The Seaboard Parish - Volume 2 by George MacDonald
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George MacDonald was a Scottish author, poet and Christian Congregational minister. He became a pioneering figure in the field of modern fantasy literature and the mentor of fellow-writer Lewis Carroll. In addition to his fairy tales, MacDonald wrote several works of Christian theology, including several collections of sermons.
Reading MacDonald is worthwhile because of the interaction between people, characterization, creativity in explaining truth and the goodness of God which shines through. There is always a feeling of goodness and hope when I read MacDonald.
MacDonald writes an excellent and amazing sermon about the Resurrection from the dead in this book; it is towards the end of the book, I think in the last chapter which is the climax of this volume. It was very encouraging and uplifting to read. His thoughts, descriptions, and depictions of the resurrected body after death he compares to a butterfly, etc.
“Think, then, of all the deaths you know; the death of the night, when the sun is gone, when friend says not a word to friend, but both lie drowned and parted in the sea of sleep; the death of the year, when winter lies heavy on the graves of the children of summer, when the leafless trees moan in the blasts from the ocean, when the beasts even look dull and oppressed, when the children go about shivering with cold, when the poor and improvident are miserable with suffering or think of such a death of disease as befalls us at times, when the man who says, 'Would God it were morning!' changes but his word, and not his tune, when the morning comes, crying, 'Would God it were evening!' when what life is left is known to us only by suffering, and hope is amongst the things that were once and are no more—think of all these, think of them all together, and you will have but the dimmest, faintest picture of the death from which the resurrection of which I have now to speak, is the rising. I shrink from the attempt, knowing how weak words are to set forth the death, set forth the resurrection. Were I to sit down to yonder organ, and crash out the most horrible dissonances that ever took shape in sound, I should give you but a weak figure of this death; were I capable of drawing from many a row of pipes an exhalation of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet, such as Milton himself could have invaded our ears withal, I could give you but a faint figure of this resurrection.”
Excerpt From The Complete Works of George MacDonald (Illustrated Edition) George MacDonald This material may be protected by copyright.
For all my fellow painters, this book theorized the “why” behind painting like no other GM book. I’m still thinking on the things I highlighted and wanting to be the painter GM believed God was honored with. There was worship of God in painting and pictures. I thoroughly enjoyed this one the most in the series of three and will come back to reread these again once I get through the rest of GM’s works.