I believe that Susan is like mankind. She fell from innocent grace, matter of factly like Adam or Eve she was newly aware of how she was being seen (hiding behind makeup rather than fig leaves, but you catch my drift).
Still, one must re-read the serpent's tale, how he promised Eve that she would not surely die. That was a half truth. The serpent knew she would not surely die with a capital "D" because a savior would come.
So yes she died, and yet she did not die without a trace.
Susan is like that, out of the garden (Narnia) and yet ultimately the subject of Christ's redeeming love and therefore a recipient of justification through grace. Like Eve, she was expelled from her original paradise. Like Eve she eventually found a new paradise. Even so shall Susan find her paradise in the New Narnia.
Still, one must re-read the serpent's tale, how he promised Eve that she would not surely die. That was a half truth. The serpent knew she would not surely die with a capital "D" because a savior would come.
So yes she died, and yet she did not die without a trace.
Susan is like that, out of the garden (Narnia) and yet ultimately the subject of Christ's redeeming love and therefore a recipient of justification through grace. Like Eve, she was expelled from her original paradise. Like Eve she eventually found a new paradise. Even so shall Susan find her paradise in the New Narnia.