Next week will mark sixty years since a rifle shot echoed
in Dallas altering the course of history.
It left John F. Kennedy dead and a nation in shock. For those of us who are older, it is a moment frozen in time. Each one who experienced it remembers where we
were and what we were doing when we heard
that President Kennedy had been shot. This week will be filled with
documentaries, flashbacks, stories, and remembrances of that event. But
something else happened on that date that the world little noticed.
On the same day, November 22, 1963, C. S. Lewis collapsed at
5:30 PM in the bedroom of his Oxford home and died one week before his
sixty-fifth birthday. Sixty years later,
C. S. Lewis’ death is little noted. But
his writings may be more popular and more widely read than ever. Both events marked by November 22 continue to
shape our world: the traumatic assassination of President Kennedy and the
writings of C.S. Lewis.
An avowed atheist in his youth, C.S. Lewis came to faith in
Christ in 1931, partially influenced by his friend and colleague, J.R.R. Tolkien. By some estimates he became the most widely
read Christian writer in history. He is
perhaps best known today for The Lion,
The Witch and the Wardrobe, a Christian allegory written for children in
1950.
I expect both Lewis and Tolkien would be shocked to discover
their fantasies, The Chronicles of Narnia
and The Lord of the Rings have
become blockbuster movies in the twenty-first century. And, I expect C.S. Lewis
would be even more surprised to learn that he is one of the most quoted authors
on social media. Here are a few of his
most famous quotes:
“A man can no more diminish God's glory by refusing to
worship Him than a lunatic can put out the sun by scribbling the word
'darkness' on the walls of his cell.”
"Relying on God has to begin all over again every
day as if nothing had yet been done."
"God has infinite attention to spare for each one of
us. You are as much alone with him as if you were the only being he had ever
created."
"When Christ
died, he died for you individually just as much as if you had been the only
person in the world."
Millions who have struggled with doubt and disbelief have
found a path to faith through his best known book, Mere Christianity. I first
read Mere Christianity when I was a
college student 55 years ago, along with
The Screwtape Letters and The Four Loves. Later I added his science fiction books, Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra and That Hideous Strength. Like
many others my faith and my thinking have been shaped by Lewis’ writings.
As the world pauses to reflect on that fateful day in Dallas
sixty years ago, we are afforded opportunity to reflect on faith in Christ, as
described so beautifully by C. S. Lewis. A faith that can carry us through any
crisis, global or personal.
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