Finding Hope in Suffering With Amy CarmichaelSample
“All” means “all”
“All the paths of the Lord are lovingkindness.” I found that in the R.V. lately (Ps. 25:10) and have found it feeds me. All does not mean “all but these paths we are in now” or “nearly all, but perhaps not just this specially difficult painful one.” All must means all. So your path with its unexplained sorrow, and mine with its unexplained sharp flints and briers, and both with their unexplained perplexity of guidance, their sheer mystery, are just lovingkindness, nothing less. I am resting my heart on that word. It bears one up on eagle’s wings; it gives courage and song and sweetness too, that sweetness of spirit which it is death to lose even for one half-hour.
God bless you and utterly satisfy your heart with Himself. I remember in old days almost desperately repeating to myself these lines from Tersteegen:
Am I not enough, Mine own?
Enough Mine own for thee? . . .
Am I not enough Mine own?
I forever and alone,
I, needing thee?*
It was a long time before I could say honestly “Yes” to that question. I remember the turmoil of soul as if it were yesterday, but at last, oh the rest, “for in acceptance lieth peace.”**
* “The Inheritance," a hymn by Gerhard Tersteegen
** “In Acceptance Lieth Peace,” a poem by Amy Carmichael
Scripture
About this Plan
After an accident left her confined to her room in constant pain for the last twenty years of her life, Amy Carmichael penned countless precious letters to her friends. Compiled in the book Candles in the Dark, her letters share her intimate walk with Christ, offering encouragement and hope to those dealing with suffering. Let these words of strength and comfort light your path today like candles in the dark.
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