Send us a text A donkey in a lion’s skin shouldn’t fool anyone—yet when we forget the true Lion, costumes start to look convincing. We close our Narnia arc with The Last Battle, following the trail from deception and power-grabbing religion to judgment that clarifies everything and a new creation that feels more real than stone underfoot. Along the way, we meet Shift’s manipulative theatre, Puzzle’s naive complicity, and the dwarfs’ tragic cynicism, and we press into why Lewis insists Aslan a...
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Send us a text A donkey in a lion’s skin shouldn’t fool anyone—yet when we forget the true Lion, costumes start to look convincing. We close our Narnia arc with The Last Battle, following the trail from deception and power-grabbing religion to judgment that clarifies everything and a new creation that feels more real than stone underfoot. Along the way, we meet Shift’s manipulative theatre, Puzzle’s naive complicity, and the dwarfs’ tragic cynicism, and we press into why Lewis insists Aslan a...
Episode 111 - Look and Look Again: Sacred Seeing in a Superficial World
The Christ Centred Cosmic Civilisation
36 minutes
3 months ago
Episode 111 - Look and Look Again: Sacred Seeing in a Superficial World
Send us a text Have you ever considered how profoundly your eyes shape your spiritual life? Far beyond mere physical vision, your eyes function as gateways that determine what enters your inner world and ultimately forms who you become. The podcast begins with Jesus's striking metaphor: "Your eye is the lamp of your body." This isn't poetic flourish—it's a profound reality that what we choose to look at literally fills our body with either light or darkness. Our eyes regulate what enters our...
The Christ Centred Cosmic Civilisation
Send us a text A donkey in a lion’s skin shouldn’t fool anyone—yet when we forget the true Lion, costumes start to look convincing. We close our Narnia arc with The Last Battle, following the trail from deception and power-grabbing religion to judgment that clarifies everything and a new creation that feels more real than stone underfoot. Along the way, we meet Shift’s manipulative theatre, Puzzle’s naive complicity, and the dwarfs’ tragic cynicism, and we press into why Lewis insists Aslan a...