I finally got to reading this book! If Ellen Vaughn’s first
book (“Becoming Elisabeth Elliot” which tells the first half of Elisabeth's life) was excellent, than this second part was something far beyond
that. It was really hard to put down…. I for sure lost some sleep this past
week being up reading. And I wept at the end. (I had a good idea/spoilers
of the ending ahead of time, but still, I wept.) I should also add that the only disappointing aspect of this 2-part biography was there were NO PICTURES! (If you'd like some, and a timeline of her life, here's a great resource: https://elisabethelliot.org/about/timeline/)
I so appreciate how Ellen wrote this book. Like Ellen, I am a realist. Like her and Elisabeth I know
that those we admire should never be put on pedestals as (near) perfect saints. Like her and Elisabeth,
I want the whole truth to be spoken, regardless of other people’s opinions/reactions.
And Ellen modeled, “speaking
the truth in love”.... although I know I could grow in that particular aspect - I am probably more like Elisabeth in that regard.
I left the reading of this book with two emotions. One was utter
sadness at the ending of Elisabeth’s life and the wrong/hard last years she
suffered… largely because her views on marriage/submission were rather sadly
twisted (which caused her and many she advised harm). My heart broke so for
her (and her daughter/family members who had to watch) as it does for other
women stuck in similar controlling marriages (this is a passionate area for me,
one I’ve written about and continue to speak out about). While submission is one
aspect of marriage, while someone making you “feel like a woman” is great,
there is so much more to what God’s design is. Elisabeth desperately wanted to
feel secure, she missed the signs of Lars’ anger/control issues (although to
give her some credit, so did everyone else around her), and she believed that a wife’s
submission meant inferiority and being under a husband’s authority (which I
agree Jim’s unintentional but unfortunate treatment of her during their early courtship contributed to - see
the first book for more on that). Marriage was not intended by God to be authoritarian,
even though because of sin, it often ended up that way. Marriage, as in Ephesians 5, is mutual
submission, it is not one-sided, even though the wives’ submission is
emphasized, and the husband's responsibility to love is emphasized. It is supposed to be mutual love, respect, submission, Christ-like
giving, working together for the kingdom of God. Elisabeth, for her part, tried to do just that. But unfortunately, she married
a man who actually wanted to control her, not love her like Christ. There are
still abusive, controlling men (and women) in churches today. There are popular
pastors teaching authority/submission imbalance in marriage, overlooking
and even defending abusive behavior (even actual abuse that should be reported
to the police), all the while teaching on “God’s grace” and “love for others”. If
Elisabeth’s third marriage saddens and rather makes you angry that’s good… but pay
attention to the fact that it’s still happening all around us. I should clarify here that I am a committed "soft" complementarian... I cannot reconcile the Egalitarian views on gender/marriage with Scripture. However, many "complementarians" are actually authoritarians or defenders of "Biblical patriarchy" so it's very important that we are careful and clear about what we mean in this area. For more reading on this topic, I highly recommend THIS series.
The other emotion I was left with after reading this book was still, a very great admiration. Elisabeth was human, she made mistakes… but still, I came away admiring her faith, her endurance through so much suffering, her commitment to what she believed, her willingness to “tell it like it is”. She spoke out about many things and was indeed rather a “seer” in her generation. Despite being married to a controlling false believer for the last period of her life, God used this season for her to write most of her books and influence thousands for Christ. Our suffering is never for nothing, and despite our/others' sin, God uses us.
Elisabeth was a faithful servant of God who persevered to the end… I seek to learn from her, follow her example in some ways and to do better in other ways, and earnestly praise God for the good He did in and through her life.
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