C.S. Lewis on Myth Become Fact
Surprised by Joy (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: 1955), 236.
I was by now too experienced in literary criticism to regard the
Gospels as myths. They had not the mythical taste. And yet the very
matter which they set down in their artless, historical fashion —
those narrow, unattractive jews, too blind to the mystical wealth of
the Pagan world around them — was precisely the matter of great
myths. If ever a myth had become a fact, had been incarnated, it would
be just like this. And nothing else in all literature was just like
this. Myths were like it in one way. Histories were like it in another,
but nothing was simply alike. And no person was like the Person it
depicted; as real, as recognizable, through all that depth of time...
yet also so luminous, lit by a light from beyond the world, a god. But
if a god — we are no longer polytheists — then not a god, but God.
Here and here only in all time the myth must have become fact; the
Word, flesh; God, Man. This is not "a religion," nor "a philosophy." It
is the summing up and actuality of them all.
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