Eric Ortlund
Goodreads Author
Member Since
November 2012
More books by Eric Ortlund…
“The spectral light inside sang like slow thunder. Already it had grown into a worm that twisted, a bird that fluttered, a snake that slid through my intestines. As it moved, it was hard to tell where my viscera ended and the invader began. The being’s presence receded from my mind and the light disappeared. I stood in perfect darkness for a moment before the jail cell became visible again.”
― I Am the Doorway
― I Am the Doorway
“I stared at it for a while. Then something happened to me which hadn’t happened for a long time. Once as a boy my parents took me to the beach. I didn’t build sand castles or play in the waves. I just stared at the horizon the whole time. I couldn’t take my eyes off it. My father asked me what I was looking at, and I told him I wanted to get in a boat and sail out there and keep sailing. When I went to Greece with Sarah and we looked out over the crystal blue Mediterranean, the same sweetness pulled at me. I cannot tell you where it came from or what I wanted, but I never forgot it. And it was happening again, in that lonely, quiet place Malachi had brought me to, because … what was that, above the thin curtain of reality? Past the furthest horizon, unseen, outside, silent? I could not make it out, but from my great depth, I was sure there was something, the way stars become visible in daylight from the bottom of a well. It pulled at me.”
― I Am the Doorway
― I Am the Doorway
“After all, the only kind of relationship with God that will save us is one where he is loved for who he is, for his own sake, irrespective of what secondary, earthly blessings we gain or lose because of our relationship with him. Unless Christians can, perhaps imperfectly but sincerely, affirm the all-surpassing worth of knowing God (Phil. 3:8)—surpassing even the worth of knowing one’s children—then we will be bored in the new creation, where God is “all in all” (1 Cor. 15:28). Our relationship with God must be greater than the secondary blessings he gives us, because it is a matter of time until we lose every secondary blessing when we die.”
― Suffering Wisely and Well: The Grief of Job and the Grace of God
― Suffering Wisely and Well: The Grief of Job and the Grace of God
Horror 101: Studying the Roots of the Horror Genre
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— last activity Feb 18, 2015 08:19AM
Goodreads group for the on-going podcast series Horror 101, featured monthly on Tales to Terrify, charting the development and evolution of the horror ...more




































