- Wed, Nov 09, 2011
- Christ
The Water of Life for the Thirsty
In C. S. Lewis’s The Silver Chair, a young girl from earth, Jill Pole, is alone, lost, and very thirsty as she wanders through the foreign world of Narnia. Then she sees, for the first time, Aslan, the great and ferocious lion, standing by a stream of fresh water.





Nanci and I leave today for 12 days in Oxford and Cambridge where I'm teaching at the Oxbridge
I have been rereading C. S. Lewis’s
I know some of you, like me, have been deeply touched by the Lord through the writings of C. S. Lewis. So I’m going to tell you about something we’re doing this summer, just so you’ll all know about it, and in case a small number of you may sense God’s leading to attend.
The apostle John says we know what God’s love is because of the unthinkable price Jesus paid for us, to turn us into God’s own children, fully acceptable in his sight. God’s love abounds. It proliferates. It’s overflowing, even excessive—something all sufferers need to hear.
I appreciated what C. S. Lewis wrote in The Four Loves about the vulnerability of love:





