A lecture series looking at examples of the three major genres of C.S. Lewis's literary criticism, fiction, and apologetics.
Curated by: Dr Scott Masson (29 videos)
In the third book of Mere Christianity, C.S. Lewis seeks to explain Christian behaviour to his readers, leaving his most explicitly theological exposition to the fourth and final chapter. I suggest that the logic of this order is less warranted by the material than it is a sign that he is following the order presented in Dante's Divine Comedy. Yet even there, he (typically for a modern man) inverts the theological virtues and places faith AFTER hope and charity, a point I discuss in the next lecture. ❤️ If you find my channel helpful, become a channel member: www.youtube.com/c/DrScottMasson ❤️ Subscribe to my Substack: https://drscottmasson.substack.com/ ❤️ Support my channel and assist me in providing better content: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?token=FZN9nCjKxWQNUnF_jsASfpjiVyRpj1H_mdGvxmYj9wIO-ZgrxM5vR1V-nTy3kKygP1gh10&fromUL=true&country.x=CA&locale.x=en_US/?token=FZN9nCjKxWQNUnF_jsASfpjiVyRpj1H_mdGvxmYj9wIO-ZgrxM5vR1V-nTy3kKygP1gh10&fromUL=true&country.x=CA&locale.x=en_US