How C.S. Lewis's fairy tales can impact your friends for Christ.
| posted 5/21/2008
The summer Lindy Lowry was 20, she rejected the Christian faith she'd had since childhood—dismissing it as a fairy tale that made no sense in a world full of evil. That's because while she was away at college attending summer school, the unthinkable happened: Her best friend since childhood was kidnapped, raped, and brutally murdered.
Lindy questioned everything after her friend's horrific death. Was God really good? Her friend had been a Christian; why hadn't God protected her? "It caused a crisis of faith unlike anything I'd ever experienced," Lindy says. "If God let such horrible, senseless things happen, I wanted nothing to do with him."
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Lindy rejected God, but during the rebellious, angry season that followed, Lindy's Christian friends didn't reject her. It was their friendship—and several "fairy tales" by famed Christian apologist C.S. Lewis—that eventually restored her faith. Chief among those was his seven-volume children's series, The Chronicles of Narnia.
Not Just for KidsOne of Lindy's faithful friends knew she'd loved the Narnia series as a child. But she also knew it was relevant to Lindy's current, very adult situation. Unlike the hollow reassurances her slain friend was "in a better place" that some offered, this friend read Lindy the last chapter of the final Narnia book in which Lewis offers a beautiful description of heaven. His vision showed Lindy just how wonderful that place is.
Her friend also had Lindy re-read Lewis's description in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe of Aslan the Lion: "He's not safe, but he's good." Lindy could relate to that—God felt very unsafe and unpredictable. The rest of the stories contained truth about the struggle between good and evil of which Lindy was now more aware.
"Lewis didn't tie up everything nice and neat," Lindy, now in her mid-30s, recalls, "but his words started me on a path of exploring who God is, as compared to what I'd always been told."
While others' experiences might not be as dramatic as Lindy's, Lewis's fantasy stories have struck a chord with millions of readers through the years. With over a million copies in print since the 1950s, the Chronicles is second only to Harry Potter as the best-selling children's book series ever. And now Lewis's series is being made into full-length feature films.
From the Page to the ScreenThe Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and now, Prince Caspian, are big-budget affairs with special effects by the same team behind the blockbuster The Lord of the Rings movies (based on the books written by Lewis's friend and fellow Christian J.R.R. Tolkien). As such, it provides Christians a prime opportunity to share God's love with their friends and families.
Lewis wrote the Chronicles as a Christian who wanted to help people understand God and his deep love for them. The story, on its surface, is about four children who accidentally stumble into a magical land of talking beasts and fantastic creatures ruled by an evil sorceress, the White Witch. The children meet Aslan the Lion, True King of Narnia, and eventually join him in defeating the White Witch. Biblical themes of good against evil, forgiveness, and redemption are woven into the story. But while Aslan is a Christ figure, the story doesn't retell the Bible story. It's a fantasy, which makes it appealing to a wide audience.



