Synchronicity and CS Lewis and the trees of Mars
70Chronicles of Narnia
C.S. Lewis was an Irish author and writer probably most famous for The Chronicles of Narnia , a series of books in which children visit another world and where a war between good and evil is taking places and God is represented as Aslan the lion.
As a child I never had any liking for church or prayers or anything to do with the Christian religion that my school taught but when I first discovered Lewis' work viaThe Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe all of that was to change.
CS Lewis books on Ebay
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C S Lewis - Out of the Silent Planet - 1949 d/w
Current Bid: $7.80
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The Complete C.S. Lewis Signature Classics (Paperback)
Current Bid: $17.94
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The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis Hardcover 1944 Macmillan Company New York
Current Bid: $9.99
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The Company They Keep:C.S.Lewis J. R. R. Tolkien 1st
Current Bid: $50.00
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The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis (2004, Unabridged, Compact Disc)
Current Bid: $15.99
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The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis (2003, Abridged, Compact Disc)
Current Bid: $10.25
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Books by CS Lewis
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Out of the Silent Planet
Fiction with a spiritual message
I read all the other Narnia books and reread them and am about to again now. They were a form of spirituality that made sense to me and still do. I was so influenced by the Narnia books that one of my only son's Christian names is Aslan.
Lewis, who was a very good friend of J.R.R Tolkien, was a Christian writer, and although I would by no means describe myself as a Christian, I understand his books so well and believe they have an important message that I can relate to. It is not just the The Chronicles of Narnia , which are some of my personal favourites, but also his science fiction trilogy, also known as the "Space Trilogy," which are set on Earth, Mars and Venus.
The first of these is Out of the Silent Planet (1938) in which the hero Dr Ransom is kidnapped and forced to go to Mars in a spaceship by the evil scientist Dr Weston and his accomplice, Devine. They intend giving Ransom to some Martian beings known as Sorns, whom they believe will sacrifice him. Weston is after gold on the planet and also intends wiping out the native beings and making it a human world from which he can conquer the rest of space. Humans and science are the rulers of the universe in his mind.
Ransom escapes on Mars, or Malacandra as it is called, and meets with and befriends the Hrossa, the Sorns and the Pfifltriggi, who are the races of beings that live on the planet as well finding out about the Eldila, who are like angels or other dimensional spirit beings. All the life forms on Mars look to a leading eldil known as Oyarsa and above him there is a being called Maleldil, who is the equivalent of God.
Ransom learns that all the beings that live on Mars live in harmony presided over by Oyarsa, and that Earth is known as Thulcandra, the Silent Planet, which is ruled by a "Bent Eldil," who is clearly representing the Devil.
Space, as such, is full of life and the domain of the eldila and Earth has become a planet that is the odd one out in the solar system because of its "bent" ruler. Wikipedia describes the situation as follows:
"Because the eldila, who fill space (or "the heavens," which are depicted as warm and bright under the influence of the Sun) know nothing about what goes on inside those boundaries, Earth is called Thulcandra, "the silent planet". While Earth has fallen into evil, Mars has not. This represented one of Lewis's concerns about space travel: that fallen humanity would have nothing to offer other life in space other than our depravity."
In view of this it is not surprising to find that author and alternative historian Michael Tsarion lists Lewis as a highly recommended author. Tsarion believes this planet was taken over by an evil alien race - the Nephilim of the Bible - who interbred with humans and became imprisoned here and are in quarantine for the safety of the other worlds, but who seek to esape and spread their evil thoughout the universe.
In Out of the Silent Planet , Mars has vast forests of very tall trees and oceans. As in the Narnia books the animals are all portrayed as good beings. Without going more into the story, I will just add that in the end the humans are sent back to Earth for the safety of the life on Mars.
I had just read Out of the Silent Planet again when I happened on a blog at Myspace by my friend Saint of Circumstance. And here is where the synchronicity was amazing - his blog was about the NASA photos of a lake and huge trees on Mars. Google "trees on Mars" and you will find loads of info on this.
