Five Lessons from Elisabeth Elliott
Few women have had an impact on the kingdom of God as has Elisabeth
Elliot. Her remarkable insights and words of wisdom continue to shape
us, even after her death and years of illness. Here are just five truths
I have gleaned from her devotional book “A Lamp for My Feet.” Published
in 1985, it remains on my list of books I regularly re-read.
“Thy List Be Done” – His List, Not Mine
Women always have multiple lists going – shopping needs, errands to
be run, answering emails or correspondence, calls to be made, prayer
lists, etc. Inevitably, we will have interruptions and won’t accomplish
what we hoped. The lists get longer instead of shorter! Elisabeth
experienced that frustration on more than one occasion and wrote,
“Because God is my sovereign Lord, I was not worried. He manages
perfectly day and night, year in and year out, the movements of the
starts, the wheeling of the planets, the staggering coordination of
events that goes on on the molecular level in order to hold things
together. There’s no doubt that He can manage the timing of days and
weeks. So I can pray in confidence, ‘Thy list, not mine, be done.'”
“Wastelands”- Don’t Look for Shortcuts
At some time we all experience “dry, fruitless, lonely places.”
Using Exodus 13:17, Elisabeth points out that these times are not
wasted for the Christian. “God did not guide them by the road towards
the Philistines, although that was the shortest….God intentionally took
them by way of the wilderness toward the Red Sea. “If they had gone
their own way, they would have missed the deliverance from Egypt’s
chariots when the sea was rolled back. Lets not ask for shortcuts. Let’s
keep alert for the wonders our Guide will show us in the wilderness.”
“Volunteer Slaves” – Serving with Joy
Our service to Christ is in the sense of a volunteer slave, or a
servant who loves her master with all her heart. It is not “forced
labor,” but the “purest joy when it is most unobserved, most
unself-conscious, most simple, most freely offered.” Don’t minimize the
service in small acts – cooking a meal, consoling a discouraged friend,
forgiving a failure. “Let me not imagine that my love for You is very
great if I am unwilling to do for human being something very small.”
Ouch.
“Apportioned Limitation” – Accepting Your Field of Service
God sets limitations on “the scope of our work”, in that He has
appointed us to a certain “sphere”. “We will keep to the limits God has
apportioned us” (2 Cor. 10:13). Jesus did that – becoming a baby, a
growing child, an adolescent, a man, each stage “bounded by its peculiar
strictures, yet each offering adequate scope in which to glorify His
Father.” God is glorified when we work in the place He has set us. “Let
me not covet another’s place or work or glory”
“First Be Quiet” – Learning Silence
“Our hectic lives involve many changes, and changes require
decisions, and decisions must often be made in the midst of a multitude
of confusions.” Instead of constantly asking others’ advice, Elisabeth
suggests practicing quietness. She points out how Jesus deliberately
sought solitude during the non-stop days of His ministry. “The more
hectic our lives become, the more necessary is this quietness.” When it
is not possible to get away to a place of solitude to pray for a day,
then “do not speak about the decision to anyone but God for forty eight
hours at least. Just hold it before Him alone. Keep your mouth shut for
two days. Pray. Listen. Seek his counsel.” Or this, “Sit before Him for
fifteen consecutive minutes in silence, focusing … on Psalm 86:11,
‘Guide Me, O Lord…”
What have you learned from Elisabeth?
Susie Hawkins
Susie lives in Dallas, TX with her husband OS Hawkins. She is the
author of "From One Ministry Wife to Another: Honest Conversations on
Connections in Ministry". She has 2 daughters and 6 grandchildren,
keeping her life full of craziness and joy.
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