Episode Synopsis "Till We Have Faces, Class One"
C. S. Lewis is arguably the greatest philosopher of the twentieth century, offering a panoply of scholarly, fictional, children’s, allegorical, and polemic works that provide an extraordinary metaphysical-aesthetic vision of the human need for the divine. His novel, Till We Have Faces, is without question his greatest work of all. Set in an entirely pagan context, Lewis drives us through our own self-justifications to confront the fact that “we cannot know the gods face to face till we have faces.” Don’t miss it.
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- Lecture 14: The Common Good
- Lecture 13: The Four Last Things
- Lecture 12: The Constitutionality of Marriage
- Lecture 11: Human Nature, Gender, and the Imago Dei
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- Lecture 9: The Nature & History of the Church
- Lecture 8: Angels & Demons
- Lecture 7: The Incarnation
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- Lecture 5: Theological Virtue & Divine Love
- Lecture 4: Justice & Salvation
- Lecture 3: Human Nature, Virtue, & Suffering
- Lecture 2: The Existence of God: Reason & Faith
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