Do I believe Narnia is real? Of course not. Why? Well, for one thing, I have no reason to believe it's real. As
MfA said, the burden of proof is on the believer. Just because something cannot be disproven, that does not, by default, make it a possibility. There are plenty of things in this world, some extremely outlandish, that cannot be disproven either. (Also, if you look up the records, I doubt you'll find any trace of a Peter, Susan, Edmund, or Lucy Pevensie who went to live with a Professor Kirke.

)
As for the scientific possibility of other worlds or a parallel universe, it's not impossible; but again, I have no reason to believe in it until I have the proof. And even if there are other worlds, you still will not find Narnia among them. You might, by coincidence, find a world that reminds you of Narnia in some ways. But it will still be its own world, not Narnia.
How do I know? Well, because Narnia was a fictional idea. It's not a legend. It's not written in a book as an eye witness account. It was written by a man named C.S. Lewis who admits he created it as an entertaining story. He made up the name, he planned out the history, he used his own human imagination to decide how he wanted the world to be. The possibility of it being a real place is the same as the possibility that real places could include Middle Earth, Naboo, Discworld, or any world we ourselves create in our own novels. (If someone read a book you wrote during NaNoWriMo, and they told you they believed the places in your story were real, what would you think?

) To say that C.S. Lewis sat down and wrote about a world that physically existed somewhere in reality, is to imply that Lewis was either psychic somehow; or was being inspired by the Holy Spirit as he wrote, being divinely told about some place we never knew before, much the same way the writers of the Bible were inspired. And
that treads in some very dangerous territory.
As for why Narnia feels so real, of
course it's going to be easier to believe in Narnia than disbelieve in it. We're Narnia fans; we want it to be a real place.

(Just like this Whovian would find it much easier to believe that the Doctor is coming for me in his TARDIS than it would to believe I will spend the rest of my days on earth, never to explore strange planets or battle Daleks.) But I think it's important to discern the difference between wishful thinking and truth.
Another reason why Narnia feels so real is because our hearts were made for another world. Although Narnia is not a real place, it has certain qualities - beauty, joy; the face-to-face presence of a loving, omniscient, omnipotent being - that reminds us of a real place.
And this is where the important part comes in. People like Lewis write stories like Narnia in order to get us excited about the real thing - God and the wonders He has in store for us. They didn't write it so that we would get distracted from the real thing and focus only on the fictional story parts of it. We should love Aslan because he reminds us of Christ; not love Christ because He reminds us of Aslan. We should look forward to Christ's return, to the New Heavens and the New Earth; not look forward to possibly finding the fictional world that a human based on it. It's no good saying things like, "I hope Heaven is as good as Narnia" or "I hope Christ is as wonderful as Aslan". Christ, and what he has in store for us, is the original. Aslan and Narnia are the copies. When we see God, and everything else, Narnia will look rather dim in comparison.

~Riella
