
Into the Depths of in C. S. Lewis'
The Chronicles of Narnia
Source From http://www.blessedquietness.com/ journal/homemake/narnia.htm
C.
S. Lewis' most famous books are perhaps the Chronicles
of Narnia, his occult, fantasy books for children. In them he
went to great lengths to glorify and promote many occult
ideas. While some maintain that the spiritual idea behind
the fantasy is the truth of scripture, the cold hard facts
point in the completely opposite direction. He was introducing children
to witchcraft through esoteric (hidden meanings) writings. Let's take a
closer look.
First of all, it is necessary to get some background
in order
to see where C. S. Lewis was headed with his "fantasy" stories.
Lewis was good friends with Charles Williams and J.R.R.
Tolkien (author of the occultic Lord of the Rings Trilogy). All three were
part of a group of writers called the "Inklings." Of this group,
one friend felt that
| Williams,
and maybe Tolkien, were the two that influenced Lewis' thinking the
most. Williams, a professing Christian, was especially close to him
and taught Lewis the "white witchcraft" delusion of being
able to take someone's pain for them and suffer it in one's own body.
They cast this "talent" in a Christian light, and Lewis later
claimed to have this ability and to have used it on behalf of his wife.
(1) Exodus 22:18 Thou shalt not suffer
a witch to live. Ephesians 4:27 Neither give place to the devil. |
![]() |
The
writings of these three Inklings are so overt in mixing paganism with alleged
Christianity, that one reprobate has
even suggested them as a shining example for bringing neo-paganism and Christianity
together "peacefully!" http://www.geocities.com/Athens/7734/xnpaglit.htm
(Link no longer works)
Lewis and Williams
also drank and smoked together (2)
which is hardly surprising considering how often drinking
wine and strong drink is mentioned in Lewis' "children's"
books! Proverbs
20:1 Wine is a mocker, strong drink
is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise.
(Photo: One of Lewis' favorite pubs, "The Eagle and Child," familiarly
known as "The Bird and Baby." See
footnote 2a for further information and implications.)
Charles Williams was also a member of the highly devilsh, Qabalistic, "Order
of the Golden Dawn," and was an active member for several years. (The
"Order of the Golden Dawn" was primarily made up of mystical "christians"
and former followers of Madame Blavatsky that still adhered to Luciferianism.)
A number of his works reflect this. "Shadows of Ecstasy pulsates with
the Hermetic dictum, 'as above, so below.' War in Heaven concerns the Grail,
Many Dimensions the Philosopher's Stone, and The Place of the Lion the Platonic
archetypes. We are confronted with the Tarot deck in The Greater Trumps,
necromancey in All Hallow's Eve, and ghosts, witchcraft, and damnation in
Descent into Hell." (3) We are warned in scripture that the friends
we choose can influence us to evil, yet Lewis chose this blatantly ungodly
man for his close friend. Proverbs 22:24 Make
no friendship with an angry man; and with a furious man thou shalt not go:
25 Lest thou learn his ways, and get a snare to thy soul.
Lewis not only got a snare to his own soul, he has tried to pass it on to
children!
Lewis and Williams are said to have helped to keep the Luciferian concept
of the Holy Grail alive. "The symbol of the Grail as a mysterious object
of search and as the source of the ultimate mystical, or even physical,
experience has persisted into the present century in the novels of Charles
Williams, C.S. Lewis..."(4) Lewis and his two writer buddies, Williams
and J.R.R Tolkien, of the infamous Inklings, appear to be strongly connected
with the Priory of Sion mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau; otherwise known as
the so-called "holy bloodline" or "Merovingian" mystery
which claims that Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene were wed, had children
and that their descendants became the rightful royalty of Europe, particularly
France and Scotland. (5) It would hardly be surprising that Lewis would
believe this blasphemous, repulsive lie since he had such a high regard
for myths and had studied them so extensively. [See quote above.] The so-called
"holy bloodline" is also the same as or symbolized by the "holy
grail."
Some of the strange story lines which Lewis "invented" for his
stories may not be so strange when compared with the mythology that surrounds
the Priory of Sion mystery. The simple fact that plain English school children
could actually be royalty smacks of the hidden identity of the members of
the "holy bloodline" today and for many years past. Also, we find
that "Prince Caspian"marries a wife who has "the blood of
the stars" in her veins. (See chapters 13&14 in The Voyage of the
Dawn Treader, and p. 50 of The Silver Chair.)
