C. S. Lewis wardrobe housed at The Wade Center of Wheaton College
A Wardrobe in Disguise
“It won’t be long now,” you said with a smile your emotions under control. And I marveled at your calm. But when you got that call that said all had been done (and all was not enough), didn’t it take a while for your ready smile to find your face again?
You are never quite ready for the end to come, are you? Even when you’ve had wind of the end for a while.
When you finally face that familiar face inside that greedy box, your resignation to what you thought you were prepared for quickly bolts out the door, leaving you alone with the lonely truth that life will never, ever, really be the same.
But as Paul Harvey was wont to say… “And now for the rest of the story!”
Death’s only glory is that overpriced coffin in which it thinks it’s sealed our fate (and that of those we loved). But Death forgets its box is but a wardrobe. through which the Risen Lion leads us (and all those with faith) into the Land of Narnia where Death (even if it could be remembered) would only be a bad dream.
Long live, Aslan! Deep be Your peace!
Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed!
In “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” the author invites us to enter the land of Narnia through an old-fashioned bedroom wardrobe. That standing wooden box is the means by a new world is experienced. Have you ever thought of a casket as a wardrobe? For the Christian, a simple pine box is a time-capsule to eternal life. If you have never read this classic story by C. S. Lewis, why not commit to reading it this year?
The above post is an excerpt from When God Speaks by Greg Asimakoupoulos. It was written for a friend whose father died after an extended illness.
This painting of Aslan is by world-renown wildlife artist Gregory Beecham
When God speaks, I want to hear against the backdrop of constant distractions.
Amid the din of doing life in the midst of mounting pressures and maintaining routines (all the while pursuing dreams), I want to sense His presence and hear the essence of His heart.
When God speaks I want to know what He is saying. And even if it means a moratorium from praying (because my words can often get in the way), I am willing to be still to know that He is God.
Greg’s book, “When God Speaks“ is listed on the BOOKS menu at $14.99 from Lulu Books.