(urth) Religious writers and audiences
Russ Allbery
rra at stanford.edu
Sat Jun 5 19:32:29 PDT 2010
James Wynn <crushtv at gmail.com> writes:
> As for Narnia, if people didn't continuously and erroneously INTRODUCE
> people to the books as "Christian allegory", not that many people would
> catch on to the Christian themes mixed in there -- not until the final
> volume if at all.
I agree for most of the series, but the explicit Christian parallels in
_The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe_ are pretty blatantly obvious if
you know the corresponding bits of Christianity. The stone table scene in
particular is, I think, difficult to read as anything other than an
explicit parallel to the death and resurrection of Christ.
The degree of explicit parallelism drops off a *lot* in the other books,
with (as you note) the possible exception of _The Last Battle_.
> Lewis noted that most did not and those that did were usually
> children. I have had very astute readers tell me that they didn't note
> any Christian themes in "Til We Have Faces" until *I* began discussing
> them.
_Til We Have Faces_ is more in line with books like _The Voyage of the
Dawn Treader_, where the Christianity is there if you want to look for it
but it's fairly easy to not see it if you're not looking for it.
--
Russ Allbery (rra at stanford.edu) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>
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