To all the women who wouldn’t read a book about being weak:
As a woman who has only very recently identified as weak (I spent 26 years or so feeling very delusionally capable), I know how you feel when you pick up a book about weakness and think it’s not for you. “This book must be for THOSE kinds of women, the kind who are insecure and not confident in who they are.”
No, my friend, this book is for the church. Admittedly, I was drawn to the book for myself, excited to find out what the Bible has to say about weakness now that the Lord has finally given me eyes to see how incompetent and powerless I am. I was disappointed then at first to see that this book is about a lot of kinds of weakness, most of which I can’t currently identify with.
But listening to the whole book, I realized two things:
1. There are many kinds of weakness I don’t feel now, but will likely experience in my life some day.
2. There are many kinds of weakness that I don’t think about, that are likely plaguing my beloved brothers and sisters in the church.
So Emily’s book not only spoke to me in the chapters that were relevant to me, but equipped me with truth and compassion for ministering to the saints in my life. It also prepared me with Scriptures I will need to keep in mind for when I inevitably face new weaknesses, like chronic pain or memory loss.
This is the kind of practical book that will sit on your shelf and get referenced over the years as you have conversations about weakness with loved ones. It was a valuable listen now, and would make a great gift to anyone who loves the local church.
Also, Emily has a great voice to listen to, perhaps that’s a given with the Risen Motherhood podcast, but not all authors end up being good audiobook narrators, so I was pleased to find she was!