Jim Elliot

 

Feb

02

2010

Thabiti Anyabwile|1:47 pm CT

Whimpering Stateside Young People and Demon-Fearing Indians
Whimpering Stateside Young People and Demon-Fearing Indians avatar

Jim Elliot, shortly before martyred in service to the gospel:

You wonder why people choose fields away from the States when young people at home are drifting because no one wants to take time to listen to their problems.  I’ll tell you why I left.  Because those Stateside young people have every opportunity to study, hear, and understand the Word of God in their own language, and these Indians have no opportunity whatsoever.  I have had to make a cross of two logs, and lie down on it, to show the Indians what it means to crucify a man.  When there is that much ignorance over here and so much knowledge and opportunity over there, I have no question in my mind why God sent me here.  Those whimpering Stateside young people will wake up on the Day of Judgment condemned to worst fates than these demon-fearing Indians, because having a Bible, they were bored with it–while these never heard of such a thing as writing. (Shadow of the Almighty, p. 237)

The words ring with sacrificial authenticity and the piercing wisdom of one who saw eternal truths more clearly than most.  There’s the sound of Bonhoeffer in Elliot’s words: “When Christ calls a man, He bids him come die.”  These kinds of prophetic statements strip us of so much self-absorbed, pretentious, and cowardly cavils at the call of God.  They reduce us to either naked boldness for our King, or that pitiable nothingness that loves self above all else, even the eternal.

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Nov

30

2009

Thabiti Anyabwile|6:34 am CT

Trust Only in Divine Grace
Trust Only in Divine Grace avatar

Jim Elliot:

I see clearly now that anything, whatever it is, if it be not on the principle of grace, it is not of God. Here shall be my plea in weakness; here shall be my boldness in prayer; here shall be my deliverance in temptation; at last, here shall be my translation. Not of grace? Then not of God. And here, O Lord Most High, shall be your glory and the honor of your Son. And the awakening for which I have asked–it shall come in your time, on this principle, by grace, through faith. Perfect my faith, then, Lord, that I may learn to trust only in divine grace, that They work of holiness might soon begin….

In Shadow of the Almighty: The Life and Testament of Jim Elliot, p. 110.

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Nov

09

2009

Thabiti Anyabwile|8:01 am CT

The Next Step… The Threshold of Heaven
The Next Step… The Threshold of Heaven avatar

I’m being challenged right now reading Shadow of the Almighty: The Life and Testament of Jim Elliot. I’ve just started the book, but already I’m deeply encouraged by the zeal that shows through the life of a young man joyfully serious about Jesus. Elisabeth Elliot’s writing is almost spartan, but always appropriate and useful. I particularly appreciated these paragraphs in the preface:
Jim’s aim was to know God. His course, obedience–the only course that could lead to the fulfillment of his aim. His end was what some would call an extraordinary death, although in facing death he had quietly pointed out that many have died because of obedience to God.
He and the other men with whom he died were hailed as heroes, “martyrs.” I do not approve. Nor would they have approved.
Is the distinction between living for Christ and dying for Him, after all, so great? Is not the second the logical conclusion of the first? Furthermore, to live for God is to die, “daily,” as the apostle Paul put it. It is to lose everything that we may gain Christ. It is in thus laying down our lives that we find them. (pp. 9-10).
While at college in Wheaton, Jim wrote this advice to his 15-year-old sister:
Fix your eyes on the rising Morning Star. Don’t be disappointed at anything or over-elated, either. Live every day as if the Son of Man were at the door, and gear your thinking to the fleeting moment. Just how can it be redeemed? Walk as if the next step would carry you across the threshold of Heaven. Pray. That saint who advances on his knees never retreats.

I’ve only started, but it’s an excellent read, another “classic” I’m just getting around to. And I can tell I’ll be thankful and in some measure changed when I’ve finished it. If you’ve read it, how did the book affect your life?
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