C.S. Lewis on the Radio: Special Anniversary of Broadcast Talks

Long before stories about the land of Narnia were written C.S. Lewis wrote for and spoke live on the radio. Nearly ten years before The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe was published, Lewis was in front of the microphone with the potential audience of a million people. It all began seventy-one years ago today, August 6, 1941; that evening Lewis gave the first in a series of talks about his faith on BBC radio in England.

Interestingly, when Lewis was asked to be on the air (this was done by letter), no one at the BBC had heard him speak. It was hoped that because someone there enjoyed the clear writing style in The Problem of Pain that he would be a good candidate for a special short series of talks. So, one hot summer evening in August set the stage for Lewis to become well-known from being on the radio. Later this talk became the first chapter in Mere Christianity that was released in 1952 (along with material from three other radio series he did). But in the early 1940’s it was known in the U.K. as being a part of Broadcast Talks and in the U.S. when it was released it was called The Case for Christianity. Of course, Lewis’s fame would rise even higher as beginning in 1950 a new story from The Chronicles of Narnia was published annually for seven years.

You can learn more about this in a special blog post at C.S. Lewis Minute.

3 Comments

  1. Cool! Speaking of C.S. Lewis, there will be a documentary about him on TBN on the 18th. It’s called “C.S. Lewis: Beyond Narnia”. Thought I’d just let people know 😉

  2. Is it possible to listen to recordings of these broadcasts by Lewis? Do copies exist for piublic scrutiny?

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