Tolkien and Lewis Lecture with Peter Kreeft in Dallas

From booksblog.dallasnews.com: Saturday evening, Nov. 21, 2009, lovers of two of the most popular writers of all time–C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, known popularly for the Narnia series and Lord of the Rings–may spend an evening with Peter Kreeft of Boston. The dinner opens at 6:30 p.m. in Elliott Hall at Highland Park Presbyterian Church, 3821 University Blvd. in Dallas. Tickets are $70; the evening includes “the most literary silent auction in Dallas.”

To reserve seats, email mdmonse@yahoo.com.

Read more about the event

Event to feature work of C.S. Lewis

The Sam Houston State University Department of Theatre and Dance is presenting Bareface, a narrative work of dance theater based on “Till We Have Faces” by C.S. Lewis.

The concert begins at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday at the ABIII Dance Theatre at Sam Houston State University.

In tandem with “Bareface,” Dr. Peter Kreeft will give a lecture over C.S. Lewis and his last novel, “Till We Have Faces.”

The talk starts at 2 p.m. Friday in the Mafrige Auditorium located in the Smith-Hutson Building on the SHSU campus. The event is open to the public and students. Admission is free.

Cheryl Callon, an advanced graduate student at SHSU, organized the event to include Kreeft’s lecture because she wanted to bring an academic audience to an arts event.

“I’m pitching it as a C.S. Lewis weekend in Huntsville,” she said.

Kreeft is a professor of philosophy at Boston College and at the King’s College in New York City. He is a the author of over 45 books, including, “Handbook of Christian Apologetics,” “Christianity for Modern Pagans” and “Fundamentals of the Faith.” Kreeft will speak again Feb. 9 from 8:30-10 a.m. at First United Methodist Church. FUMC is hosting a breakfast for Kreeft, and he is giving a short lecture titled “C.S. Lewis for Today’s World.” For more information on Kreeft, visit his website at www.peterkreeft.com.

“Bareface” is the graduate thesis concert of Callon. Callon is a Master of Fine Arts candidate who choreographed and produced the concert.

[Read the rest at the Huntsville Item]

Peter Kreeft talks Lewis, Narnia

Peter Kreeft, Ph.D., is a professor of philosophy at Boston College. He is a regular contributor to several Christian publications, is in wide demand as a speaker at conferences, and is the author of over 45 books including the excellent Handbook of Christian Apologetics which is WELL worth the read. It is just incredible. He’s got audio available, on C.S. Lewis’ works, available at the following link.

[Listen to Peter Kreeft here]

13. Lost in the Cosmos — Contrasts two classics, Walker Percy’s Lost in the Cosmos and C.S. Lewis’s The Abolition of Man, on the topics of Natural Law, humor and irony, direct and indirect communication, the nature of self, knowing vs. knowing about, and others

14. Mere Christianity — Next to the Bible, C.S. Lewis’s masterpiece receives Dr. Kreeft’s highest recommendation

15. The Problem of Pain — A commentary on C.S. Lewis’s brilliant exposition on the problems of suffering and evil

16. Till We Have Faces — A commentary on C.S. Lewis’s solution to evil, worked out in fiction. Also deals with the fascinating question “Why does God wear disguises?”

17. A Grief Observed — C.S. Lewis’s personal and honest account of the loss of his wife, and how God deepened his love

20. Time and Eternity — C.S. Lewis’ insights on these intriguing topics

21. The Cosmic Dance — C.S. Lewis’ joyful cosmology of femininity and masculinity

22. The Imagination — C.S. Lewis and the power of creative images

27. The Good, True and Beautiful — C.S. Lewis on the three great transcendentals

And be sure to check out the Video Lecture for What Christians Believe — A review of Part II of “Mere Christianity” by C. S. Lewis, which is the first book Kreeft recommends after the Bible. And also the Audio Lecture for an online streaming interview with Kreeft (and other speakers) regarding C.S. Lewis and the Screwtape Letters.

The Third Austin C. S. Lewis Conference – Registration Open

Peter Kreeft, William Lane Craig and Frederica Mathewes Green will lead the journey as we explore the heart and depth of the Christian faith. These internationally known speakers will give us a rich day of thought provoking insight. Artistic performances scattered like shimmering islands throughout the day will give us time to enjoy the God-given creativity of the Body of Christ. We will also enjoy meals outdoors under tents with live music and a play in the evening on the life of C.S. Lewis created and performed by the author, David Payne, An Evening with C.S. Lewis.

