“Be it done unto me according to thy word” surrenders yourself and all that is dear to you to God, and the trust which it implies does not mean trusting God to look after you and yours, to keep them in health and prosperity and honor.
It means much more, it means trusting that whatever God does with you and with yours is the act of an infinitely loving Father.
The war has shown even the inexperienced, the young, that you cannot depend on money. In less than a few second the richest man’s home becomes a heap of rubble; at the same moment the little son is killed.
Is trust of God to go as far as that? Are we to see the pathetic little burden carried away in the warden’s arms and still say: “That is God’s dear son, the object of all His all-powerful love!”
–Caryll Houselander, The Reed of God
I think a lot of Christians, especially certain Evangelicals, really get themselves into spiritual trouble with the belief she describes in the first paragraph.
Leave a reply to Mac Cancel reply