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Deification Theosis And C S Lewis


Deification Theosis And C S Lewis
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"Lewis thought these doctrines conveyed truths that modern people most needed to know but were least likely to recognize: "We must never avert our eyes from those elements in [our religion] which seem puzzling or repellent; for it will be precisely the puzzling or the repellent which conceals what we do not yet know and need to know."

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"For many Christians today, deification would be such a doctrine. Deification (also known as theosis or divinization) sees salvation not merely as divine pardon but rather as a process of spiritual transformation that culminates in mystical union with God."

"As Lewis understood it, human beings could one day enter into the very beauty and energy of God and become "true and everlasting and really divine persons."

"In his book Mere Christianity, which can be seen as a manifesto on the subject, Lewis argues that the whole purpose of Christianity is to turn people into what he variously calls "new men, little Christs, Sons of God"-and "gods and goddesses."

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"Lewis knew such language might give many of us a shock, but he insisted that this is "precisely what Christianity is about."

"Although largely forgotten by Christians today, deification is at the heart of Lewis' vision of reality. From his sermons to his apologetic essays, from his space fiction to his children's stories, one can hardly find a corner of his literary universe that is not illumined by the idea."

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"Lewis encountered the idea of deification everywhere from St. Athanasius to George MacDonald, and he knew the doctrine was held from earliest times by many church fathers (like Athanasius) who helped establish the canon of the New Testament and the doctrines of the Trinity and Incarnation."

"These fathers taught that Adam and Eve were created in the image and likeness of God, but after the fall they were estranged from their creator and subject to pain, sorrow, and death."

"Deification, then, is the restoration of the divine likeness that humanity lost along with its beauty, purity, and incorruption."

"In holding to deification, not only was Lewis in harmony with Eastern Orthodoxy, where the doctrine remains a distinguishing mark, but with many voices in the West like St. Augustine and St. Bernard of Clairvaux-and a forgotten strand of Anglican tradition including Lancelot Andrewes, Richard Hooker, Charles Wesley, and Ann Griffiths."

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"Lewis didn't follow the path of Emerson or others who blurred dogmatic boundaries by confusing God and creation or by teaching that human beings are naturally divine."

"Only God is transcendent, uncreated, and divine by nature."

"Therefore deification does not mean the "actualization" or "realization" of one's latent divinity, a belief that is less Christian than monistic or pantheistic."

"Nor does deification mean that human beings eventually will evolve into something essentially equal to God (...) Lewis was always clear on the difference between creature and Creator-an irreducible ontological distinction."

"Deified human beings forever remain human while at the same time sharing in divine grace or energy, just like blazing iron in the fire shares the properties of flame but doesn't cease to be iron. Human beings will not melt into an impersonal God like a salt statue tossed into the ocean, or become new and independent divine beings in a type of polytheistic evolution."

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"For this reason, Lewis cannot be categorized with Neoplatonists, Hindus, Mormons, or even certain Christian mystics who seemed to lose sight of the essential distinction between God and humankind."

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NOTE:


I agree that deification is a "vital" part of a coherent concept of Christian life: indeed I believe that it is deification which primarily sets Christianity apart from Judaism and Islam - because it is what the incarnation and resurrection of Jesus Christ made possible, over and above monotheism.

The concept is found in all legitimate Christian traditions, but most centrally in Eastern Orthodoxy - as theosis - marking its superiority.

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So, becoming a Christian is properly a two-step process: first conversion and then deification.

Salvation is certainly possible without deification (e.g. The Good Thief) - but it is deification which is the purpose of Life and which potentially fits humans for their proper place in an hierarchical Heaven.

It is deification which makes Holy Elders and Saints, and enables them to do what they do.

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But for some, probably for me, deification is merely the turing back to God again and then again, taking the first step and back-sliding a step. It is the qualitative movement towards God - even if it gets no further than that - but of course it has, in some people, in some times and places - gone much further than that.

For instance, theosis went much further than that in C.S Lewis himself...

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