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No Room for Bitterness
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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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker shares their personal journey of learning to love and forgive others. They describe how God used difficult circumstances and a challenging person in their life to teach them the importance of love and compassion. Through the process of being humbled and broken, they experienced the transformative power of Jesus' blood and righteousness. The speaker emphasizes the need to surrender our self-righteousness and endure unjust treatment, in order to truly experience the love of Christ and have Him dwell within us.
Sermon Transcription
God lives and works today, but maybe it's hard for us to believe that, especially when we have to deal with a difficult person at home or at work. What should we do if we simply can't love or bear a certain person? Listen to today's meditation by Vassalia Schlenk called No Room for Bitterness. There were years in my life when I sensed how difficult it was for me to love, especially when I was being unjustly treated. The fact that I couldn't respond in love bothered me very much. However, it was God's great grace that sent a person into my life who was almost an unbearable burden for me, for this caused the plea for love to become the plea of my life. And I wrote in my diary, Lord, give me love, the love which is not irritable or resentful, which bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Because of my nature, it was many years before God could actually give me his love. He knew that he must permit these arrows to strike against the hard spot in my heart until it was completely riddled with holes. Then, contrition and repentance over my inability to forgive and love would be able to find room in my heart. And then God would be able to grant me his love. My old nature writhed beneath his chastening blows, but the blood of the Lamb, which I learned to call upon more and more, proved to be stronger. I am redeemed. To love you set me free. I am redeemed. You won the fight for me. Redeemed from heartless envy, pride, and self-display. The foes of love must flee now far away. I am redeemed. Yes, the blood of Jesus freed me more and more from my hardness of heart and gave me compassion for the sins of others. In this way, God taught me to go the way of the Lamb, no longer justifying myself, but rather enduring and bearing everything, including unjust reproaches. And I found that this alone is the way to Jesus. After many years in the school of God, I can now testify that when we are totally humiliated by our inability to love and our self-righteousness is broken, Jesus will open up to us his righteousness. Then we will truly be in Christ and he in us. In this way, Jesus' words in John 17 verse 26 will be fulfilled. I made known to them your name, and I will make it known that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them. Lord, hear my prayer, my earnest cry, my plea, that you may soon your image see in me. Give me your love, Lord, love comes from you alone. O, heaven, save me, would make me all your own. Lord, love like this give me. Lord, love like this give me.
No Room for Bitterness
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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.