![]() |
From the Encyclopedia Britannica, 1963 edition, vol. 16, p.119; "a town and episcopal see of the province of Terni, region of Umbria, Italy...picturesquely situated on a lofty rock (787 ft.)...taken by the Romans in 299 B.C....According to some author, the emperor Nerva was born at Narnia. The town played a considerable part in military history. In the middle ages Narni was under papal power..." It is also the geographic center of Italy. |
| Add
to this the fact that Narnia is not a "make believe" place somewhere in Lewis' imagination, but an actual town that existed in Italy (later called Narni), and you can see that Lewis may have been writing about esoteric things that he believed to be true. Strangely enough, the Priory of Sion lie is said to have resurfaced during the Middle Ages in Calabria, Italy; and then moved to France! (5) (The existence of a Narnia as a real place on earth may account for Lewis' use of the expression "What on earth..." in the Chronicles thus placing all this fantastic story line soundly on our planet. This then makes sense to those in witchcraft and paganism who believe the myths and idolatry from which he gleaned his plots, characters, etc. It is the doctrine of an invisible reality that can only be reached through magical means.) [Photo: A tower in Narni, Italy.] Remember that these books As we study the Chronicles This seems like as good a |
A
writer at factmonster.com says: "Narnia" was in fact the name
of an ancient Roman colony in central Italy, named for the river Nar
(now Nera). It has been said that Lewis discovered the name in an atlas
as a child, though he may also have come across mention of the city
in his university studies. By chance, the modern-day town of Narni (as
it is now known) honors a local saint known as "Blessed Lucy of
Narnia." Today the town's Cathedral of Narnia adjoins a shrine
to this St. Lucy. [Read
it.] There's almost too much coincidence here to believe it was all a grand accident, especially considering Lewis' advanced scholarship (by today's standards). See Narni's web site. View Photos. View Photos. Curiouser still... Narni was the site of a religious underground city which included a place where "heretics" were tortured during the Inquisition. Sotterrenea Lewis would not have known about this since it was officially discovered only 20 years ago. Interestingly, the name Pevensie possibly comes from Pevensey Castle in the south of England which was built by Romans also. (6 for links) |
Profanity
and Blasphemy
Next, we find that C. S. Lewis put profanity and blaspheming of God's name
in his book. While this it most common in his Space Trilogy, it also appears
in the Narnia books which are for children. Using profanity and swearing
for "realism" is out of line to begin with, and especially so
in books for kids! Exodus 20:7 Thou shalt
not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain; for the LORD will not hold
him guiltless that taketh his name in vain. There are no
exceptions made here for making fiction "realistic." In fact,
the Bible itself gives us an example of how this is to be handled even in
a true account. Matthew 26:72 And again he
denied with an oath, I do not know the man. 73 And after a while came unto
him they that stood by, and said to Peter, Surely thou also art one of them;
for thy speech bewrayeth thee. 74 Then began he to curse and to swear, saying,
I know not the man. And immediately the cock crew.
The Silver Chair -- "dam" p.4
The Magician's Nephew -- "Gawd", "dem" three times.
("Dam" and "dem" stand for "damn." "Gawd"
is "God.")
The word "ass" appears in 4 of the books. Being British, it did
not mean the same to him as it does to Americans (as a swear word), but
he could have left it out, especially since he only used it four times and
did use "donkey" in other places. However, considering the filthy
state of his mind, it is possible that he thought this cute. Certainly,
he could have had it editted out when he realized the books were going to
sold in America as well.
Added to this, in these Narnia books we find the "good guys" swearing
by Aslan. Now, IF Aslan is really a picture of Christ, as some would assure
us, then would it not follow that swearing by his name is blasphemy? When
the Narnians swear "by the mane of Aslan" or "by the Lion's
mane" would it not equal swearing by the Jesus' whiskers (commonly
shortened to "jeewhiz") if Aslan is really
a picture of Christ? And wouldn't it follow that "by Aslan" would
equal "by God" and "what in the name of Aslan" would
equal "what in God's name" if these people's claims are accurate?
