Planet Narnia

In our monthly C.S. Lewis book club, we’ve nearly completed “The Great Divorce”. When we’re finished with that book, we’re going to begin “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe”. I’ve loved the Chronicles of Narnia ever since I was very little. Particularly after rereading them as an adult, I thought I understood them very well. Great was my surprise, therefore, when I first heard about “Planet Narnia”, a theory put forward by Michael Ward outlining another layer of meaning behind each book in the series…

What pilgrims do

A friend of mine forwarded me an email from her daily email reflections…

That is very simply what a pilgrim does: walk. And it is the way the pilgrim prays, with his or her feet. And the feet walk through dark clouds to illumination to the light that is holy action. Through dark, cloud-filled days to a hint of subtle lightening to the sun breaking through, the feet taking us where we least thought we’d go, where before we had thought darkness dwelt, and finding there instead, in bright sunlight, the broken, the poor, the marginal, those made ugly or disfigured by abuse and oppression and woundedness.

We are changed simply by walking, rain or shine, toward and back from whatever shrine we had thought contained our hope and longing. We walk back toward what was there all along that we could not see.

— from Enter Assisi: An Invitation to Franciscan Spirituality

Music Monday: Run to the cross

I’ve been listening to a lot of Sarah Kroger again recently. Here’s “Run to the Cross”:

You were wounded, pierced and broken, I have been redeemed.
You were bound for my transgressions.
I have been released.
Who the Son sets free is free, I am free indeed.

I run to the Cross, I fall in your arms, and I know I’m forgiven, and I know I’m forgiven.
I run to the Cross, I lay down my heart, and I am not forsaken, no I am not forsaken.

I had wandered far from mercy, still you searched for me.
Held as captive, to my failings, oh, you rescued me!
Who the Son sets free is free.

I am free indeed.All to Jesus, I surrender, all to Him I freely give x4

Walter Hooper Interviews

I’ve just finished watching a series of three interviews of Walter Hooper, C.S. Lewis’ secretary and the man who has spent his life championing the works of his friend.

Do you know about the connection between Lewis, Pope John-Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI? Watch these interviews with Eric Metaxas for “Socrates in the City” and find out…

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