Tuesday, August 18th, 2009 by Paul Martin
A few days ago some pictures surfaced that included Ben Barnes as King Caspian, and Skandar Keynes as Edmund Pevensie in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. While those pictures have, for the most part, disappeared from the web (they’re only available by purchase from TitoMedia), one of them has been posted by a British tabloid called The Sun. We don’t have permission to post any of these images, so we kindly ask that you do not post it here in the comments or in the forums.
We’ll post whatever images that we are allowed to post, as soon as we’re allowed to, however, including spy photos.
If you want to see the image, take a look here: Sail away with magic of Narnia.
Tuesday, September 26th, 2006 by Joseph Ravitts
While Aslan flat-out IS Jesus Christ, many other characters in the Narnian stories can be called _analogies_ to something in the Bible. However far his inventiveness ranged, Mr. Lewis did not forget about Scripture. I was almost finished writing a fairly detailed article on this topic, when my treacherous computer chose to delete all my work for no reason. (Maybe Mr. Lewis and his brother weren’t so bad off using a manual typewriter after all.) Now it’s late at night and I’m tired; so I’ll shortcut salvaging the article by a minimal restatement of the correlations I’d listed.
1) Athaliah, daughter of Jezebel: parallel to Jadis, sharing the Witch’s willingness to murder children for the sake of power.
2) Balaam, the dubious prophet whose donkey was the only ordinary animal in the Bible that spoke: some parallel to Uncle Andrew, since Uncle Andrew’s contact with talking animals was part of the sequence of events which offered him s chance of redemption.
3) The Apostle Thomas: Puddleglum. Neither of them _wanted_ an unhappy outcome, even though both _expected_ one, and both were loyal at heart.
4) Nehemiah, a man who was not granted explicit miracles but set an example of integrity as he came from far away to clean up Jerusalem: parallel to King Caspian arriving at the Lone Islands and cleaning up the government there.
5) The spoiled, selfish sons of the mediocre priest Eli in First Samuel: parallel to the ape Shift, who only grew more selfish the more the donkey Puzzle gave in to his demands.
Joseph Richard Ravitts (pronounced RAY-vitts)
http://ut-fidem-praestem.blogspot.com