My dad was an alcoholic. One night he and my mom were fighting in the kitchen. He was screaming at her, pushing her and throwing things. My brothers and I stood in our pajamas, watching in terror as she begging him to stop...
On the Mystery of Free Will
The concept that man has free will is one of the most challenging mysteries of God to explain to both believers and non-believers. For the believer, this challenge is understanding and accepting that conforming our will to His will for us is not an encumbrance to be borne, it is a freedom to be cherished.
Self-Knowledge and Ponies
George MacDonald, Universal Reconciliation, and Free Will: A Few Brief Thoughts
Rescuing the Drowning
In my late teens, I was a drowning person. Drowning in fear, self-doubt, depression, suicidal thoughts, and deep emotional pain, I was untrustworthy and unstable. Drowning victims are dangerous. I used drugs, alcohol, sex--anything or anyone who might make me feel, even for a short time, sheltered from the hell inside I could not face.
Finding Comfort At the Back of the North Wind
Diamonds’ experience at the Back of the North Wind mirrored my own last summer. I was so tired from hitting a place in my fight against cancer, that I was in bed most of the time. I started re-reading George MacDonald’s novels that my husband and I had loved so much and had read when we were first married...
What's in a Name?
The Wreck, The Ruin, and The Remedy
The Shadow Inside
If we want to forgive truly, and find it difficult, the answer is not found by examining the person who has wronged us, wondering how he could have done such a thing, comparing his sins with the rest of ‘normal’ humanity and trying to find him not so bad by comparison. The key to full, free, and permanent forgiveness actually lies within the self, and is found when we become willing to uncover self-deception.
On Truth
The Aspiring Child
Becoming Real
Of Milk and Meat
I believe we far too frequently mistake milk for meat, and get overly satisfied with the belief that we understand various principles as well as they can be understood, or at least as well as we need to. As George MacDonald put it: "Nothing is so ruinous to progress in which effort is needful, as satisfaction with apparent achievement; that ever sounds a halt..."
The Hound of Heaven
Bonhoeffer once said that no one can understand “In the beginning” because no one was there in the beginning to see or understand it. In somewhat like manner, I cannot understand truly the words of MacDonald, taken from the reading for January 11th, which say that “God has been working for ages of ages” for His vision of Truth...
The Heart of a Joyful Conspirator
What Did George MacDonald Look Like?
The Search for Truth in Christian Community
It is my supposition that it is within the Christian Community that truths leading to God in the form of both teachings and practice should be both taught and sought. For when Jesus said: But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth, (John 16:13) Jesus was speaking to His apostles as a community, and did not mean this to suggest that individuals could forsake community for private revelation...
Revelation: The Samaritan Woman at the Well
"There are two revelations in Christianity: "the revelation of God and the revelation of ourselves." So wrote New Testament scholar William Barclay (1907-1978), a man after George MacDonald's own heart, speaking about Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. A small portion of Barclay's commentary on John 4 follows the story itself...
What Does it Mean to Believe in Jesus? William Barclay on John 3:14-15
BFF: MacDonald, Lewis, and.....Piper???
Both MacDonald and Lewis had much to say about God as the ultimate source of joy in our lives. The true child of God, said MacDonald, trusts in the Father, "and looks to him as the source of life, the gladness of being." And of course this was a major theme for Lewis in Surprised by Joy and many other of his writings. So, in the Heavenly Tea and Coffee Shoppe, sometime in the distant future, I'm imagining Lewis and his "master" waving to Piper to pull up a chair and join their conversation. Here's some of what Piper has to say, from the first chapter of Desiring God.