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From Across the Ancient Waters

Page 43

by Michael Phillips


  Katherine consulted in private with Steven Muir, as she always called him. With quiet and humble gratitude, he accepted her offer. She added, however, that no announcement of it should be made until she made it herself. He must say nothing even to his mother.

  After a few more days, Mary and Edward Drummond left on the coach for Blaenau Ffestiniog where they caught the train that, after several connections, took them back to Scotland.

  Two weeks later, declaring himself in need of a holiday, Courtenay Westbrooke left for the south of France, expecting at the end of his hiatus to find the weight of his father’s responsibilities falling to his shoulders.

  He did not return for three months. By then Percy had resumed his studies in Abereen. To Courtenay’s great surprise and smoldering fury, Stevie Muir was confidently and capably in charge as Lady Katherine’s factor at Westbrooke Manor.

  No one quite knew why from the very day of the viscount’s funeral the hammer and anvil of Kyvwlch Gwarthegydd’s smithy were thereafter silent on Sundays. Nor did a soul ever know his dark secret—that when his wife and Chandos were occupied at church, he crept to his son’s room to snatch peeks inside the Bible on the shelf, hoping to discover more about who God really was.

  Percy’s plans and what came of them will require another book.

  Read the conclusion of The Green Hills of Snowdonia in

  The Treasure of the Celtic Triangle.

  Coming August 2012

  Michael Phillips and the Legacy of His Books

  Native Californian Michael Phillips is one of the most versatile, prolific, and beloved Christian novelists of our time. To those unfamiliar with his work, the question, “What kind of books does Michael Phillips write?” has no easy answer.

  He began his writing career in 1977 with nonfiction. Since that time he has authored more than twenty nonfiction books, most notably dealing with the nature and character of God and the fatherhood of God.

  After turning to the writing of novels in the mid-1980s, Phillips has penned some sixty fiction titles of great variety. His works are read and loved by pastors, priests, and the laity, by prison inmates and college presidents, by men and women, young and old, elementary school children and graduate students alike. The enormous breadth of his faithful audience is testimony that his writings are universal in their appeal. He has likely written something to suit nearly every literary taste. Most of his series have been bestsellers in the Christian market. If you have not discovered his writings, you have years of enjoyment ahead of you!

  Michael Phillips is also a coauthor. Nearly all his fourteen books in collaboration with friend Judith Pella have also been bestsellers.

  Phillips’s name is often linked to that of his spiritual and literary mentor, Victorian Scotsman George MacDonald. For those unfamiliar with the name, the books of George MacDonald were instrumental in leading C. S. Lewis out of atheism into Christianity. Lewis emphasized that George MacDonald was the most significant impetus in his own spiritual pilgrimage. MacDonald’s writings can thus be seen as the spiritual soil out of which the faith of C. S. Lewis emerged. MacDonald’s novels, fantasies, and fairy tales provided the imaginative foundation for Lewis’s later writings, including the Chronicles of Narnia.

  In spite of C. S. Lewis’s frequent mention of his influence, Mac-Donald’s name in the late twentieth century drifted into obscurity and his books became unavailable.

  Fortunately, in the 1970s Michael Phillips, like C. S. Lewis before him, discovered the writings of MacDonald. A new generation of readers soon grew thankful for that discovery! For Phillips made it his life’s work and passion to bring to public attention the literary and spiritual links between MacDonald and Lewis. To do so, Phillips set about preparing and releasing updated and edited editions of MacDonald’s works. Phillips is most widely known as George MacDonald’s redactor, publisher, and biographer, and the man whose vision and editorial expertise brought MacDonald back from obscurity when his name was nearly forgotten.

  Phillips’s efforts ignited the MacDonald renaissance of the 1980s and 1990s, an awakening that continues to this day. In addition to his redacted MacDonald titles, Phillips’s publishing efforts in producing full-length facsimile editions spawned renewed interest in MacDonald’s original work. Phillips is recognized, not only as the man responsible for the widespread renewal of MacDonald’s influence, but as the world’s foremost purveyor of MacDonald’s message, with particular insight into MacDonald’s heart and spiritual vision.

  Michael Phillips and his wife, Judy, his lifelong partner in all aspects of his writing, bookselling, and publishing, divide their time between homes in California and Scotland, where they are working to heighten awareness of Scotland’s own George MacDonald.

  Both Phillipses love to hear from their readers. Though they receive mail from all over the world, they read and try to respond to every letter. You may learn more about Michael Phillips and his writings, as well as how to contact him and Judy and obtain their books, from the website: FatherOfTheInklings.com. You can also write to them at: P.O. Box 7003, Eureka, CA 95502.

  Find an era and a Michael Phillips series that is to your taste! Most titles are available through local bookstores, from Christian Books, Amazon, or AbeBooks, or from FatherOfTheInklings.com. And these aren’t all! For more titles by Michael Phillips, including his thought-provoking nonfiction writings on the nature of God, his Bible expositions, his acclaimed Introductions to the Books of the Bible, as well as available George MacDonald titles, go to FatherOfTheInklings.com.

