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Kristen Anne Glover

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{9} The Prince’s Kingdom

31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

From Enemy to Heir: Day 9 of 31 Days

Click on the photo above for Day 1

The prince opened the gates to his kingdom and Obscurity walked in behind him without a moment’s hesitation.  All her questions and doubts had been erased by the kind instruction of the prince.

But she was completely unprepared for the scene on the other side of the gates.

From afar, the prince’s kingdom looked pure white.  His castle sat up on a hill where it shimmered like a diamond.  No matter where you were in the Enchanter’s land, you could see it, if you wanted to.

When she was younger, Obscurity had often gazed upon that castle and thought about how very boring it would be to live in a world where everything was white.

radiant

Now that she was there, she could see that the kingdom was not white at all.  It was radiant with a myriad of brilliant, pure colors.  Some of the hues she had never seen before, but every inch of earth or sky shimmered with them.  It was like stepping into a magnificent gem, and Obscurity could not make her eyes wide enough to grasp the wonder.  She thought she could look on it forever and never see enough.

It was midday then, and the town was bustling with the affairs of the day.  Everywhere, people were hard at work, although it hardly looked like work to Obscurity because every person seemed to be doing the exact thing he or she most enjoyed doing.  Here a person painted pictures, there a person swept floors, one taught little children, and another layered mortar between bricks.

But all worked to the best of their ability, so if she had to choose, Obscurity would not have been able to tell whose job was the most important.  More intriguing still was the fact that she could sense no struggle between the roles.  There was no abuse of power or lazy workmanship, there were no angry threats or insolent remarks.

Instead, the air was filled with a sense of mutual respect and cooperation and a delight in being able to do what one was made to do in the kingdom of the prince they loved.

The prince, who stood beside her, watched it all with a look of pleased satisfaction.  Obscurity noticed that he looked more radiant than ever as his people went about the humble duties of their daily lives.

Obscurity, who had never had a skill or talent of any kind, suddenly wished she had something to do that was as good and satisfying as their labor seemed to be to themselves and to each other.  When she saw how much it pleased the prince to see his people creating, building, and ruling like princes themselves, she wanted nothing more than to be a part of it.

But she didn’t have much time to think about it because suddenly, someone looked up and noticed the prince had returned.  Immediately, he was surrounded, and she with him.  They greeted him with kisses.  One took his horse and one took his cloak and everyone was asking about the cuts on his face and the mud on his clothes.

That’s when they noticed her. 

And everything got quiet.

It was not entirely uncommon for the prince to bring an enemy into the gates.  Old people and children followed him wherever he went.  Those kinds of enemies had not been taught to hate him, or they were too old to fight, and the Enchanter’s power was lessened on those who believed enough to be hopeful, and on those who had seen enough to be hopeless.

But this was unusual.  Very rarely did the prince open the gate for someone in the prime of her life.  Very rarely did he rescue someone so obviously entrenched in the Enchanter’s lies.

Entrenched was just the word for Obscurity.  She looked like she had come right out of the sewers.  Her hair was matted and she reeked of waste and it was apparent from her clothes that she was one of those kinds of women.

Obscurity was now aware of her own wretched state, but the prince’s people were unprepared for the level of depravity they saw in her.  It was shocking.  She was by far the filthiest person they had ever seen.  Whispers skittered around the back row.

Obscurity felt her face flush and her heart fall.  She realized these people were not perfect like the prince.  When she had first seen them, they seemed so different from her own people that she could not imagine a single flaw in any of them.

Yet, there remained in them some ability to make assumptions and draw conclusions.  There remained in them some need of rescuing, and Obscurity wondered if they could see their own muddy feet when they were staring at hers.

One of the men stepped forward from the throng.

“Would you like me to take your prisoner, Sir?” he asked with a gleam in his eye.  His job as master of the guard was remarkably dull in the prince’s kingdom, and he looked forward to having at least one of his jail cells full.

“Prisoner?” the prince responded in surprise. “This woman is not a prisoner.”

Waves of whispers washed over the crowd.

“Shall I prepare the…uh…guest room, then?” asked the head butler, who was already wondering how he was going to get the linens clean after that woman left.

“No, she’s not a guest!” the prince said.

The crowd was silent.  No one could think of a third option.

“My dear people,” the prince said, extending his hand to draw Obscurity to his side.  “This woman is my bride.”

The Prince's Kingdom

Faith, From Enemy to Heir 1 Comment

{8} The Long Road Back

31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

Day 8 of 31 Days.  For Day 1, please click on the graphic above.

The prince lifted Obscurity out of the mud and placed her on his horse.  He walked ahead, leading the horse safely over the treacherous road.

Later, when Obscurity recalled the story of how she came to live in the prince’s kingdom, she found it hard to explain this part of her journey.  It was all at once the longest and the shortest road she had ever traveled.

All the way, the prince led her, singing softly over her when she was tired, and speaking truth to her when she was awake.

With each word he spoke, he became more and more lovely until she could hardly believe she had once been revolted by his appearance.  It was as if his face was changing right before her eyes.

How unlike the Enchanter he was!  The Enchanter’s beauty faded with truth; the prince’s deepened.  The more she knew of the prince, the more she wanted to know.

The sky lightened, the shadows slunk away, and her eyes began to see with agonizing clarity.

