
released 5/22/2026
In this 1994 essay, Vigen Guroian journeys through C. S. Lewis’s Narnia chronicles to discover the “motifs of faith and redemption” that illuminate and illustrate the Christian experience. Throughout these stories, Lewis reveals how the mystery of faith is engaged through seeing, hearing, and remembering. These practices help strengthen the Narnian “church” and lead to its spiritual awakening when the lion and Christ figure, Aslan, returns to the land. Guroian explores the threads of remembrance, obedience, liturgy, eucharistic presence, dance, and joy that run throughout the Narnia stories in hope that readers (and listeners) will find their own faith and memory reawakened to the hope of Christ and his kingdom.
This essay is provided courtesy of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. It was published in the Fall 1994 issue of Modern Age and is read by Ken Myers.
41 minutes
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