Our regional team is once again organizing a feast for the heart, mind, and soul. We invite you to be part of the fun, excitement, and reasoned consideration of our faith, all stimulated by the author of The Chronicles of Narnia. With Lewis as our guide, these contemporary speakers and performers will give us thoughtful spiritual food to digest.

The day will begin with Celtic worship music by the band Wear That Shoe from San Marcos. Joel Heck, Chief Academic Officer of Concordia University at Austin and a Fellow of the Institute, will deliver the opening meditation. We will sing hymns to waken our spirits.

William Lane Craig will present “Are There Objective Truths About God?” Bill Craig is a leading Christian apologist on the core of the faith: the reliability of the resurrection and the accounts of the miraculous in Scripture.

An artistic interlude featuring Wear That Shoe will follow. The band has 8 terrific musicians and features a wide variety of stylistic influences.

From Celtic and folk to jazz, they will entertain and bring us “in step” with the rhythm of the day.

Peter Kreeft will present “The Only Apologetic Guaranteed to Win the World.” Prof. Kreeft is a prolific author and entertaining speaker with a rare talent of turning a phrase that both enlightens and entertains.

Lunch will follow outdoors with live music. Meal time performers include Paul Finley, Keith Atkinson and Scott Hawley.

Frederica Mathewes Green will present the third talk “A Golden Bell and a Pomegranate.” Frederica’s talk on beauty as an apologetic will be a delight.

After an artistic interlude, the Panel Discussion will then be moderated by Bill Taylor, Executive Director of the World Evangelical Alliance Mission Commission and a Fellow of the Institute. Bill and the three speakers will be joined by Joel Heck and David Taylor, Arts Pastor of Hope Chapel and Artistic Advisor to the Institute.

Dinner will be outdoors under tents with live music–an old fashioned Texas barbeque and a chance to reflect on the day with friends, both old and new.

David Payne will then perform his original creation An Evening with C.S. Lewis, which is an intriguing and fun way to get to know Lewis as a person.

REGISTRATION is online at www.hillcountryinstitute.org. Online payments are through PayPal and are secure and safe. The cost is $60 through February 28, $75 through April 25, and $85 beginning April 26–if any tickets remain. Seating is limited, so register soon.

The speakers will also speak in sponsoring churches on Sunday. Visit the web site for additional details.

PS-an idea and challenge: Bring a friend or family member who is not a Christ follower, and give them a day of thought provoking Christian speakers and the glory and beauty of artistic expression in the faith. After all, Lewis himself was “a prodigal,” brought into the kingdom “kicking, struggling, and darting his eyes in every direction for a chance of escape.”

Your favorite seeker, skeptic, and/or atheist may have much in common with Lewis. But stand ready! Once exposed to goodness, truth, and beauty, (aka, the “deeper magic”), your guest may experience what Lewis experienced after he fully embraced Christianity: “It was more like when a man, after a long sleep, still lying motionless in bed, becomes aware that he is now awake.”

We hope to see you in Austin for this glorious weekend. All friends of Narnia are welcome!

A Rare Portrait of C.S. Lewis by Those Who Knew Him

In a couple of weeks, the world will be captivated by the blockbuster film release, “Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe” – and will be logically curious about who wrote it, what inspired him, and what he was really like.

Remembering C. S. Lewis: Recollections of Those Who Knew Him (see: http://www.ignatiusinsight.com/features2005/vs_jamescomo_dec05.asp ), just released by Ignatius Press, is a collection of 24 reminiscences and impressions from friends, students and acquaintances of C. S. Lewis – the famed creator of the Narnia tales. The book is edited by James T. Como, founding member of the New York C. S. Lewis Society.

The book provides a glimpse of how C.S. Lewis’ own experiences provided snippets that grew into a beloved classic, and most recently into the Narnia movie to be released by Disney in early December 2005. This volume is for the casual and serious student of Lewis because its readable essays take a step beyond biography to original sources with personal anecdotes and thoughts. Lewis died in 1963, on the same day as President John F. Kennedy and Brave New World author Aldous Huxley.

“The singular authority of this collection derives from one central fact – all but two contributors (one of them being the editor) were personally acquainted with Lewis,” Como notes.

‘The man who created Narnia’ would have been quite at home in his mythical world, because as friends recall in the book, C.S. Lewis cut an “egg-shaped” figure who managed to dress quite shabbily even in a new suit, loved country rambles and wild creatures, and detested artifice and intolerance.

