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  1. Nov 15, 2023 · A curious glow pervades [MacDonald’s] books: the flowers seem like coloured flames broken loose from the flaming heart of the world: every bush of gorse is a burning bush, borning for the same cause as that of Moses. . . .

  2. Jan 19, 2024 · (2018) by Dave Roney. “...and a fury of Fire that will Consume” (Hebrews 10:27) Moses approached a bush which was burning but was not consumed. It is to me a picture of the work which God is about in the lives of His children.

  3. With a Biographical Sketch and an Overview of His Writings. by Michael Phillips (fatheroftheinklings.com) Michael Phillips is one of the world’s foremost authorities on George MacDonald, and certainly the man who has played the greatest role in reintroducing the Scotsman to the reading public over the past forty years.

    • The Fiction and Poetry of George Macdonald
    • Fantasy: George Macdonald’S Imaginative Writings
    • Poetry: George Macdonald’S Poetical Works

    by Michael Phillips (fatheroftheinklings.com) This overview breaks MacDonald’s creative writing into three categories: “realistic” novels, fantasies, and poetry. These genre-categories all have sub-groupings and potential differences of classification. This is not intended to encyclopedically systematize MacDonald’s writings, but to provide useful ...

    More has been written about MacDonald’s imaginative writings a thousand times over than about his novels and sermons combined. Those who have delved into their myriad themes more expertly than I am capable of have produced thousands of pages of analysis over the years. There is therefore little need for me to do more than merely note a few points o...

    There is evidence that as a writer George MacDonald considered himself a poet first of all. This is somewhat astonishing given that in our time his poetry is almost entirely neglected alongside his fiction and fantasy works. Much of this shift is historical. Poetry has fallen on hard times in today’s literary climate. In Victorian Britain, however,...

  4. The Burning Bush as a symbol of the suffering but living Church is one of the most frequently seen symbols in the congregations of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, appearing on pulpit falls and carved on communion tables, chairs, and other furnishings.

  5. For the first time, the burning bush emblem became the official mark of the Church for use on stationery, banners, signs, and other material.

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  7. Sep 8, 2013 · One day, when Moses was moving the sheep, he came to Horeb, which was the mountain of God. An angel appeared in the flame of fire in a bush, except the bush wasn’t burning! God called from the bush “Moses, Moses! Take off your shoes because this is holy ground.”.

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