1. Why does C.S. Lewis seem to make many arguments black and white?
2. If human nature is morality, knowing good and evil, does this mean that Adam
and Eve were somehow separate 'beings' from humans before eating the
forbidden fruit?
3. Does Lewis's point about Jesus forgiving sins imply two kinds of forgiveness?
One holy done by God and the other done by your fellow man?
a. Building off the last question, I wonder what Lewis would think of placing
one kind of forgiveness over the other?
4. Lewis claims that Jesus' claims force us to make a decision about who He is,
God, liar, or lunatic, but (going back to the first question kind of) are these really
the only options? Couldn't the lack of a decision be a sort of decision?
5. Is rejecting Jesus really a moral error? Lewis says that because Jesus claims to
be God that to reject Jesus and say he is just a good moral teacher would be
wrong since claiming to be God would be a serious sin. Is it not possible to say
that a part of someone is a good model, while they fail in other areas?