Aslan

Aslan

‘Is he – safe? I shall feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.’ ‘Safe? Who said anything about safe? Of course he isn’t safe. But he is good.’ (C.S. Lewis: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe)

I was 8 years old when the teacher asked us, a classroom of children, to sit on the floor while she read to us the next chapter of the novel, ‘The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’. If you know the book, it was the part where Aslan the lion (which, I discovered later, the author had used to depict Jesus) appears in Narnia, a mythical world that represents this world. It's a beginning of real hope. This snow-covered land, which hitherto had been trapped under a curse of perpetual winter, is beginning to thaw. Meanwhile, the antagonist, an evil witch (depicting Satan), comes across a small group of woodland creatures enjoying a party to celebrate. She flies into a rage, interrogates them harshly and uses her magic powers to turn them into stone.

At that awful and unexpected moment, I remember vividly that I started to cry. As a child, I was horrified that, just as things had started to look up for these innocent animals, their lives and hopes had been shattered. It felt like a moment of despair for them and for me. (A therapist-supervisor commented recently that little wonder most of my subsequent adult life has been spent in community work, human rights, international development etc). Today as I, along with Christians across the world, reflect on Jesus’ death on the cross, I’m reminded again of terrible injustice and violence against the innocent. I often identify more with Edmund than with Peter in Lewis' drama, yet what matters most is Aslan. It's He who breaks the power of the witch.

Funmi Johnson

Founder at Funmi Johnson Therapeutic coaching and counselling service.

11 个月

Hmmm. A timely reminder that what happens to us and how we feel about it are important.

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