Narnia Entry #1: Coming Down From the High

     I was very intrigued by the feeling experienced by Digory in the concluding chapter of The Magician's Nephew.  Digory had just seen this absolutely compelling apple that had been given to him from Aslan to give to his mother to make her well, then after she ate it he kept the core because it was so astonishing.  Digory took the apple out of his pocket and it made all the other vibrant colors in the room look bland, this apple of Narnia surely was something special.  Then after Digory had left his mother, everything in the world looked so dull that he almost felt no hope, his only hope was that of which he found remembering Aslan and his majestic face.  I think that this is a common response to intense religious experience as well.  People will often bear witness or experience something so profoundly amazing or beautiful that after the encounter all of their surroundings look so mundane compared to the amazing experience they had just had.  I have found this to be true of my own life at times, I come down from this religious experience and am surprised by how bland and mundane some things I enjoy really are.  I, like Digory, find hope for the world and existence in the memory of who God is and how faith is beyond one sensational experience.

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