We all love tender stories. Some love to sigh and sink deeper into their soft armchairs, others
love a good cry. Think of best-selling authors who have that ability: Nicholas Sparks, Francine
Rivers, and Janette Oke. Their characters are so real and have such deep needs that we can’t
help but lose ourselves within the pages of their books.
But where does that ability come
from? Some writers have a natural gift for this kind of writing, but others must develop it. Either
way, creating heartfelt prose is a skill that most fledgling writers can discover and strengthen
over time.
Here is the key: Writers who stir our hearts are brave enough to reach into
the hurting corners of their own souls. Instead of shying away from the pain, they explore it and
embrace it and articulate it in great detail. Every aspiring writer would love to have such a soul
connection to their readers, but they don't have the courage to go where you have to go in order to
have that happen.
Many times I've wept as my fingers swept across the keyboard, yet those
pieces are the best I've ever written. It is from our own pain that we have a chance to reach other
hurting souls who need so desperately to hear from us. (2 Corinthians 1:4) Every one of us has
places in our hearts that only God can comfort. What amazing joy it brings when He allows us to
share that comfort with others—people we will never meet and yet we can move so profoundly.
What hurting corner can you explore in your next story?