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The Christian World of C. S. Lewis is unavailable, but you can change that!

C. S. Lewis was one of the twentieth century’s foremost Christian authors—at once a scholar, a teacher, a social critic, an amateur yet profound theologian, and an apologist. Clyde Kilby examines Lewis’ Christian works one by one, compares them with each other and with books by other authors, and elucidates the themes that recur throughout the main body of Lewis’ writings.

the Roman church, the Orthodox faiths, and the Salvation Army have all retained a certain gusto that his own church could well re-acquire. His objection to Roman Catholicism was the ordinary Protestant one, that of addition of doctrines not in the Bible, such as transubstantiation, the immaculate conception, worship of the Blessed Virgin, and papal infallibility. Yet he felt that Protestants are about as busy in subtracting from the Gospel as Romans are in adding to it. He felt more at home with
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