“Here I am forsaken by the world, and yet I am a princess,” (Grimm’s Fairy Tales, “The Goose Girl,”)
When I was in elementary school, my very favorite fairy tale was “The Goose Girl” by those grim Grimm’s Brothers. A few years ago, my mom gave me an old print edition of The Grimm Fairytales. I was so excited to find my favorite fairy tale again after so many years. Does a girl ever get too old for a good fairy tale?
Here a princess is indeed forsaken by the world – yet both her parents had provided for her – and that provision helped protect her – but she doesn’t really realize it. This princess was filled with fear, which caused her to give up her princess position – and she becomes The Goose Girl.
However, she has to free herself from the bondage she put herself in. Ultimately, she does – by people who cross her path. Of course, it helps to be good and noble. With their help and encouragement, she becomes the rightful princess she was created to be.
Just like you and me were created princesses, daughters of the King – with provisions and protections. I did not know about those for a long time.
Unlike the Goose Girl, I did not know I was a princess. I did not see myself as valuable – at least to God. I always wondered how Jesus could love me as much as He loved Peter, James, and John. I would say, “Sure he does,” but that was not how I felt inside. I wanted Jesus to love me like that, but I still wondered,”Oh, I’m not good enough or special enough for that.” Oh, maybe if I were like Mother Teresa or Joan of Ark. But I was not. I was just Maryleigh.
Then one day I understood. Not a Logos (word) thing – but a Rama (Alive thing). The knowledge of who I was in the family of God bloomed fully: I am a daughter of the King. Imagine being a daughter of the King—how people treat you, how you are provided for, how you are valued, and loved. Imagine being The Goose Girl unveiled.
Those fairy tales can teach us a lot about the love of a father, especially when you have not experienced it. How many people do not take a chance on God because they have no concept of a loving father?
All fairy tale princess in the Kingdom face grievous challenges. Many have fathers, the king, or if they are no longer alive, they provide protectors who leave no stone un-turned, no effort exhausted. The princess is never forgotten nor is the pursuit lessoned to reclaim His child.
The Prince, much like the princess’s honorable father, often saves her, whisking her from the grip of torment, isolation, a false-sense of abandonment. The tormenters are destroyed – and she is returned to her rightful place in The Kingdom.
A true princess loses not her nobleness during these fierce challenges. She cries sometimes, feels saddened, feels lost. But she still acts nobly.
God is like that. He provides. He leaves no stone unturned. He never gives up. The fairy tale princesses are always provided for and their futures are secured. We really are not any different from those Grimm’s Brother Girls! We just think about ourselves differently – and that is what needs to be changed. Do you see yourself as God sees you?
“I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
And you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
And whoever curses you I will curse;
And all peoples on earth will be blessed through you”(Genesis 12:2-3)
You are a princess, a daughter of The King
Continue the rest of your journey as the princess you were created to be
the daughter of the King
Think about that –
let it settle into your soul!
Throw off the Goose Girl!
Become the Princess of God!
I lOVE this.
The thought of being a princess, God’s princess…
Thanks for the reminder.
It was also difficult for me to accept that God created me to be His princess. My relationship with him become more real when I finally acknowledged this.
Beautiful writing!
Oh how I truly loved this!!
Reminds me of Disney’s “Princess Diaries.”
If we really truly knew in the deepest Rama kind of way, how differently our life would be!!
We are the daughter of the King, God’s princess!! I am letting that settle in my soul tonight! 🙂
I know it’s Sunday morning – a long time since “Walking With Him Wednesday”. But it took a long time to get through the “Multitude Monday” posts – and still didn’t get past 140 or so.
Oh how we do forget our heritage. So true.
And from a fairy tale – but inspiring, “A true princess loses not her nobleness during these fierce challenges. She cries sometimes, feels saddened, feels lost. But she still acts nobly.” Even when we don’t “feel” it we (I) need to keep living it.
I know you wrote this for women, for the princesses – it is equally true of the princes.
These words were a blessing today. Thank you.
God be with you and yours
[…] with me. The Year of Refreshing is closing. Funny, He prompted that revelation through my work on The Goose Girl. I am moving into The Year of […]
WOW! Yes, we never know we are a Princess until someone leads us to our King of Kings. I love finding these beautiful stories and reading them to my children. Thank you so much for linking up with Mustard Seeds….you are truly a blessing!!
I love being a princess, although I admit my thinking still needs to change some. Sometimes I forget . . .
Thank you for the reminder!
~Jennifer
I could comment on every post because I’ve been looking through several of them. I’ll summerize and say you have a lovely blog. Beautiful pictures, interesting stories and delicious sounding recipes. Thanks for visiting my blog. I’m now following.
Beautiful post about God pursuing us unrelentlessly. I love the idea of being a princess.
I’m raising a couple of boys myself and will look forward to stopping by this sweet blog and seeing what God has placed on your heart.
I found you from “Encouragement is Contagious” and I pray that you find my words encouraging.
Love and blessings to you!
What a beautiful perspective! I really enjoyed this post, and your writing is so beautiful and refreshing!
Visiting from the the “Encouragement is Contagious” linky party at my blog, “Only A Breath”! I hope your week is a wonderful one!
Blessings!
Melanie
I enjoyed your blog. Blessings, Debbie
The Goose Girl was my favorite as a child, too. Have you read the book by Shannon Hale? I enjoyed it. But, as a girl, the version I read was in my mother’s childhood fairy-tale book. I always felt so sad for Falada, but my favorite part was how, at the end, the imposter was put naked into a barrel stuck with nails and dragged through the streets by horses until dead. I know: how dark. Maybe that’s why I loved it. But going back to your analogy: how comforting is it to know that vengeance is the Lord’s?
[…] few years ago, in The Goose Girl Unveiled, I wrote (I hope you don’t consider this cheating – but I really wanted to include […]
[…] Why do people ever think they are too old for fairy tales? One of the best birthday gifts ever was when my mother gave me a book of fairy tales a few years ago, and it had my very favorite fairy tale: “The Goose Girl.” […]