Why would Lewis be so careless? It certainly does not fit the picture of
a "good, godly Christian" as he was supposed to be!
On p. 191 of The Horse and His Boy, Aravis says to the horse Bree, "Why
do you keep on swearing by the Lion and by the Lion's Mane? I thought you
hated lions." To this Lewis has Bree reply, "so I do, but when
I speak of the Lion, of course I mean Aslan. All Narnians swear
by him." [emphasis added]
Here we turn our attention to the darker and esoteric meanings of the Chronicles
of Narnia. As we progress with this study it will become clear that C. S.
Lewis was not glorifying the Lord Jesus Christ with these stories, but rather
was putting forth sun worship and other pagan idolatry and witchcraft by
using hidden meanings and symbolism. Since he professed to believe that
Christ was the fulfillment of paganism ("...as I believe, Christ,...fulfills
both Paganism and Judaism..."; p. 129; Reflections on the Psalms) it
is not surprising that there are things in these books that would lead one
to think that Lewis was writing an allegory of Christianity; but, when his
terminology, characters, and such are examined closely it becomes apparent
that he had something else on his mind.
When Lewis has Bree say, "All Narnians swear by him" an interesting
point comes to light. All Christians do not swear by Christ or God. In fact,
Christians that are trying to ...live godly in Christ Jesus... (2Timothy
3:12 ) know that this is totally unacceptable for a Christian! Titus
2:12 Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should
live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world;
On On the other hand, all sun worshippers do swear by the sun! Mr. Lewis
has condemned himself by his own words! Matthew
12:37 For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt
be condemned.
by Mary Van Nattan
(1) Light on C. S. Lewis; written by various of his friends and edited by
Jocelyn Gibb; p. 63.
(2) Essays Presented to Charles Williams; edited by C. S. Lewis. From the
preface.
(2a)
LETTER FROM A READER-- Sept. 16, 2000
Dear Steve,
I was browsing thru your site after my previous e-mail and came across this in your section on C.S. Lewis: One of Lewis' favorite pubs, "The Eagle and Child," familiarly known as "The Bird and Baby."
This inn-sign is actually a representation of the pagan god Zeus/Jupiter in the form of an eagle carrying off a boy called Ganymede to Olympus to serve as a sexual plaything. I don't know whether that was why Lewis was attracted to it, but it can hardly be coincidental that such a foul and disgusting image should be associated with a pub frequented by such a person as Lewis.
(See www.ecsel.psu.edu/~rreynold/Ganymede.htm for confirmation.)
Bless
you, Hugh Anka
(6) See sites on Pevensey: Ancient
Roman Fortification, Wikipedia
article, photos
and more
photos.
Some information for this article was obtained from a documented paper written
by an unknown author. We wish that we could give the proper credit, but
the Lord knows who they are will reward them properly on that day!
LETTER FROM A READER:
Dear Mary and Steve,
Thank you for the posting about C.S. Lewis and Narnia.
I had believed what others had said "the allegory, analogy" etc. and had several British made videos of Narnia stories.
I had no idea where the root of these ideas were coming from and didn't know what they really were. I just assumed that they were good because they were "artsy and creative"
I think that they left out the Bacchanalia in the movie. Probably sanitized somewhat.
When I first saw your site, I don't remember if it was one or two years ago, I just dumped all the CSL stuff in the garbage. Obvious to me that that stuff was not good.
There is an important lesson from all of this. With any thing we have to not Jump on a Bandwagon, before we evaluate and examine who is playing in the Band, or where the Wagon is going.
There is another ministry covering this lately (Berit Kjos) at www.crossroad.to
Many assume that the battle is between Good and Evil in the stories, but isn't it between some new leaders that are mean and some old leaders from the "old Days" of former "false glory" or - both sides of the tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil that was in the Garden of Eden.
Maybe this is a diversion created to entice people into a different mindset so that they won't take God's Word seriously.
I had the Mere Christianity in the house and threw that away too. Never read it carefully. Didn't notice that it advocated syncretism. Or "whatever works for whoever" philosophy. When pointed out it was clear as day.
![]() |
|
|||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|||||||||
![]() |
|
|
|
|
||||||||
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
![]() |
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||
![]() |
|
|||||||||||
| |
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|