Hinds' Feet on High Places

Hinds' Feet on High Places  
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Author(s) Hannah Hurnard
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Christian
Publisher Christian Literature Crusade
Publication date 1955
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 158 pp.
ISBN NA

Hinds' Feet on High Places is an allegorical novel by English author Hannah Hurnard. Hinds' Feet was written in 1955 and has become a very successful work of Christian fiction, seeing new editions published as recently as July, 2005.

Plot introduction

It is the story of a young woman named Much Afraid, and her journey away from her Fearing family and into the High Places of the Shepherd, guided by her two companions Sorrow and Suffering. It is an allegory of the Christian life from salvation through maturity. It doesn't actually describe life in Heaven at all, but shows how the Christian is transformed from unbeliever to immature believer to mature believer, who walks daily with his/her LORD as easily on the High Places of Joy in the spirit as in the daily life of the mundane and oftentimes humiliating tasks,that tempt us to lose perspective of who we now are in Christ.

The book takes its title from Habakkuk 3:19, "The Lord God is my strength, and he will make my feet like hinds' feet, and he will make me to walk upon mine high places."

The story begins in the Valley of Humiliation with Much Afraid, being beset by the unwanted advances of her cousin, Craven Fear, who wishes to marry her. (The Family of Fearings seems to have some strong similarities to the Addams Family, when one realizes that Much Afraid is far from a "10" at the beginning of the book. Much Afraid is really rather ugly from all outward appearances, walking on club feet, sporting gnarled, deformed hands, and speaking from a crooked mouth that seems to have been made so by a stroke or the like.)

The Good Shepherd is tender and gentle with Much Afraid, especially in the beginning. However, His many sudden departures may strike the reader as bizarre, given the human penchant to expect kindly souls to never do everything that may be interpreted as rude or as hurtful in any way. Yet, though the Shepherd leaves in a moment, He returns the same way at the first furtive cry of the forlorn little protagonist. "Come, Shepherd, for I am much afraid!"

When Much Afraid intimates that she would love to be able to dance upon the high places as do the surefooted deer, the Shepherd commends her for this desire. In order to accomplish this, he offers to "plant the seed of love" into her heart. At first sight of the long, black hawthorne-looking seed, she shrieks in fear. Soon, she relents, and after the initial intense pain, she senses that something is indeed different in her, though she still looks the same,...for now.

The many twists and turns of the book are worthy of any great Steven Spielberg movie, like Back to The Future I. Just when the reader thinks that Much Afraid is about to reach the High Places, the path turns downward towards a seemingly endless desert.

There is the incident at the sheer cliff that must be climbed with only one rope, which hangs a long way down to her from the top.

Then incredibly days are spent in a forest that is shrouded in a thick cloud of fog. During this time Much Afraid is sequestered with her two friends, Sorrow and Suffering, in a log cabin.

The climax is arguably an unexpected twist that comes as Much Afraid despairs of ever reaching the High Places. (The solution is worthy of J. R. R. Tolkien in his Lord of The Ring Trilogy.)

Allusions/references to other works

The book bears some stylistic similarities to John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress. The name of the protagonist, Much-Afraid, also appears first in Bunyan's work.

References

Bosman, Ellen. “Hind's Feet on High Places” in Masterplots II: Christian Literature. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 2007: 779-782.