This is the reason I don't quote him anymore. When I was a young believer and didn't know any better I had some of his books. All the "educated" people recommended him to me as someone to follow. I read his writing and some of them didn't make sense so I set them aside. Years later when I went back to read them again I realized he had many "Catholic" leanings.
He said some good things but since his foundation was bad I can not quote him.
Beware of the wolves they can sound very good until we know the Bible well.
He said some good things but since his foundation was bad I can not quote him.
Beware of the wolves they can sound very good until we know the Bible well.
Leilani MasaniaiFollow
CS LEWIS WAS HIGHLY ESTEEMED BY MEN and it wasn't because of His God fearing example. Although he has many good quotes... He didn't believe in the teachings of Jesus at all.
Lewis Became a Catholic Before his Death...
Lewis indicates that shortly before his death he was turning toward the Catholic Church. Lewis termed himself "very Catholic" — his prayers for the dead, belief in purgatory, and rejection of the literal resurrection of the body are serious deviations from Biblical Christianity (C.S. Lewis: A Biography, p. 234).
Lewis even went to a priest for regular confession (p. 198), and received the sacrament of extreme unction on 7/16/63 (p. 301).
His contention that some pagans may "belong to Christ without knowing it" is a destructive heresy (Mere Christianity, pp. 176-177), as was his statement that "Christ fulfils both Paganism and Judaism..." (Reflections on the Psalms, p. 129)...
Read here what he believed...
http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/Wolves/cs_lewis.htm
CS LEWIS WAS HIGHLY ESTEEMED BY MEN and it wasn't because of His God fearing example. Although he has many good quotes... He didn't believe in the teachings of Jesus at all.
Lewis Became a Catholic Before his Death...
Lewis indicates that shortly before his death he was turning toward the Catholic Church. Lewis termed himself "very Catholic" — his prayers for the dead, belief in purgatory, and rejection of the literal resurrection of the body are serious deviations from Biblical Christianity (C.S. Lewis: A Biography, p. 234).
Lewis even went to a priest for regular confession (p. 198), and received the sacrament of extreme unction on 7/16/63 (p. 301).
His contention that some pagans may "belong to Christ without knowing it" is a destructive heresy (Mere Christianity, pp. 176-177), as was his statement that "Christ fulfils both Paganism and Judaism..." (Reflections on the Psalms, p. 129)...
Read here what he believed...
http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/Wolves/cs_lewis.htm
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