Showing posts with label inspirational material. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspirational material. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Writing the Spiritual Novel

Considering writing a spiritual novel?

When I think of a spiritual novel, I am thinking of a novel chuck full of inspiration and motivation. If you consider the works of C.S. Lewis you will also understand what I mean.

Who is the Lion but Christ?
Who is the White Witch but Satan?
What is truly happening at the stone table? The Crucifixion.

If you're interested in writing a spiritual novel, you're not alone, and that's a good thing. There is still much good in the world and authors the world over are discovering ways to share what they know is true.

When I sat down to write Conquering Your Goliaths: A Parable of the Five Stones I had in mind a short book that told a story about someone overcoming an obstacle. At the same time I wanted to use scripture and the five stones that David gathered before he met up with Goliath.

Writing a spiritual novel is kind of like reading the scriptures or praying or having that contemplative moment. You take your knowledge and experience in the spiritual realm and apply it to the story you're writing. This writing cannot be hurried. As in the story above, you must Listen, Trust, have some Optimism that God will help you, keep going with Tenacity and always retain that Constancy needed with God to get you through.

Is that easy?

Nope.

Photo by Mike Cogh, courtesy of Flickr
But I'd like to think that writing the spiritual novel is made that much easier as long as we are willing to tune in.

Year ago I heard the story of an old fashioned radio. This radio had a dial that had to be turned to the right or to the left to find the exact station. If the radio station wasn't on the exact spot, the dial not in its correct spot, static resulted.

I'd like to compare this story to writing the spiritual novel. If you're feeling a bit of static, if you're feeling as if the story isn't coming along as it should, or it feels rough or wrong, it probably is. Tune in. In your own personal life you probably know how to do that.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Quotable Quotes for Writers

Do you have a selection of your favorite quotes from your top fellow writers?

Photo by: brewbooks, courtesy of Flickr

What I love about writers, especially if the writer has an inspirational heart, is what they can teach me--not just about plot, characterization or theme, but what I learn about the power of words. A word gains power as it is used just right, when you feel it in beneath your skin and all the way into your heart.

Words that have meaning for me as a writer and as a person, are words that make me think well beyond the reading of them. I am awe-struck and want to change another piece of myself just for reading them. I want to take action.

You may love C.S. Lewis like I do but may not have read "Weight of Glory" though you've probably heard of "The Screwtape Letters." As in all Lewis literature such as the ever common but not so common "Mere Christianity," there is something profound to hear.

"Conceal from the patient the true end of Humility. Let him think of it not as self-forgetfulness but as a certain kind of opinion (namely, a low opinion) of his own talents and character" (From The Screwtape Letters).

"Be sure that the ins and outs of your individuality are no mystery to Him (God); and one day they will no longer be a mystery to you" (From Weight of Glory).

"When will I ever learn to accept what is given instead of always yearning for more? My lavish expectations too often tarnish my blessings" (From A Year by the Sea, by Joan Anderson).

"God sometimes speaks in whispers, so we will move closer to hear" (Firstlight, by Sue Monk Kidd).

Photo by Burtoo, courtesy of Flickr
And finally,

"When the heart is flooded with love there is no room in it for fear, for doubt, for hesitation. And it is this lack of fear that makes for the dance. When each partner loves so completely that he has forgotten to ask himself whether or not he is loved in return; when he only knows that he loves and is moving to its music--then, and then only, are two people able to dance perfectly in tune to the same rhythm" (Gift from the Sea, by Anne Morrow Lindbergh).

Today you may want to gather your own favorite quotes and have them readily available to read when you need a bit of uplift or guided direction. As a writer we may or may not believe in our own gifts, our own talents to write, but we usually forget who gave them to us in the first place.