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mere ChristianitY
study guide
How to Use This Study Guide
This Study Guide is most effectively used in a small group setting. It is organized into four sections, corresponding to the four books that comprise . Your preparation for the first two sections can be completed in one week each, but the last two are longer and ideally need two weeks each. Thus, six weeks is a reasonable length for the study, and two hours is recommended for each session. you follow the logic and grasp the points C. S. Lewis is making in that section of the book. You can download additional copies of the study guide at www.cslewisinstitute.org.
that, among all the possible solutions, is best explained by the Christian understanding of a moral God (Book Two). Our moral nature needs guidelines and, again, Christianity provides the most helpful and satisfying morality on the planet (Book Three). That satisfying answer for our moral hunger is not found in ourselves, but in the only true human capable of complete morality, Jesus Christ (Book Four). In order to get the most out of these questions, it will be helpful to treat Mere Christianity like a textbook. Take a pen and number the paragraphs in each chapter before you begin to read. You will find that these study questions will direct you back to specific paragraphs in each chapter for serious consideration and thoughtful application.
C.S. Lewis Study Program | Mere Christianity Study Guide 1
Book One:
Book Two:
5. How is Christ the shocking solution, 10? 6. After reading this paragraph containing Lewiss famous Lunatic, Liar or Lord trilemma, 13, how would you answer the person who says that Christ was merely a good teacher?
Book Three:
Christian Behavior
Chapter 1: The Three Parts of Morality
1. Lewis writes that morality is concerned with three things: a) fair play, b) character, and c) eternal accountability, s 3, 4 and 5. Which of the three is the most pressing concern for you? 2. Many people who think of morality just focus on fair play. What is the problem in ignoring the other two parts of morality, s 7 and 8? 3. How does the illustration of a naval fleet help explain how each aspect of morality is mutually independent s 6, 7, 8 and 9? 2. If one social groupingclub, association, lodge, etc.was especially filled with many people who practiced the four cardinal virtues, in what ways might that be unique and attractive? 3. How does the illustration of a tennis player explain what it means to be virtuous, 6? 4. Virtue is a quality of character that God is very concerned with. Why is virtue important for this life and the life to come, s 8, 9 and 10?
3. How would a Christian society break the stereotypes of both the political left and right, s 4 and 5? 4. As Lewis describes it, what attracts you to the idea of a Christian society? What concerns do you have about a Christian society?
2. How is the idea of loving ones self the key to Lewiss explanation of forgiveness, s 5, 6 and 11? 3. How is forgiveness central to the experience of eternal life, s 7 and 10? 4. Apply this chapter practically: Who are the top ten people you need to forgive? Write in a journal how you feel about forgiving them and then perhaps make plans to begin the process.
Chapter 9: Charity
1. Going against the flow of our cultural concept of love, Lewis writes that love is not a feeling but an action 2. What do you think of this? 2. What are the dangers of hating and the benefits of loving, s 7 and 8? 3. How does Lewiss definition of Christian love make our responsibility to love our neighbor both easier and more difficult?
Chapter 7: Forgiveness
1. Why might the Christian concept of forgiveness be even more unpopular than the Christian beliefs on sex and marriage, s 1, 2, 3 and 4?
2010 The C.S. Lewis Institute
3. When you find your faith is weak, what can you do to strengthen it, 6? 4. How has reading Mere Christianity so far strengthened your faith?
2. When making an effort to live a moral life, why should a Christian leave it to God, s 5 and 6? 3. How does faith affect the way in which we live by Christian virtue and values, 7? 4. In your reading of Mere Christianity so far, what have you learned about the Christian faith that you did not know before?
Book Four:
3. If being a Christian is so hard, why would anyone want to become one, s 3, 4 and 7? 4. What reservations might you have toward the Christian faith?
come to humans because the Christian God is personal as the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit? 4. In what ways did your understanding of and appreciation for theology grow after listening to this lecture? 5. God has made it possible, through his Son Jesus Christ, to be joined in an intimate spiritual unity with him. What difference can it make, in the way you think and feel, to know that you are truly connected with God?
C.S. Lewis Study Program | Mere Christianity Study Guide 7