“What does God want me to do?”, not “What will God do if I do so and so?”
Quote by George MacDonald
Work
Unspoken Sermons comprises three series of addresses originally delivered orally and later published in written form during the late nineteenth century. The work belongs to the broader corpus associated with George MacDonald, a Scottish author and minister whose writings spanned fiction, poetry, and religious exposition. The sermons are distinguished by their literary quality, employing narrative techniques, metaphor, and speculative reasoning rather than conventional homiletic structure. Central themes include the restorative nature of divine punishment, the gradual transformation of human will, and the ultimate reconciliation of all creation. The title itself suggests a distinction between spoken ministry and written reflection, or perhaps between conventional preaching and the deeper truths that resist easy articulation. The work has influenced subsequent religious writers and remains in circulation as part of MacDonald's collected writings, though it occupies a particular place within his output as explicitly theological rather than allegorical or fantastical in mode. more
Author
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“As many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God.”
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“Why should my love be powerless to help another?”
“What would the Living One have me do?”