But the more she saw of the prince’s beauty, the more she recognized her own ugliness.  Obscurity felt she was seeing herself for the very first time, and she was stunned by the reflection.  As much as a failure as she was, she had still believed herself to be beautiful, at least in some small ways.

The light revealed a much different picture.  She was filthy all over.  The clothes she wore with haughty pride were nothing but rags.  She was broken, vile, and disgusting.  She was a stranger and enemy of the prince, and when she looked at him, she was so ashamed of the contrast she wanted to retreat back down the road and into the shadows again.

The Long Road Back

And yet he had reached down in the mud for her, knowing how repulsive she was, and carried her in his own arms when she could not even stand long enough to help herself.

Fresh sobs gripped her.

“Why are you crying?” he asked.

“Because I am so ugly,” she cried.

The prince stopped the horse.  “Who has made you feel ugly?”

“Well, you, I guess.”  It seemed the wrong thing to say, but she hadn’t felt this shame until she met him, so who else could it be?

“No, Obscurity.  Not me.  A woman who was dead and now lives is not ugly to me.”

“But I am ugly!  You can’t pretend that you don’t find me repulsive.”

“I find you in need of rescuing.”

“But I am so unworthy.  I want to hide!”

“Then you have fallen for the lie, and he has won.”

Obscurity wiped her eyes and looked at the prince.  She was so tired of lies.  Her entire life was one big lie, and here she was, tangled up in another one just as soon as she had gotten half-way free.

“He is pursuing you, Obscurity, even now.  He always will, because he hates me.”

Obscurity looked behind her quickly.  But the road was empty.

“He will do anything he can to turn you away from me.  If he can keep you hiding in a corner of my kingdom, he will.  And if he can’t get you to serve him, he’ll have you serve yourself.”

Obscurity felt sick with confusion.  She didn’t understand any of it, except for that last bit.  The prince was certainly wrong about that.

“I am not serving him, and I most certainly am not serving myself!” she cried out.  “I hate myself!”

“That is exactly the problem.  You are turning inward, looking for some sort of worth in yourself.  But there isn’t any, is there?  And because you come up lacking you feel ashamed.  You pity yourself.  ‘Poor Obscurity.  She is such a dirty mess.’  You feel worse about it than ever because now, you know what clean is, and you are far from clean.

“But I am telling you, Obscurity, I did not save you because you were clean.  I saved you in spite of your filth.  And if you begin now to look for some reason for your salvation other than my goodness then you are giving something to the Enchanter that only belongs to me.  I rescued you because I am good, not because you are.  You deserve none of that glory.  So do not take it, either by pride or by shame.”

The prince’s words were sharp, as if he was speaking to the Enchanter himself, and Obscurity held her breath because she dared not breathe.

“You can run and hide in your shame but if you do, know that he has won.”

“No,” Obscurity begged, hiding her face in her hands because she could not look at him anymore.  “I don’t want him to win.  I am sorry, please, I am.”  She paused, trying desperately to figure out the words in her head before she spoke.  “Only, I don’t know what to do with all this.” She spread out her hands over her filthy dress and mud-caked feet.  “I don’t know what to do with it.”

“Let your dirt and your filth be the reason you run to me.  Don’t you see?  Being sorry is a very different thing from being ashamed.  Being sorry turns your eyes toward me, and away from him.  Because he can’t do anything with ‘sorry.’  But I can.  Let me.”

Obscurity nodded through her tears and felt the prince’s arms enfold her to himself.

“Remember what I said when I found you?” the prince asked when she had quieted.

“You said, ‘Come.’”

“Yes, and now we have come through the hardest part of the journey.  It has been a long road back.  But we are here.”

Obscurity looked up.  Above her loomed the massive gates to the kingdom, and the prince’s hand was already on the door.

*The story continues tomorrow with Day 9.  Please join us!

From Enemy to Heir 4 Comments

{7} Ephesians 2:13

Ephesians 2:13,19

Day 7 of 31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

To find the beginning of the story, click here.

Every seventh day during the 31 Days challenge, we will take a Sabbath rest from the story and turn our eyes back to the Scriptures from which it was shamelessly plagiarized.  It is my desire that we take these days to think about and pray over the passages I have highlighted.  If you are reading this series to your children, read these passages too.  You might be amazed at how well your children put the pieces together!

My kids, who have started to expect a new chapter as part of their bedtime routine (they get the privileged of hearing it before all of you), were a little disappointed that today’s “chapter” was just a verse.

Then they read Ephesians 2:13 and 19.

“Wow, Mom,” Jonathan said.  “That is just perfect for our story!”

Yes, it is.  He will learn what plagiarism means later.  For now, it is enough that he knows that his mom did not just make this story up.  God wrote it first.

If you have some time today, you might also want to compare the story with what you know about salvation.  Here are some questions to get you started:

1) In what ways are you like Obscurity?

2) Why was the Enchanter described as beautiful, but the prince as plain?  Can you think of some Scriptures to back up your answer?

3) How does the prince fit your understanding of Jesus?

4) From Enemy to Heir is the story of salvation, and beyond.  Have you felt Jesus calling for you to come?  How have you responded?  If you have not accepted His invitation, why are you resisting?  What fears do you have that keep you from running into His arms?

5) If you have been rescued by the Prince, tell someone.  Read this series with your children or with a friend and tell them about the One who saved you from a life of obscurity.  Because this is not just any story.  This is your story.

Tell it.

*The story continues tomorrow with Day 8. 

From Enemy to Heir 7 Comments

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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