Frederica Mathewes-Green

essays

I write on many different topics: Eastern Orthodox Christianity, movie reviews,  Christian life, the culture, and more. If you’d like to sort my essays by category, click here .

 

Entries from November 1, 2005 - December 1, 2005

C.S. Lewis: The Reluctant Convert

Posted Tuesday, November 29, 2005 in

Beliefnet asked me to contribute a short biography of C S Lewis to their "Narnia package", which just went live today. My contribution is titled "The Relucant Convert". It looks like a great collection of articles.

Expect Narnia saturation in the next couple of weeks! I will be going to see the movie at an advance screening this afternoon with my daughter Megan. I started recording the Narnia books on tape for the Maryland Radio Reading Network for the Blind a couple of years ago (at one hour per week, it takes awhile) and expect to finish "The Last Battle" before Christmas. The books are extraordinary, and even better when you read them out loud.

Click to read more ...

CS Lewis, the Reluctant Convert

Posted Tuesday, November 29, 2005 in ,

[Beliefnet, November 29, 2005]

In later life, C. S. Lewis – “Jack” to friends and family – would say that it all began with a toy garden. He was seven years old when his older brother, “Warnie”, brought to their playroom a biscuit tin he had decorated with tiny twigs, moss and flowers. As Jack gazed at the miniature fairyland

Click to read more ...

Walk the Line

Posted Friday, November 18, 2005 in

[National Review Online, November 18, 2005]

Someone watching "Walk the Line," the immensely enjoyable 20th Century Fox movie about Johnny Cash, would gather the impression that Cash had something to do with music. Yes, we see him on stage frequently, and are treated to numerous song fragments. But music isn't what the movie is about. Instead, it's chiefly about his relationships with women - a first marriage troubled by his infidelity and addiction, a descent to the depths, a long yearning for another woman, and her eventual consent.

Click to read more ...

Stepping Out In Faith

Posted Thursday, November 17, 2005 in ,

[Kairos Journal, November 17, 2005]

In 1991, my husband I made a difficult decision to leave our denomination for theological reasons. It was, for us, a matter of integrity. Bishops were denying the Resurrection, the Virgin Birth, and other basic tenets of the faith. After twenty years in the Episcopal church, first with both of us in seminary, and then with Gary serving as a pastor, we knew it was time to look for a new church home.

What Gary discovered was the Eastern Orthodox Church. The most striking thing about this church was its determination to adhere to the faith and worship of the early Christians.

Click to read more ...

Pride and Prejudice

Posted Friday, November 11, 2005 in

[National Review Online, November 11, 2005]

Keira Knightley has a way of squinting -- narrowing her eyes and looking simultaneously skeptical and perky - that I just can't believe they had invented in the early 19th century. This stands out solely because everything else about this production of "Pride and Prejudice" is so well-appointed, from the gently-worn blue paint on the walls to the cotton lace on the pillows. Jane Austen's 1813 novel has been brought to the big and little screens many times before, but this new version, directed by Joe Wright, can't be beat. It is charming, lively, and satisfyingly authentic.

Click to read more ...

Chicken Little

Posted Friday, November 4, 2005 in

[National Review Online, November 4, 2005]

Is the big green head of the Wizard of Oz still scary? It sure used to be. Back in the days when "The Wizard of Oz" was broadcast once each Spring, the moment when that looming lightbulb head boomed "Silence!" was the closest a seven-year-old came to numinous awe. (Though it was the witch cackling "I'll get you, my pretty," that caused my little sister's feet to thump-thump-thump away down the hall.)

I ask because a good bit of "Chicken Little" is just as scary. Giant heads looming out of darkness and thundering "Silence!" is just one example.

Click to read more ...