

Only the recording of the seventh broadcast has survived. The BBC preferred to do live broadcasts, but because of travel difficulties the second, sixth and seventh were recorded for broadcast later. The Fourth Series was carried on the BBC Home Service and published two days later in the BBC’s magazine, The Listener. “Beyond Personality: The Christian View of God” Mere Christianity, Book 3: “Christian Behavior” The broadcast on “Sexual Morality” was published without the permission of Lewis or the BBC in the Daily Mirror on Octounder the sarcastic title: “This Was a Very Frank Talk–Which We Think Everyone Should Read.” BBC Radio Third Series: “Christian Behavior” The cuts were restored in the first published version, Christian Behaviour (1943) with some further revisions for Mere Christianity. Lewis originally wrote them to be 15 minutes long like the previous two series, so they had to be quickly cut down to 10 minutes. The third series was carried on the General Forces Programme to the armed forces on Sunday afternoons between 2:50 and 3 pm. Mere Christianity: “What Christians Believe” BBC Radio Second Series: “What Christians Believe”īroadcast Talks and The Case for Christianity, Book 2:”What Christians Believe” There were only a few revisions between the broadcasts and the published versions. This series was carried on the BBC Home Service on Sunday afternoons between 4:45 and 5 p. m.

Mere Christianity Book 1: “Right or Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe”ĥ. BBC Radio First Series: “Right or Wrong: A Clue to the Meaning ofthe Universe”īroadcast Talks and The Case For Christianity, Book 1: “Right or Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe.” (Each of the two internal `books’ were titled, but individual chapters were untitled.) The entire four broadcast series and three books were published in 1952 as a single book, Mere Christianity. The talks were first published in Britain in 1942 as Broadcast Talks and in 1943 in the United States as The Case for Christianity. (The titles for the BBC radio talks are from the broadcast scripts.) A large number of letters from listeners resulted in Lewis doing a broadcast on September 6 to answer questions. “Right or Wrong: A Clue to the Meaning of the Universe.”Įxcept for the Saturday, September 6 broadcast, this series was carried on the BBC Home Service on Wednesday evenings between 7:45 and 8 p.m. This article provides information about the original broadcast talks and their publication history up to Mere Christianity. Lewis’s Mere Christianity originated as a series of radio talks delivered in the 1940s in Great Britain.

Lewis’s Mere Christianity Discovery Institute JReligion and Civic LifeĬ.S. Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Flipboard Print arroba Email
