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Once Upon a Time ...

The power of story and the gift from the ultimate Storyteller
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When we're small, we see the world through story.

            Story fuels our childhood games of make-believe and let's pretend. Story fills our head and heart whenever clever adults spin imaginary tales at bedtime. After all, little ones don't say, "Tell me a fact." They say, "Tell me a story."

When I was eight, I discovered a story that shaped my young life—and has continued to do so for decades. The opening line still makes me smile: "It was a dark and stormy night." Only a writer as accomplished as Madeleine L'Engle could begin the book A Wrinkle in Time with a literary cliché and win readers' hearts—and a Newbery Award—in the process.

            After a vivid description of that tempestuous weather come two simple lines: "The house shook. Wrapped in her quilt, Meg shook."

            With those few words, I found myself transported to Meg Murry's bedroom, shaking right along with her. A few more paragraphs, and I sympathized with her struggles at school. By the third page, I longed to know more about Charles Wallace and their missing father. And what sort of chapter title is "Mrs. Whatsit"?

            That's story at work, quietly drawing you into its embrace. You can resist rhetoric, but it's hard to fight narrative. Without realize, you're turning pages—no longer aware of the chair you're sitting in or the clock ticking beside you or the birds singing outside your window.

            What makes L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time truly powerful is its timeless theme: the struggle between good and evil, and the ultimate triumph of love. Not only Meg's love for her brother, Charles, but also God's love for his people.

            In the closing chapter, "The Foolish and the Weak," God's Word makes a timely appearance: "The foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men" (1 Corinthians 1:25, KJV). Three more verses follow, taken verbatim from the King James Version—not in a "Christian" novel per se, but in a young-adult novel published by Dell and applauded worldwide.

            As a third-grader I knew little of the Bible, but I knew truth when I heart it. When Meg's heart began to pound, mine did, too. When her cheeks streamed with tears, mine grew wet as well. Deep inside me, life-changing truth landed like seeds in fertile soil gently broken open by story.

            God's Word began to take root.

Twenty years passed before I discovered a tiny green shoot poking out of the hard ground of my heart. Once again a writer was a t work—C. S. Lewis, through the pages of Mere Christianity—as at last I understood the Story was meant for me, meant for everyone.

            Another 20 years passed before I took a great leap of faith and became a storyteller myself. I believe that long process unfolded because two celebrated writers bravely told the only story that truly matters: the Story of God's love for his people, demonstrated in the gift of his Son, Jesus Christ.

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Related Topics:
Evangelism, Sharing Faith, Sharing Your Story

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Average User Rating:

Patricia Hickman

June 03, 2010  12:29pm

Liz is a true storyteller, both on the platform and the written page.

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