Kristin is a kind, gentle author who knows pain of varying circumstances. This book is pure grace given to those with gaping wounds, aching hearts, and bruised spirits. Her firm, unwavering statements about who God is and what He will or will not do is beautiful and refreshing.
Why do we suffer?
What do we DO with the pain?
What do I hold on to when everything I’ve ever believed no longer holds true?
Kristin doesn’t ignore the hard questions, and she doesn’t list the answers. She doesn’t give trite platitudes and expects us to pull ourselves together and duct tape our faith so it’s presentable again. She points us to Jesus again, and again, and again.
I had to write whole paragraphs, some two at a time, because there aren’t quick statements that sum up what faith in suffering looks like, and I deeply appreciate that.
But let me try to quote one favorite section:
“…our worship isn’t in the value of the great things we do with our pain, it’s in the act of pouring it out. The target of our pain isn’t in the meaning we can extract from it. It’s Jesus. In becoming the target of our pain, Jesus absorbs our suffering for us, not so we could avoid it entirely, but to give us a cure for it. The work of the cross didn’t just create an antidote we get when we die. His death and resurrection give us the freedom to live in abundance -joy, peace, and hope- even while we’re still on the earth, even while we still suffer.”
I look forward to my in-hand copy. arriving later this month.