Best-selling author R. Scott Hurd serves up a hearty spiritual feast of inspiring anecdotes, amusing reflections, and helpful advice. Combining his pastoral experiences with his conversational style, he reassures, encourages, and challenges readers to take practical steps to reawaken their faith.
I am the publicist for this author. This book is divided into 40 chapters, making it an excellent personal, parish group or parish book club read for Lent. Each chapter gives easy, practical and concrete ways to coax a wary faith, bolster a weak faith or help a wandering faith take root. Fr. Scott Hurd writes in the language of everyday people. You do not have to be part of a religious order or a theologian to undertake the message of this book. Working from where you are, Fr. Scott gently guides you to where you hope to be in your faith. Begin the journey from fragile to fearless!
I really really enjoyed this book! I read one or two chapters a night during Lent. I think it's one of those kinds of books you can't just speed read through. It's great even for those whose faith does not necessarily feel fragile, and I would recommend it also for those who are not necessarily wary, weak, or wandering. Overall it was a very insightful, down to earth, easily accessible and understandable journey into what it means to have faith. I can't wait to read it again, and I've already marked down pages to turn to for future reference.
Relatable anecdotes paired with saintly stories and advice made this a quick read with plenty of take away. It deals more with those everyday things that cause us to stray, doubt, question, and otherwise be lackluster about our faith than those big life/worldview altering events.
Which was actually a nice change. Sometimes it's the ordinary things that are the biggest challenges to faith.
This book gave a wide list of ways to experience/grow faith. It worked well as a devotional for Lent. I liked how it ended with a reminder that everyone is different and basically a call: you be you. Each chapter felt like a story told suggestion, it did not feel too preachy.