Margins
A Slow & Certain Light book cover
A Slow & Certain Light
1973
First Published
4.27
Average Rating
122
Number of Pages
This is a book about guidance of God, writes the author Elisabeth Elliot a collection of observations from personal experience and from the Bible on why and how God does, in fact guide his children. To ask for the guidance of God is to make a choice, and this takes faith. It must be faith of a far higher kind. It is faith that has strength to wait for the rewards God holds, strength to believe they are worth waiting for, worth the price asked.
Avg Rating
4.27
Number of Ratings
74
5 STARS
47%
4 STARS
34%
3 STARS
18%
2 STARS
1%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Elisabeth Elliot
Elisabeth Elliot
Author · 60 books

From the Author's Web Site: My parents were missionaries in Belgium where I was born. When I was a few months old, we came to the U.S. and lived in Germantown, not far from Philadelphia, where my father became an editor of the Sunday School Times. Some of my contemporaries may remember the publication which was used by hundreds of churches for their weekly unified Sunday School teaching materials. Our family continued to live in Philadelphia and then in New Jersey until I left home to attend Wheaton College. By that time, the family had increased to four brothers and one sister. My studies in classical Greek would one day enable me to work in the area of unwritten languages to develop a form of writing. A year after I went to Ecuador, Jim Elliot, whom I had met at Wheaton, also entered tribal areas with the Quichua Indians. In nineteen fifty three we were married in the city of Quito and continued our work together. Jim had always hoped to have the opportunity to enter the territory of an unreached tribe. The Aucas were in that category—a fierce group whom no one had succeeded in meeting without being killed. After the discovery of their whereabouts, Jim and four other missionaries entered Auca territory. After a friendly contact with three of the tribe, they were speared to death. Our daughter Valerie was 10 months old when Jim was killed. I continued working with the Quichua Indians when, through a remarkable providence, I met two Auca women who lived with me for one year. They were the key to my going in to live with the tribe that had killed the five missionaries. I remained there for two years. After having worked for two years with the Aucas, I returned to the Quichua work and remained there until 1963 when Valerie and I returned to the U.S. Since then, my life has been one of writing and speaking. It also included, in 1969, a marriage to Addison Leitch, professor of theology at Gordon Conwell Seminary in Massachusetts. He died in 1973. After his death I had two lodgers in my home. One of them married my daughter, the other one, Lars Gren, married me. Since then we have worked together.

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