In the next book Perelandra or Voyage to Venus (1943), Ransom and Weston end up on Venus, where again, Ransom meets the friendly beasts, such as a dragon, and inhabitants of Perelandra, including the Green Lady, who represents the Biblical Eve in another Garden of Eden. Weston is cast as working for the Devil, and he does all he can to lead her astray, He actually becomes the "Un-man" when he is possessed by the Bent One's spirit. It is against this evil that Ransom must battle against incredible odds. He knows that is why he is there and what is at stake.He must prevent Weston bringing evil into Perelandra.
The third book in the series is That Hideous Strength (1945) and set on Earth.
Copyright © 2010 Steve Andrews. All Rights Reserved.
Links:
CS Lewis on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._S._Lewis
Michael Tsarion's personal site: http://www.taroscopes.com/
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We grew up having C. S. Lewis as our bedtime stories. I have heard and read all of the "Narnia" stories, and they are all great and also very funny. Strange thing is I never thought of them as having Christian Connections at the time I heard them, they were simply exciting stories that captured my imagination.
I just wonder if being born in Belfast qualifies you as being Irish? Lewis was sent to school in England and never lived anywhere else after that. I don't think he thought of himself as being Irish.
That said, this is an interesting hub. I haven't read the "Silent Planet" trilogy for many years, and must do so again. Unlike "Misty", I clicked that Lewis was re-telling the New Testament at the "Resurredtion" scene, after which all the other stories fell into place.
What do you make of Philip Pullman's anti-Lewis trilogy?
Well I learned something today! I've also read the Narnia books many times over, and have also read them to my children, and I knew about the Christian connection. What I didn't know, however, was that he'd also dabbled in science fiction, and I will certainly look out for these books. Thanks for an interesting hub.
Hi Steve, well how's this for a bit of synchronicity: when i came out to Tenerife to visit I was reading Out of the Silent Planet, which I left with my sister. I read Perelandra on my return journey. I plan to read That Hideous Strength soon. I also have a copy of his theological works which are very interesting, particularly the Screwtape Letters. As for the "trees" of Mars they're about a km across so must be bloody mighty trees indeed. I think I will await the scientific explanation rather than rely on the speculation of techy nerds on the internet.
Another great hub, Steve! I am still praying to laid off so I have some reading time--I can't recall ever having this negative an attitude toward my work. If things keep going the way they are going, I'll get my wish soon!
I wonder if you don't resonate with more of the pagan legend and iconography that the early church absorbed--this seems to really come through Lewis's writing in a way that it doesn't with evangelical sermons and original texts. It would be a fine project if someone could tie the traditions together in a continuous line instead of perpetuating the supposed chasm between the two. I do think it could be done. After all, the story of Jesus is basically Isis/Osiris told anew. It's a very ancient story. Not to take anything away from the historical Jesus at all--in fact, it would add a new dimension to the idea of "the Word made flesh" to tie Christianity to the more ancient tellings of the tale.
C.S. Lewis, the most notorious athesit-turned-Christian. His space trilogy is phenomenal and I'm glad you mentioned it, albeit the final installement literally blew my mind after 40 pages. HE was quite the author, and while I enjoyed Narnia in my preteen years I abandoned the childish concept for the Lord of the Rings, lol. I also liked his religious ranting in Mere Christianity and his satirical Screwtape Letters. His least known authorship was "The Pilgrim's Regress", to which I confess utter confusion.
I be;ieve it's a personality issue, where one who likes the one books series generally doesn't like the opposing :)
Wow, you're the first person I know who's "free spirited" but not into Led Zeppelin...that's actually refreshing. I figure the hippy-side of me likes folk music more than anything modern or mainstream.
Tolkien was actually the dude who influenced a lot of Lewis' works, especially Narnia!


















Jerry G2 3 years ago
I've always been a C.S. Lewis fan, of both his fiction and non fiction. The stories are very good, the non fiction is thought provoking, and I just feel like you're enriched by the simple experience of a Lewis book. Great hub, thanks for sharing!