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Friday 8 July 2011

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Aslan is the lion ruler in C. S. Lewis's Narnia series.  But does Aslan represent Jesus or satan?  Anyone familiar with the series will respond "Jesus, of course!".  Hopefully, after you read this article, you will see why this question should be asked.


"Aslan is Not a Tame Lion"
Record by Narnia

J.R.R. Tolkien was an occultist who used Biblical imagery to mask the occult basis of his Lord of the Rings trilogy.  One look at the runes on the covers of Tolkien's books should tell you that he was not a Christian. 

The Lord of the Ring of Solomon can allegedly conjure and control the 72 demons of the Kaballah.  The Lord of the Rings of Saturn is satan.  Black magic (Sauron) and white magic (Gandalf) both come from below.

I believe that The Lord of the Rings is based on Madam Blavatsky's luciferian doctrine.  If so, then Tolkien's Morgoth, the tyrranical oppresor, is his notion of God.  Gandalf the White would be his notion of lucifer.

C. S. Lewis was Tolkien's friend in the secret society of British authors known as the Inklings.  Only the adepts had an "inkling" of what they wrote about.  Is it possible that C. S. Lewis also employed Biblical imagery to mask an occult message?

Like most people, I always assumed that Aslan, the Lion who rules Narnia, was an analogy for Jesus, since Jesus was the "Lion of Judah".  One day I was reminded that in the Bible, the devil is also portrayed as a lion.  He is described as a "roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour".  Throughout the Narnia series, it is stated that Aslan "is not a tame lion".  He is powerful and can be dangerous.

Aslan is called The King of Beasts.  "Beasts" may refer to both animals and demons.  The king of demons in the Bible is satan.  Aslan has magical authority both temporal and spiritual. Magic is an occult term.  God performs miracles, not magic.

Aslan is called mysterious, recalling the mystery religions of ancient Babylon and Egypt.  He is the ruler of Narnia. Notice that "Narnia" contains the word "Arian".  Also notice that an anagram of "ASLAN" is "SA7AN" (you get the idea). 

C. S. Lewis himself described Aslan as an alternative version of Christ.  What is lucifer but a blasphemous alternative version of Christ?  Both Jesus and lucifer are called the Morning Star in the Bible.

Here is a list of Aslan's followers:  Talking Beasts (including owls), Centaurs, Fauns, Dryads, Dwarfs, Satyrs, Naiads, Hamadryads, Mermaids, Silvans, Unicorns, and Winged Horses.

None of these are symbols of Christianity.  They are all pagan mythological creatures.  Satyrs are companions of Pan and Bacchus.  In the Bible, a satyr is twice called a demon (Lev. 17:7; 2 Chron. 11:15 — KJV).  A satyr is a pagan god that takes the form of a wild goat.  The Unicorn is a symbol of satan in the occult.

Magic rings are used to enter a new world in Narnia, just as they are in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.  E. Nesbit also used magic rings in her childrens' stories.  The C.S. Lewis rings are found in an empty void.  In the Bhagavad-Gita, the Void (meaninglessness, negativity, death) is the source of enlightenment and joy.

Aslan appears and sings, calling Narnia into existence.  In Heaven, lucifer was in charge of the music.  The characters feel awe but Jadis (Judas) feels fear and hatred and attacks Aslan.  Jadis is the White Witch.  White magic is considered benevolent in the occult. Why does the benevolent one attack Aslan if he is good?

Several animals are given the power of speech and reason by Aslan.  In the Garden of Eden, the serpent (satan) had the power of speech and gave Adam and Eve forbidden knowledge.

Aslan orders a quest to acquire a magic fruit to protect Narnia.  In Genesis, the serpent used the forbidden fruit to make Adam and Eve defy God.

Aslan takes the group to the Wood Between the Worlds, a kind of Purgatory, which does not appear in the Bible.  The forest is a place of communicating with the spiritual realm in the occult.

Jadis, the White Witch, is a tyrant who turns Aslan's followers to stone during her hundred year winter.  But what if the villains of Narnia are really Christians?  That would make the "heroes" demons.

If Jadis is Christian and C.S. Lewis was anti-Christian, then he would have to portray her as "evil" when she battles Aslan (satan).  By twisting everything around, one could deceive Christian readers into rooting for the Anti-Christian characters.

Peter slays Jadis's Chief of Police Maugrim.  How is slaying in any way Christian?

Aslan makes Peter a knight.  Knights are seldom Christians.

The White Witch mocks and slays Aslan.  If the White Witch is really Lewis's portrayal of a Christian, as I suspect, then this mockery and slaying is yet another misrepresentation of Christianity by Lewis.

Aslan rises from the dead, a mockery of Christ's resurrection, and kills the White Witch.  Since both sides are killers, there are no devout Christians.

