God in the Dock
Essays on Theology and Ethics
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Narrated by:
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Ralph Cosham
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By:
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C. S. Lewis
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Always amazed
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Must have
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Fantastic Listen
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Excellent
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Would you listen to God in the Dock again? Why?
Yes, because C.S. Lewis is a great thinker and helps to elucidate different topics so well.Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No. I never do that.Any additional comments?
I wouldn't choose this as my first C.S. Lewis book, go to Mere Christianity, Chronicles of Narnia, Screwtape Letters and Weight of Glory first. This one is more for the fan who has read most of the other items and wants to continue to read more. Which describes me.Excellent for the C.S. Lewis fan
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God in the Dock is a collection of 51 essays and a handful of additional letters. These are mostly on either ethics, apologetics (and really how and why of apologetics more than actual apologetics) and general theology.
With a collection like this, you can really see Lewis’ skill at speaking to his audience. A negative of this is that you see how Lewis covers similar topics with different audiences, so there is a decent amount of repetition, especially of his good one liners.
But mostly, I appreciated his skill. He gave a talk to a group at a textile mill about Christianity and then he also has a talk about apologetics to pastors and youth workers. In both he talks about apologetics and the role of sharing faith, but very differently. What impresses me is his willingness to not answer questions at times and what seems to be real humility of trying to only talk when he feels like he has something he can add.
It is this book that several of Lewis’ famous quotes are found, including his quote about reading old books, not because they are better, but because they are from a different time and place with different biases and blind spots. And that quote is true of reading this book. His thoughts on animal cruelty and the role of science and the decline of religion are interesting both because there are ways that they are still relevant today and because they are relevant in an odd way that feels like he is from a different culture.
Lewis seems to be both at his best and occasionally his worst because he is a man particularly writing to his own culture. So his essay on women as priests will sound quite dated to most. But still essentially has the main points that will seem right to many complementarians. But even as he is writing he is correctly predicting his argument will sound dated.
At other times it is easy to see how little our culture has changed from the culture of the 1950-60s in the UK. He complains of commercialism at Christmas, advocates for continuing to support new translations of the bible (but in other essays against modernization to hymns and the prayer book), speaks of the need of pastors to actually be a part of the people and not set apart, and many other topics that could have been written within the last few years.
This is not a book that I would pick up if you are new to Lewis. (Although it does give a fairly wide range of his writings.) But if you have read a lot of the standards, the Narnia books, the Space Trilogy, the Great Divorce, Mere Christianity, Surprised by Joy, etc., then this is a good next step.
(originally posted on my blog, Bookwi.se)
Wide variety of essays compiled posthumously
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Very Insightful
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I first read it when it was newly published, and some of what I read then has remained with me all these many years, deep in my conscious mind yet also at the tip of my tongue. The very concept of putting God in the Dock as the Accused, and having the gall to sit ourselves down in the Judge's chair, or even the jurists' box, will never leave me, and is an image I find increasingly en pointe as the Church is bombarded with demands that She follow the culture rather than the Creator, the tickling words of the created rather than the Word God breathed and had penned for us.
Issues of liturgy, the Canon, of saints, of capital punishment, of miracles... these and many more, are tackled with humility, brevity, and blinding clarity as Lewis applies the most obvious yet previously unseen logic, that I often find myself in the slack-jawed amazement of Peter and Susan Pevensie sitting in the office of Professor Kirk who asks pertinent questions, causing the children to realize the previously improbable, but now inescapable, answers. Meanwhile, the professor is shaking his head, muttering, "Goodness! What DO they teach the children in these schools!?"
God in the Dock is a staple in my re-read stack, right up there with Pilgrim's Progress and the Chronicles.
God in the Dock is timeless, logical, & profound
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- Miracles
- Dogma and the Universe
- Answers to Questions on Christianity
- Myth Became Fact
- Horrid Red Things
- Religion and Science
- The Laws of Nature
- The Grand Miracle
- Christian Apologetics
- Work and Prayer
- Man or Rabbit
- On the Transmission of Christianity
- Miserable Offenders: An Interpretation of Prayerbook Language
- The Founding of the Oxford Socratic Club
- Religion without Dogma
- Some Thoughts
- The Trouble with “X”
- What are we to make of Jesus Christ?
- The Pains of Animals: A Problem in Theology (an open letter to C.S. Lewis by C.E.M. Jode and Lewis’ response)
- Is Theism Important?
- Rejoindre to Dr Pittinger (Lewis’ response to a literary critic)
- Must our Image of God Go?
Chapter 24 marks the beginning of Part 2 and, in the reading, Cosham begins numbering the chapters all over again instead of continuing on the audio layout. Chapter 24=Chapter 1 and so forth.
- The Dangers of National Repentance
- Two Ways with the Self
- Meditation on the 3rd Commandment
- On the Reading of Old Books
- Two Lectures
- Meditation in a Toolshed
- Scraps
- The Decline of Religion
- Vivisection
- Modern Translations of the Bible (An introduction to a book on the New Testament)
- Priestesses in the Church
- God in the Dock
- Behind the Scenes
- Revival or Decay
- Before we can Communicate
- Cross Examination (an interview with CS Lewis)
Part 3 begins with Chapter 40, starting the audio chapter count again.
- Bolverism: Or the Foundation of 21st Century Thought
- First and Second Things
- The Sermon and the Lunch
- The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment
- X-mas and Christmas: A Lost Chapter from Herodotus
- What Christmas Means to Me
- Delinquents in the Snow
- Is Progress Possible?
- We Have No Right to Happiness
Part 4, a collection of letters and correspondence, brings this book to a close.
This collection is fairly overwhelming. It contains letters, speeches, essays, verbal debates, and even introductions to other books. He mostly covers topics of contemporary apologetics such as science, miracles, morality, and the secularization of the world. There are even segments of debates he has with some of his peers which was highly beneficial. Because of the nature of this collection, much of the principles and specific content are repeated throughout. I most appreciated Lewis’ reflections on prayer, but he did slip fully into a level of free will with which I could not agree.
Overall, a decent read to learn the nature of debate and apologetics… but not highly enjoyable.
Overwhelming and Repetitive
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Also - great reader! Does a wonderful job, you would think Lewis was there speaking it himself.
If you've wanted more C.S. Lewis...This is it!
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