| A Conversion of the Imagination With so much troubling stuff going on all around us, why 
                    would we devote an issue of Response to C.S. Lewis 
                    and the tales of Narnia? We might also ask why there is so 
                    much hype and anticipation about the opening of Disney’s 
                    production of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe? 
                    Try Googling Narnia and you will find some 6 million pops. 
                    Why is this wonder-filled work of the imagination so unbelievably 
                    fascinating to our culture? In a culture that prides itself on unblinking realism — 
                    our daily look into the heart of all that is wrong and horrifying 
                    — why is there such explosive interest in the realms 
                    of story, mystery, and fantasy? Well, one answer might be 
                    that we need to escape it all from time to time. But there is something far more important going on here. 
                    I think this deep fascination comes from a pretty profound 
                    hunch that we cannot live meaningfully without the imagination. 
                    A human culture that has lost its imagination has little sense 
                    of overarching meaning, therefore little chance for hope, 
                    ultimately little joy. As we open that most incredible door of the wardrobe, whether 
                    we are an innocent, curious child or a seasoned, skeptical 
                    adult, we enter into dimensions of our lives and the world 
                    that are in some ways more real than what we think is real. 
                    We feel it. We know it. In 1939, just as the Nazis had brutally invaded Poland, C.S. 
                    Lewis preached a sermon at Oxford to a packed-out crowd of 
                    students and faculty admitting that “we have to inquire 
                    whether there is really any legitimate place for the activities 
                    of the scholar in a world such as this.” Because of 
                    Lewis’ intense interest in the imagination, both as 
                    a literary scholar and ultimately a writer of tales, I have 
                    to believe he was also asking whether there is any legitimate 
                    place for fantasy and mystery and stories in those times when 
                    fear settles over the civilized world.  The great 20th-century poet Robert Frost, at just about the 
                    time of Lewis’ sermon, talked about poetry as the “stay 
                    against confusion.” William Carlos Williams, another 
                    early-20th-century American poet, says that “it is difficult 
                    to get the news from poems,” yet people “die miserably 
                    every day/ for lack/ of what is found there.” The imagination 
                    just may provide the real news in the news. The Polish American poet Czeslaw Milosz, yet another great 
                    20th-century defender of the imagination, talks about the 
                    cost of exchanging “simplicity of the heart” to 
                    be found in poems and stories for all of the sophisticated, 
                    restless mocking so prevalent in elite culture. Milosz lived 
                    through that bloody Nazi assault on his country and was forced 
                    to endure the subsequent occupation by the Soviets. Through 
                    it all he wrote poems. He was told by other intellectuals 
                    that it was “an abomination to write lyric poetry after 
                    Auschwitz.” It was an intellectual, moral, spiritual 
                    escape. What was it then that drove him to continue to write “idyllic 
                    verses ... in the very center of what was taking place ... 
                    and not by any means out of ignorance”? Milosz stakes out a principle here. There is absolutely no 
                    justification for escape. We must know and understand what’s 
                    going on in the world. But if there is to be any hope in times 
                    of great darkness and chaos and fear, the imagination must 
                    stay active. The imagination must continue to tell stories, 
                    must continue to tap into that deeper mystery, just beyond 
                    the wardrobe door, where all of what we see and experience 
                    in the world begins to make sense in profoundly new ways. 
                   “Gentle verses written in the midst of horror declare 
                    themselves for life,” says Milosz. “Evil grows 
                    and bears fruit,” he continues, “which is understandable, 
                    because it has logic and probability on its side and also, 
                    of course, strength. The resistance of tiny kernels of good, 
                    to which no one grants the power of causing far-reaching consequences, 
                    is entirely mysterious. ... Such seeming nothingness not only 
                    lasts but contains within itself enormous energy.”  We have bright banners flying all over the campus of Seattle 
                    Pacific this fall asking a big and important question: Can 
                    a university change the world? That’s the subject 
                    of my writing and speaking these days. That’s the question 
                    behind our 2014: A Blueprint for Excellence. And 
                    in some ways I think it’s like asking can a child’s 
                    tale change the world?  Two signature commitments have emerged for us at Seattle 
                    Pacific in all of this rich conversation: We are declaring 
                    that we will be a place that knows and understands what’s 
                    going on in the world, and we will be a place that embraces 
                    the Christian story. For me, something “entirely mysterious” 
                    takes place when these two commitments engage, something, 
                    as Milosz says, with “enormous energy,” some kind 
                    of unanticipated power with “far-reaching consequences.” 
                   And it is the special task of the imagination that can cause 
                    this interface to happen. The New Testament scholar Richard 
                    Hays calls it nothing less than a “conversion of the 
                    imagination.” The remarkable thing that happens 
                    is the imagining of good news right in the midst of the news. 
                    When we tell the Christian story, in winsome and delightful 
                    and surprising ways, the swirling, troubling confusion of 
                    the stories of our world begin to have a bigger meaning. And 
                    that’s a great mystery, full of power.  Can a university change the world? Absolutely. But somehow 
                    the Narnia tales remind us that stories and mystery and the 
                    imagination will be right at the heart of it all.  — BY Philip 
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