
The C.S. Lewis podcast #230 Alister McGrath: Theology, miracles and imagination
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Oct 6, 2025 In this engaging conversation, Alister McGrath, a theologian and former Oxford tutor with extensive writings on C.S. Lewis, delves into Lewis's views on miracles and the imagination. He describes miracles as perspective-dependent signs and argues for their credibility as fundamental to Christian faith. McGrath also explores how Lewis's ideas resonate with modern theological scholarship and counters the New Atheism movement. He emphasizes the role of imagination in theology, suggesting it reveals deeper meanings beyond mere reason.
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Scholars Reassess Hume And Lewis's Vision
- Modern theological scholarship now re-evaluates Hume's narrow framing and finds Lewis's richer vision of miracles more plausible.
- Contemporary theologians like Pannenberg and Keith Ward view Lewis's approach as reasonable.
Lewis As A Gateway To Christianity
- Lewis functions as a gateway for modern readers who either dismiss Christianity or don't understand it.
- Mere Christianity remains accessible and invites further exploration of Christian truth.
Patterns Don't Prove Impossibility
- Lewis counters Hume by reminding us that observed regularities are descriptive not normative constraints on possibility.
- Anomalous events can show our patterns incomplete rather than impossible.










