August 2024
Wee book written in 1894 by British artist and cross-cultural ministry worker Lilias Trotter. It’s about dying to sin and self to be able to experience spiritual freedom and fruitfulness. Filled with her own nature illustrations, but they are blurry black and white copies that don’t do her work justice.
Though much of my young adult years were majorly formed by pietist type writings such as this, I’m very shy of picking them up now—they caused so much miserable spiritual striving and burnout in me and in others. But I decided to return to Lilias Trotter, remembering her artist’s soul that took time to SEE and ponder what she saw in light of what she knew of the gospel. And I survived the foray without too much trauma triggered! 😅 I found a worthwhile, thought-provoking, encouraging read.
Excerpts:
“The death of the Cross”—death’s triumph—that was the point where God’s gate opened; and to that gate we come again and again, as our lives unfold, and through it pass even on earth to our joyful resurrection, to a life each time more abundant, for each time the dying is a deeper dying. The Christian life is a process of deliverance out of one world into another, and “death,” as has been truly said, “is the only way out of any world in which we are.”
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From His side God will come in with a breath of His resurrection power; for the Cross and the empty tomb cannot be long divided.
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…There lies before us a beautiful possible life—one that shall have a passion for giving: that shall be poured forth to God—spent out for man: that shall be consecrated “for the hardest work and the darkest sinner.”
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And a like characteristic of the new flood of resurrection life that comes to our souls as we learn this fresh lesson of dying—a grand independence of any earthly thing to satisfy our soul, the liberty of those who have nothing to lose, because they have nothing to keep. We can do anything while we have God. Hallelujah!