I will be in Indianapolis on Wednesday, August 26, speaking to the Central Indiana C. S. Lewis Society about Sheldon Vanauken, author of A Severe Mercy. The meeting will be at 7 pm at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, located at 34th and Central in Indianapolis. My powerpoint presentation will focus, in part, on Vanauken's Indiana roots. The presentation is open to the public. For more information on Sheldon Vanauken you may visit my web site: http://www.willvaus.com/sheldon_vanauken.
Arthur Greeves In light of recent developments in the United States on the issue of gay marriage, I thought it would be interesting to revisit what C. S. Lewis thought about homosexuality. Lewis, who died in 1963, never wrote about same-sex marriage, but he did write, occasionally, about the topic of homosexuality in general. In the following I am quoting from my book, Mere Theology: A Guide to the Thought of C. S. Lewis . For detailed references and footnotes, you may obtain a copy from Amazon, your local library, or by clicking on the book cover at the right.... In Surprised by Joy , Lewis claimed that homosexuality was a vice to which he was never tempted and that he found opaque to the imagination. For this reason he refused to say anything too strongly against the pederasty that he encountered at Malvern College, where he attended school from the age of fifteen to sixteen. Lewis did not rate pederasty as the greatest evil of the school because he felt the cruelty displa
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