C.S. Lewis: Christian Conspiracy Theorist Extraordinaire?

This entry was posted by on Monday, 18 May, 2009 at

Thanks to Chris White from Nowhere to Run, I now have a new book to add to my growing list of “must reads”. It’s called That Hideous Strength, written by C.S. Lewis.

I am currently reading 1984 by George Orwell, and up next is Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. I’m sure I’ll be saving the best for last by following those up with That Hideous Strength.

If you want to know where the world is headed–and it is already much further along than most realize–then read these books. After that, take a good look under the surface of what is happening in the world today, especially here in the U.S.

As someone who has spent 3 days and 3 nights in the belly of the beast, I can assure you that much of what you read is already being implemented.

Listen to the following 2 min., 59 sec. audio clip where Chris White provides an excellent overview of Lewis’ book and how it differs from Orwell’s 1984, specifically in its treatment of the supernatural realities driving the one-world government of the End Times.

Show: Nowhere to Run
Date: 5/15/09
Host: Chris White
Topics: C.S. Lewis; That Hideous Strength; George Orwell; 1984; Occult supernatural forces guiding people in powerful position; Secret cabal with an evil agenda; Mass deception; Ideas and symbolism encoded in book

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Nowhere To Run with Chris White

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  • http://www.thirdgreatawakeningcom.blogspot.com/ Dr. James Willingam

    The interesting fact about That Hideous Strength is this: Did Lewis name an actual conspirator in his list of fictional conspirators, namely, Cecil Rhodes? When Carroll Quigley did his research for his Tragedy and Hope, a history of the world in modern times, he did the research at Oxford but cited no sources, a fact noted by at least one or two reviewers when the book was released. Though Quigley would later deny there was any conspiracy, his discussion of various events seem to suggest otherwise. Cleon Skousen's The Naked Capitalist, a review of Tragedy and Hope provided some light on the subject, but many other sources tend to confirm the thesis that there really is such a thing and people pay a price for discussing it. Did Lewis lose his position at Oxford for having mentioned a real conspirator by name, if Rhodes was such?