Chronicles begins as the four children step through the back of a wardrobe closet in England in the midst of World War II, into a world frozen by the White Witch, populated by mythical animals and creatures; a place where Good and Evil battle and the children’s own moral struggles play a role in rescuing Narnia.

Renowned as one of the great 20th-century defenders of Christianity, Lewis in The Chronicles of Narnia fulfills first and foremost his own advice as related by one of the essayists in James Como’s book: “The first duty of an author is to entertain.”

“Lewis confessed to drawing many ideas for scenes and characters in his stories from mind pictures that came to him either waking or asleep,” related his friend Roger Lancelyn Green whose assistance Lewis acknowledged on the Narnian tales. In fact, Lewis felt his dreams about lions at the time of writing The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, are what may have brought the powerful Christ-like figure of Aslan into being, Green writes.

A prolific, learned and accessible author, a bachelor who found love in his 50s, Lewis was a tutor to university students for 30 years and a friend to many. His friend, theologian Austin Farrer writes that Lewis corresponded in his own hand with readers who wrote him from all over the world. “His characteristic attitude to people in general was one of consideration and respect. He did his best for them, and he appreciated them. He paid you the compliment of attending to your words. He did not pretend to read your heart,” Farrer writes.

So too, Lewis maintained his own reserve, only briefly allowing most friends an inkling of his personal life, recalled several essayists.

Readers of this book and fans of Narnia will quickly see how the man who was Clive S. Lewis-”Jack” to his friends-was a generous, imaginative, yet razor-sharp moralist and philosopher whose world view is translated into a world that rivets, charms, and disarms. At the same time, essayist after essayist relates Lewis’s personal quirks.

Clifford Morris, a minister who drove Lewis during the last years of life and accompanied Lewis on many of his walks in the English countryside, writes that he picked up Lewis at the nursing home the night his wife Joy died, and thus was the first to see him after the hospital staff.

“He did not wish to go straight home, and so we sat in the car and talked-for a long time. We talked about the things that good friends do talk about on such occasions, and I shall always count it a privilege to have seen-and shared, in some measure-his Christian faith,” Morris said.

Famous for his mastery of logic and language, Lewis’s disregard for his clothing and regular misplacing of his hat was almost as legendary. At one point a week after a walk, Morris and Lewis found Lewis’s hat under a hedge “being used as a home for field mice. Jack retrieved it of course and continued to wear it.”

“This book…of Lewis is richly varied in perspective, length, intimacy, and elegance about one of the arguably greatest Christian thinkers and writers of all time,” says Peter Kreeft, Ph.D., author of C.S. Lewis for the Third Millennium. “They invite you in, and make you feel like a friend of C.S. Lewis.”

Joseph Pearce, world-renowned literary biographer and author of C. S. Lewis and The Catholic Church, says Como’s book is “an invaluable, indeed an indispensable, addition to the burgeoning sphere of Lewis scholarship.”

To help audiences understand C.S. Lewis, the celebrated 20th-century author behind Disney’s upcoming “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe” movie — Ignatius Press offers six top author-experts on the author and his writings.

These articulate, entertaining, and renowned authors and scholars know C.S. Lewis and his fascinating world of Narnia inside and out.

Michael Coren is the author of C.S. Lewis: The Man Who Created Narnia, a biography of Lewis written for teens (Ignatius Press, January 2006). Coren examines how Lewis’ own life led him to write The Chronicles of Narnia. A Canadian broadcaster and columnist, Coren is host of the nightly television program, The Michael Coren Show, and also hosts a radio show of the same name. Michael is a columnist with the Toronto, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton and Winnipeg Sun. He is the best-selling author of 10 books-including works on J.R.R. Tolkien, G.K. Chesterton, and H.G. Wells. Coren is also a highly popular and entertaining public speaker.

James Como, Ph.D., is a New York-based scholar of C.S. Lewis and a professor of rhetoric and public communication at the City University of New York. A founding member of the New York C.S. Lewis Society, Como’s books include Remembering C.S. Lewis (Ignatius Press, 2005) and Branches to Heaven: The Geniuses of C.S. Lewis. Como’s broadcast commentary on Lewis includes the PBS documentary The Question of God. In 1993 he visited the closed set of Richard Attenborough’s Shadowlands and interviewed the principals of that film.

