I bought this book when I was in a very bad mental state…but didn’t have the energy to actually read it then. So I only actually read it now, when I’m doing much better and no longer as swamped by the lies/emotional turmoil that blocked me from God. Therefore, I wonder how I would’ve received this book differently if I had read it in my prior low state. So with that caveat…
Overall it was good gospel reminders and lessons. It started off stronger and then I found the latter chapters (pleasure, purpose, protection, & power) a little lackluster. Sometimes I found the stories or instruction too broad and not as precise or detailed enough to come alive. Fields uses so many quick examples from her life, I almost wish we had a christian memoir instead in some sort of chronological/thematic order, which I would’ve found more personal, encouraging and inspiring. Finally, I was shocked that in the chapter on Purpose, Fields spoke very little/almost nothing about evangelism and showering the gospel. While I appreciate her observation on the commercialization of Purpose, her desire to dispel the controlling pressure that demands we need to know everything God knows about our purpose, and her the simplification of Purpose to the essence of daily regular obedience to God, I think leaving out “go and make disciples of all nations” leaves our God given Purpose incomplete. Describing our purpose as obedience and who you become and not what you achieve is great, but I think leaves some room for misunderstanding that obeying God is just about being a better, good, more moral person. Anyway, I wonder if the reason why Fields left evangelism out is so to not overly burden the likely very hurting people reading this book. However, I think I would’ve been blessed to be encouraged to pay closer attention in my suffering, to look expectantly, to what God’s doing. I would get to witness how he can is actively weave my life/suffering into His greater story that I can tell others, even while I am actively doing terribly (“in chains” for the gospel haha).
However I appreciate the kindhearted intentions the author definitely has and liked the written out prayers between chapters. I also like the mere existence of this book, acknowledging that there’s frequently that felt gap between what we know and what we experience. I also liked her chapter on peace, that it’s not the absence of negative emotion (after all Jesus experienced plenty of negative emption). “Peace isn’t dictated by emotions or circumstances…[but] God’s peace allows us to experience painful events and respond from our knowledge of His character, not from our understanding of our circumstances. Negative emotions are part of the human experience; there’s no way to escape them. But we don’t have to be led by them” (p.41).