1. What is faith to believe? The simple words of promise that Jesus Himself gives to us in Scripture: “This is My body. This is My blood.”
  2. This day and its meaning provided the opportunity for an anonymous author to write a poem for Sheer Thursday about Judas' betrayal of Jesus.
  3. He represents our likeness, fulfills it, and so has the prerogative to reproduce his likeness in us.
  4. Jesus has gone ahead of you on the road, and promises to be with you still.
  5. A truly Lenten mindset sees the season as preparatory for the resurrection life of Easter as opposed to the mortification of Good Friday.
  6. The number forty calls to remembrance narratives of God’s great acts of redemption, but also our conformity to and participation in those narratives.
  7. Theology and history go hand in hand in the real person of Jesus Christ, making the truth of the Gospels profoundly human and powerfully meaningful.
  8. The joy of which Lewis speaks is a deep yearning of the soul not unlike the nostalgia we feel upon seeing a favorite childhood object once again.
  9. Of all the Inklings, Williams was certainly the most enigmatic. His mind and body were always moving.
  10. In A Hobbit, A Wardrobe and a Great War, Loconte meticulously analyzes both Lewis and Tolkien with one eye on their immediate historical context and the other on their works, letters, and diary entries.
  11. If poetry elevates its subject, we could also say the reverse: the subject, in this case, the Most High God, elevates the language.
  12. Thanks to Barfield’s opposition, several important things happened to C.S. Lewis.