Aslan's breath brings the statues to life, a mockery of God breathing life into a pile of clay to create Adam.

Aslan slashes Aravis across her back with his claws as equal punishment for the whipping she gave her servant. Jesus would never do this.  Aslan believes in "an eye for an eye" while Jesus taught us to "forgive our enemies". 

Aslan calls Rabadash "the demon of Narnia" and turns him into a donkey.  Therefore, Rabadash must be a Christian whom Lewis is misrepresenting and mocking.

As Aslan guides the Pevensie children to Prince Caspian, he only appears to his true followers, much like satan on earth.  Aslan reawakens the spirits of the forest and the river (paganism), leading to a Bacchanalian revel (drunken orgy) to create a revolution (socialist rebellion against God).

The Telmarines (Christians) are defeated and the Old Order (of Babylon and Egypt) is restored.  Humans and animals are now equal (evolution propaganda:  humans are now wild beasts who have lost their souls and the guidance of God).

A painting of a ship becomes a real ship (astral travel).  Caspian, the King of Narnia, brings peace (a tyrannical new world order).  The Seven Lost Lords (demons) have been banished by Miraz (a Christian).

Lucy casts spells at a magician's house.  Aslan stops the first two but allows the story-spell.  Why would a Jesus figure allow witchcraft?  A true Christian analogy would never have spells in it at all.

At the end of the world (Armageddon), Aslan appears as a lamb before transforming into a lion (satan imitating Christ).  Only demons shape-shift, not Jesus.

Eustace Scrubb and Jill turn to Aslan (satan) for help against bullies.  They blunder through a temporary gate (an occult stargate) to Aslan.

Owls (occult knowledge) guide them to defeating the Lady of Green Kirtle (Christian) who warns them about Narnia.  Aslan scares the bullies.

Shift is a talking ape (more evolution propaganda).  Shift and the donkey Puzzle fool Narnia into thinking that Aslan has returned to combine with Tash as Taslan.

Dissenters are killed in a stable.  Ecumenical leaders are portrayed as killers.  One of the Ten Commandments is "Thou Shalt Not Kill".

Aslan (satan) appears in the stable but only his followers can see him.  The dwarfs who lost faith (in satan) cannot be reached, much like Uncle Andrew (a Christian) in The Magician's Nephew.

Tash must be an analogy for God because Aslan (satan) says "I and Tash are of such different kinds that no service which is vile (holy) can be done to me, and none which is not vile (not holy) can be done to him".

Aslan's country (Hell) eventually encompasses Earth.  The group has died but Aslan's country (Hell) is more real than the Shadowlands (reality).  This reflects the occult belief that "Life is an illusion".

At the conclusion, Aslan transforms from a lion into a man (more shape-shifting) and the word "he", referring to Aslan, becomes capitalized ("He").

This is commonly interpreted as Jesus Christ in Heaven, but the Narnia series is so full of mythology and witchcraft that I believe it represents the Anti-Christ.  I suspect that the whole Narnia series is based on the philosophy of Madam Blavatsky, who believed that lucifer was the "hero" of the Bible and that God was the "villain".

The fact that an occult-based corporation like Disney is producing the Narnia series is further proof that Narnia's "spirituality" is not from above. 

Here is a video comparing Tumnus to the Greek god Pan:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhBu_D1WPu0

Now let us consider beyond the Narnia series.

In The Screwtape Letters, Lewis calls satan "Our Father Below" and calls God "the Enemy". Screwtape is a mentoring demon who teaches his nephew demon, Wormwood, how to undermine faith and tempt men into sin. Is the book a warning or a "how to" book?

In The Great Divorce, the eternal torment of Hell is depicted as a mildly unpleasant place. The inhabitants of Heaven and Hell are permitted to meet freely at the foothills of heaven. The book presents the falsehood that after one dies and goes to Hell, one may still repent and go to Heaven. This is incorrect. 

C. S. Lewis's dog died when Lewis was four.  He adopted the name of his dog (Jack) for the rest of his life.

At the age of fifteen, Lewis abandoned his Christian faith and became an atheist, becoming interested in mythology and the occult.

In 1921, Lewis twice met his hero, satanist and poet W. B. Yeats, and remarked "thank the gods that I am Irish".

We are told he converted to ecumenical Christianity in 1931.

From 1918 to the 1940s, he had an affair with Jane Moore, a woman 26 years his senior, according to George Sayer.

In 1957, Lewis married Joy Gresham, an ex-Communist divorcee.

Although we all sin, the life and the writings of C. S. Lewis suggest that he may not have been a Christian at all. 

I have no doubt that I have made some errors in the details of this article.  I invite you to correct me.  If you disagree with the whole thing, well, I already know that.  If you agree with me, that's news.
Thanks to Wikipedia for their information.

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