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The Easy Way Out Is the Dangerous Way
Basilea Schlink

Basilea Schlink (1904 - 2001). German religious leader, writer, and co-founder of the Evangelical Sisterhood of Mary, born Klara Schlink in Darmstadt to a professor of mechanics. Raised Lutheran, she studied at Fröbelseminar in Kassel (1923) and Berlin’s Inner Mission girls’ school (1924), later earning a doctorate in psychology from Hamburg University in 1934 with a thesis on adolescent faith struggles. From 1933 to 1935, she led the Women’s Division of the German Student Christian Movement, resisting Nazi exclusion of Jewish Christians. In 1947, with Erika Madauss, she founded the Sisterhood in Darmstadt, taking the name Mother Basilea, growing it to 209 sisters across 11 global branches by 2001. Schlink authored over 60 books, including My All for Him, translated into 60 languages, and published tracts in 90. Her radio programs aired in 23 languages, emphasizing repentance and reconciliation, especially between Germans and Jews. Unmarried, she dedicated her life to prayer and ministry, shaping interdenominational Christian communities.
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In this sermon, Basilia Schlink discusses the challenges and doubts that can arise in our faith journey. She emphasizes the importance of daily surrendering to God's will and seeking His help in bearing difficulties. Schlink shares her personal experience of writing down her struggles and consciously choosing to accept them as part of God's plan. She testifies that by embracing hardships with a humble and grateful heart, she has found peace and transformation in her life.
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God lives and works today, but the hours come in every life when we are tempted to doubt God's reality, when the difficulties or suffering become too great and we don't know how to go on. Today's meditation by Basilia Schlink is a helpful word for just these times. Perhaps at a certain time we've made the decision to live according to the Bible. We've made a commitment to God. Every time he gave us difficulties we would bear them willingly. By this move we were filled with peace and confidence and view of the future. But that was yesterday. What about today? Watch out. Watch out for what? Watch out for Satan. He doesn't surrender his booty so easily. So long as our discipleship of Jesus is more or less a matter of the intellect, Satan is quite happy to leave us under the delusion that we're on the right track. Yes, he even encourages us and strengthens us in this belief, for he knows that here we are so open to his influence. Why? A one-time commitment to bear difficulties in our lives is not enough, as I've experienced repeatedly. We're soon at the end of our strength. We don't gain anything by just persevering if we don't cry to the Lord daily, asking for his help. Otherwise, Satan is the winner, for he's able to whisper his lies into our ears. And so the accusations and questions rise in our hearts. God has given me such troubles to bear in my family. I can't go on like this. Or perhaps I can no longer work and live with these difficult people at the office. But do we realize that by doing this, we're striking out at God? Some years ago, I came to this realization with a shock. At the time, I had only moaned inwardly, this burden is really too much. And one day, I noticed that this was nothing but great self-pity. But I didn't remain sitting there with this realization. I began to take measures. I wrote down all the things in my life that were difficult for me to bear, and where I was tempted to protest strongly against God and His will. Then, as a testimony before the visible and invisible world, I wrote after each item the words, I want to have precisely that. Consciously and deliberately, I gave my yes to that which the Lord had laid upon me in the way of hardships. Since that day, everything changed in my life. From that time onwards, the difficult became easy. Now, full of thanksgiving, I can testify, the Lord makes the bitter sweet in our lives, if we don't wish it away or rebel against it, but rather accept it humbly with a yes, Father. Yes, thank the Father that He takes so much trouble to educate us with the problems and hardships in our lives. He could really make it much easier for Himself, but He is concerned that we attain the goal of glory, which can only be reached on the path of chastisements and suffering. So when God the Father lays a burden on you, give yourself to it ever anew, trusting that His will is goodness, His heart only love, and the ways by which He leads us are good. and loving-kindness, and good the ways He leads us on.
The Easy Way Out Is the Dangerous Way
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Basilea Schlink (1904 - 2001). German religious leader, writer, and co-founder of the Evangelical Sisterhood of Mary, born Klara Schlink in Darmstadt to a professor of mechanics. Raised Lutheran, she studied at Fröbelseminar in Kassel (1923) and Berlin’s Inner Mission girls’ school (1924), later earning a doctorate in psychology from Hamburg University in 1934 with a thesis on adolescent faith struggles. From 1933 to 1935, she led the Women’s Division of the German Student Christian Movement, resisting Nazi exclusion of Jewish Christians. In 1947, with Erika Madauss, she founded the Sisterhood in Darmstadt, taking the name Mother Basilea, growing it to 209 sisters across 11 global branches by 2001. Schlink authored over 60 books, including My All for Him, translated into 60 languages, and published tracts in 90. Her radio programs aired in 23 languages, emphasizing repentance and reconciliation, especially between Germans and Jews. Unmarried, she dedicated her life to prayer and ministry, shaping interdenominational Christian communities.