C. S. Lewis was a significant mastermind with the uncommon capacity to convey the philosophical and religious method of reasoning of Christianity in basic yet incredibly compelling ways. God in the Dock contains forty-eight papers and twelve letters composed by Lewis somewhere in the range of 1940 and 1963 for a wide assortment of distributions. Running from mainstream paper pieces to learned protections of the confidence, these articles spread points as changed as the rationale of belief in a higher power, great and malice, supernatural occurrences, vivisection, the job of ladies in chapel country, and morals and governmental issues. Huge numbers of these compositions speak to Lewis’ first endeavors into topics he would later treat in full-length books.
God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics.
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