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Author Linda Brooks Davis |
Linda Brooks Davis, welcome to Overcoming
With God. I truly enjoyed meeting you at the ACFW in Nashville in 2016! What a sweet lady you are! Would you tell us about the one of the most difficult
things in your life you have had to overcome, with God’s help?
The greatest trial of my 71 years is one our
family is experiencing now. Minor children are involved, and the terrible case
is still in the courts, so I’m not free to share details.However, I can “sew around the edges” a bit
by sharing some ways in which the Lord has dealt with me.
Once upon a time I believed I lived in a
country blessed by the inalienable right of freedom of religion. I thought
rearing children according to parents’ Christian principles wasn’t simply duty
but a U.S. Constitution-guaranteed right. Naively, I believed Christian rearing
was sacrosanct within the walls of a Christian home. Tragically, this isn’t necessarily so. Furthermore, I’ve learned godlessness has so
invaded our institutions of government--even in a “conservative” state--that
the agency and its arms tasked to protect children can become a Christian
family’s worst nightmare.
I’ve learned the world’s ungodliness has so
invaded this agency and the courts that right
is labeled wrong and wrong is labeled right. I’ve learned testimonies of those who curse the name of
Jesus are accepted as truth. And the testimonies of Christian parents--the
father, a godly pastor/counselor--is not only suspect but declared a lie and
the home’s teaching about the difference between “law and grace” labeled
“abuse.”
And God has taught me some things about
myself. I come from a long line of hard-charging
women who wait for no one to act for them, double down when the way grows
tough, and fight every ol’ demon in Hell
for their children, as my mother said.
Recently, the Lord has shown me pride lurking in the shadows of
self-sufficiency; bitterness and anger--better yet, rage--boiling in the teapot of my heart; and idolatry as I’ve gazed upon certain loved ones and grasped their
hands before His.
What passages in the Bible have been most
helpful to you in those times?
I’m reminded in Zechariah 2:13 (AMP) that the
Lord is roused in my behalf, so I’d
best settle down: “Be still before the LORD, all mankind; for He is roused from
His holy habitation [in response to His persecuted people].”
What helped you get through or helped you
cope with this difficulty?
As the Lord would have it, the theme verse
for The Calling of Ella McFarland, 2
Corinthians 12:9, has become my life’s theme through this ordeal “… ‘My grace
is sufficient for you [My lovingkindness and My mercy are more than
enough--always available--regardless of the situation]; for [My] power is being
perfected [and is completed and shows itself most effectively] in [your] weakness.’
Therefore, I will all the more gladly boast in my weaknesses, so that the power
of Christ [may completely enfold me and] may dwell in me.” (Amplified Version)
Pride and self-sufficiency have no place in
the weakness in which Christ’s power is manifest; anger and bitterness exclude
trust in God; and only open, empty hands can be filled with His.
Disability friendliness: Is this latest
release available in audio format or do you have any other works available on
audio? Do your e-books have audio
capability? Do you have any in large print?
In this latest work, do you have any topics
useful for bibliotherapy, or therapeutic influence through reading about a
disorder or situation?
I’ve just completed my second full-length
novel. The working title, Where Healing
Waters Flow, provides a clue to its theme. It picks up with Lily, one of
the secondary characters in The Calling
of Ella McFarland. The year is 1914, and this young woman who was horribly
abused as a child finds a type of healing she hasn’t expected.
One of my
favorite verses is Psalm 3:3 (KJV): “But thou,
O Lord, art a shield for me; my glory,
and the lifter up of mine head.”
It’s the perfect theme verse for Lily’s story.
1905 brings
hope of Oklahoma statehood and the woman’s suffrage debate is raging, forcing
Ella McFarland to make decisions about her faith, family, and aspirations. When
she comes to the rescue of a young, abused sharecropper’s daughter, her calling
takes shape in ways she never imagined. Education is Ella’s passion, but a new
love is budding in her heart, and new purpose calls. Can she find God’s will
amid the tumultuous storm that surrounds her?
CFP: I've been wanting to read this story for a long time, it sounds so good! And it's a multiple award-winning novel! Congrats, Linda!
Question you’d like to ask readers:
I would love to hear readers answer the questions I’ve been asked above. Sharing one another’s struggles and triumphs lightens loads while it strengthens for the road ahead.