  19th-CENTURY SCOTLAND, with Judith Pella

  The Stonewycke Trilogy (1985–1986):

  The Heather Hills of Stonewycke

  Flight from Stonewycke

  The Lady of Stonewycke

  The Stonewycke Legacy (1987–1988):

  A Stranger at Stonewycke

  Shadows over Stonewycke

  Treasure of Stonewycke

  The Highland Collection (1987):

  Jamie MacLeod, Highland Lass

  Robbie Taggart, Highland Sailor

  CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH

  The Journals of Corrie Belle Hollister (1990–1997):

  My Father’s World, with Judith Pella

  Daughter of Grace, with Judith Pella

  On the Trail of the Truth

  A Place in the Sun

  Sea to Shining Sea

  Into the Long Dark Night

  Land of the Brave and the Free

  Grayfox

  A Home for the Heart

  The Braxtons of Miracle Springs

  A New Beginning

  19th-CENTURY RUSSIA, with Judith Pella

  The Russians (1991–1992):

  The Crown and the Crucible

  A House Divided

  Travail and Triumph

  WORLD WAR II & COLD WAR GERMANY

  The Secret of the Rose (1993–1995):

  The Eleventh Hour

  A Rose Remembered

  Escape to Freedom

  Dawn of Liberty

  WESTERN AMERICAN PRAIRIE

  Mercy and Eagleflight (1996–1997):

  Mercy and Eagleflight

  A Dangerous Love

  SPIRITUAL FANTASY (1998)

  The Garden at the Edge of Beyond

  CONTEMPORARY THRILLER

  The Livingstone Chronicles (1997–2000):

  Rift in Time

  Hidden in Time

  WORLD WAR I ENGLAND

  The Secrets of Heathersleigh Hall (1998–2000):

  Wild Grows the Heather in Devon

  Wayward Winds

  Heathersleigh Homecoming

  A New Dawn over Devon

  ANCIENT EPIC SCOTLAND

  Caledonia (1999–2000):

  Legend of the Celtic Stone

  An Ancient Strife

  CONTEMPORARY DRAMA

  The Destiny Chronicles (2002):

  Destiny Junction

  King’s Crossroads

  AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

  Shen
andoah Sisters (2002–2004):

  Angels Watching over Me

  A Day to Pick Your Own Cotton

  The Color of Your Skin Ain’t the Color of Your Heart

  Together Is All We Need

  Carolina Cousins (2005–2007):

  A Perilous Proposal

  A Soldier’s Lady

  Never Too Late

  Miss Katie’s Rosewood

  American Dreams (2005–2008):

  Dream of Freedom

  Dream of Life

  Dream of Love

  SCOTTISH DRAMA (2011)

  Angel Harp

  Heather Song

  19th-CENTURY WALES

  The Green Hills of Snowdonia (2012):

  From Across the Ancient Waters

  The Treasure of the Celtic Triangle

  DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  In chapter 7, in discussing the village of Llanfyniog, it was said that its religion “tended to see God as an Almighty magician and shaman, rather than as the loving Creator-Father of humankind.” What did you think of this description of a Christianity which mingled remnants of paganism with the Christian Gospel? Have you encountered hints of the same thing in any of the churches you have been part of?

  Nearly all of us have experienced family stresses not unlike what occurs in chapter 9 between Percy and his parents. Share a similar experience from your life—either as a parent or as a teen. How was it handled, and what was the end result? Many relational conflicts in families never do get satisfactorily resolved. What ongoing stresses are you attempting to come to terms with in your family?

  Tell about an experience when you were aware of nature first “speaking” to you in new ways.

  By chapter 25, nature has begun to get more deeply into Percy’s soul than he ever anticipated. God speaks to every human heart by unique means. Nature is one of those ways. What are others? What have been your experiences in detecting God’s voice and presence in new ways, whether through nature or other manifestations of His Being? What have been those “unique means” in your life?

  What is your response to the spiritual inclinations of Kyvwlch Gwarthegydd and Hollin Radnor in chapter 28?

  Respond to Vicar Edward Drummond’s sermon on prodigality and reconciliation in chapters 29–33, both literarily and spiritually. Do you like this kind of thought-provoking spiritual content in a novel? Were you challenged to make right any relationships in your own life? Have you wondered, with Edward and Mary, about the role of the prodigal’s parents in the parable, what they were doing and thinking while their son was away? Have you been in such a position yourself?

  What arrows of prayer were you challenged to send to God for your own loved ones after reading chapter 33?

  Why is it, do you suppose, that young people in our day are not counseled, instructed, exhorted, and challenged to make their relationships with their parents right according to the pattern of chapter 50, and instead think it is enough to drift lazily back into speaking terms but little more? Why is today’s church so lethargic about urging true repentance and homegoing? Why do today’s counselors, even Christian counselors, invariably blame the parents for most problems, and do not confront young people with the scriptural imperative simply to humble themselves and repent?

  Read between the lines of chapter 68 and interpret what you think is going on in Percy’s thoughts.

  As Percy describes the inner workings of his relationship with his father to Florilyn in chapter 69, what are your reactions? Many might read this and think That is pretty idealistic … or That is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard … or That sounds wonderful. What do you think?

  Has Percy made a sound decision (chapters 74–76)? He is facing an extremely difficult and delicate set of circumstances. When you were in similar situations, how did you arrive at clarity? Whom did you seek for counsel? If Percy had asked for your counsel in his predicament, what would have been your response?

  What would you have said to Roderick Westbrooke in chapter 81 that Percy did not say?

 

 

 


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