaps Lewis was inspired by Naaman's words to Elisha in 2 Kings 5:18 when he wrote it.
What he was getting at,it would appear,was that what mattered was where a person's heart really was and not just what they said.
Kokhiri Sojourn wrote:So... Question: what do you think about Lewis' statements (as Aslan) in the Last Battle, as some from an apparently different faith get into "Aslan's Country?" I was fairly confused when I read over it this summer. Any thoughts?
Kokhiri Sojourn wrote:I agree with that the heart matters over all, but the surprising thing to me was that I never remembered that Emeth Tarkaan actually coming to know Aslan before the end of Narnia (i.e. that he was converted before death/end of all things). That was what confused me - can your heart be in the right place when it is elsewhere from God, even if you've never heard the message? This was the only time in the series I hesitated on Lewis' allegory. I don't know that I disagree yet, but just wanted some clarification/opinions.
ClosetOtaku wrote:It fundamentally addresses the question: "What of the heathen who dies never hearing of Christ?" Lewis believes that Faith is Faith (e.g. Abram put his faith in God, and it was credited to him as righteousness).
mitsuki lover wrote:Which is entirely different from Universalism.Lewis himself would never have claimed to have been a Universalist.Also (to go off topic a bit)I believe MacDonald's Universalism would have been more anchored in the belief that at the crucifixion Christ died for all Mankind and so the Atonement applies to all.This is what I think a Universalist of MacDonald's theological views would argue.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 55 guests