Thomas Howard is an English professor at St. John’s Seminary in Massachusetts. In his soon-to-be-re-released book, NARNIA AND BEYOND: A Guide to the Fiction of C.S. Lewis, Howard examines Lewis’ joyous world view, evinced by dancing, drinking and partying rabbits, badgers, dwarves and children in the “fairy tales” of The Chronicles of Narnia. Howard says Narnia shows Lewis’ view those women-as embodied particularly in Lucy who sees things first-are especially receptive to mystical experiences. Most of all, Howard says that Lewis is “a storyteller in the tradition of the bards who sang to us because it is a worthy and beautiful thing to do.”

Joseph Pearce is the author of C.S. Lewis and the Catholic Church (Ignatius Press 2003), a biography that examines the Anglican Lewis’ relationship to the Roman Catholic Church. Pearce, a noted biographer of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, J.R.R. Tolkien, Oscar Wilde, and others, is a former London skinhead who turned away from that racist world view and now teaches literature at Ave Maria University in Florida. Pearce answers each question asked clearly and with respect-a great interview for the journalist seeking a fellow Brit’s perspective on one of the 20th century’s greatest writers.

Peter Kreeft, a Boston College professor of philosophy, sees C.S. Lewis as one of the key prophets for the Third Millennium. Kreeft is a best selling author of more than 40 books, including C.S. Lewis for the Third Millennium, Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Heaven, Love is Stronger Than Death, and Ecumenical Jihad: A combat manual for the culture wars. He lectures widely on Lewis and is probably America’s leading expert on his thought

Richard Purtill is the author of 20 books, including C.S. Lewis’ Case for the Christian Faith. Purtill is professor emeritus in philosophy at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Washington. Purtill says Lewis’ knack for “marvelous metaphors” is one of his great strengths in both fiction and non-fiction.

For an interview to discuss C.S. Lewis with one of the six Ignatius Press author-experts detailed above, please contact Christine Valentine-Owsik at 215-230-8095 or valencom@aol.com.

Science Fiction Expert Available to Talk About the Popularity and Passion of ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’

Phil Ray, associate professor of English at Connecticut College and a specialist in science fiction and fantasy literature, is available to talk about the social, religious and cultural relevance of the upcoming blockbuster movie “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.”

Ray, who regularly teaches classes on “Narnia” author C. S. Lewis, said that “The Chronicles of Narnia” resonates with the public because Lewis presents the “truths” of Christianity through pictures and plots that even the youngest reader can grasp.

“”Narnia” is Lewis’s greatest work because he deals with his favorite theme, the central Christian “truths,” and because in the process he liberates himself from the restraints of logical and theological argument to revel in the pleasures of storytelling at its most basic level,” Ray said.

“In “Narnia” Lewis says goodbye to lay theology and re- embraces pure story.”

To contact Prof. Ray, contact the Connecticut College Office of Media Relations at 860-439-2508.

C.S. Lewis Summer Conference Response!

I sent an e-mail to the C.S. Lewis Foundation for feedback on the C.S. Lewis Summer Conference at the University of San Diego: The Fantastic Worlds of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Here’s the incredible response from Marlon Davies, an intern at the Foundation:

The Conference went smashingly! It was truly a magnificent weekend of fellowship, good company and quality learning. I have included a link to an article from Dick Staub, one of our featured guests over the course of the weekend. It will give you a window into one person’s experience. DickStaub.com

Overall, we received excellent praise and feedback about all our guests, especially scholars Peter Kreeft and Joseph Pearce, actor Tony Lawton and music artist, Fernando Ortega.

The C.S. Lewis Foundation will be facilitating a number of things throughout the next year. However, everything will be working toward, in anticipation, OxBridge 2005. You can view the archives of the 2002 OxBridge conference “Time and Eternity” at our site. This is similar in nature to the recent San Diego conference, but larger. The theme of 2005 will be “The Good, the True, and the Beautiful”. Our site will be updated this summer will much more information on the event. [July 24-August 5, 2005: Oxbridge 2005 Summer Institute - "The Good, the True and the Beautiful"] Also, any other events coming up will also be updated quite soon online.

Most notable will be the C.S. Lewis tall ship cruise. A beautiful way to see the British Isles and learn more about Lewis and his life and writings. This is put on in partnership with 1st century voyages.

For more information, visit: C.S. Lewis Foundation
and NarniaFans’ Festivals page