Full disclosure: I've met both authors of this book when I was in seminary; I've been a long-time reader of Craig's voluminous output (and think he is not only the most brilliant person I've ever met, but astonishingly humble); and I recall Médine telling me, from her own lips, some of the stories later published in this volume.
That said, words cannot express a high enough recommendation for this book. Impossible Love tells the beautiful, compelling story of how God united Craig – an American New Testament scholar – and Médine – a Congolese scholar who met Craig while a graduate student, became separated from him for years, and was rendered a refugee by her country's civil war in 1997-1999. As their gripping account, told in sections alternating between them, makes very clear, no one but God could have brought them together through their inner and outer trials. Opening with scenes of Médine and family fleeing gunfire as fugitives, on the one hand, and of Craig, a former atheist turned zealous Bible college student, being beaten for witnessing in the streets, this is one book I didn't put down easily – and I don't think you will either!
Throughout their story, God is clearly at work. He sees to their needs in ways that just can't be waved off as mere coincidence. But that wouldn't surprise Craig or Médine. The sorts of manifestations we see in the New Testament – miracles, prophecy, even speaking in tongues – aren't foreign to either much of African Christianity or to the Christian circles in which Craig moves. (Actually, one of the earliest misunderstandings that comes between Craig and Médine is over speaking in tongues!) For some readers, the prevalence of modern prophecy may be one of the strangest aspects of their story (as they both hear prophecies about their future that they cannot possibly believe could be fulfilled... until they are). But should it be? “Would that all the LORD's people were prophets, that the LORD would put his Spirit on them!” (Numbers 11:29). The God of the Old Testament and of the New Testament is the God of the Church, who fills us with the same Spirit. Perhaps we have not because we ask not (James 4:2).
A significant portion of the book is occupied with the horrors of the civil war that ravaged Congo-Brazzaville, Médine's home country, from June 1997 through December 1999. Neither side's soldiers prove to be above committing awful war crimes, and the Moussounga family frequently has reason to wonder if they'll live to see the next day, as they flee from town to town, face disease and serpents and worm-infested drinking water, and suffer in the face of human cruelty. Now that our world is gripped in the worst refugee crisis in decades, we need all the more to hear from someone who has been a refugee, to remind us that the numbers aren't statistics; they're people made in God's image, whose problems aren't easily solved by the soundbites we manufacture from our comfortable armchairs in the United States.
But the central theme of their story is that, even though their love was humanly impossible – kept apart by so many misunderstandings, and by first one being married and then the other (both of which end in dreadful heartbreak), and then the civil war and further problems after that – it was possible for God to bring about! As the two conclude: "God knows the future into which He calls us. No matter what the hardships along the way, He is truly worthy of all our trust. He really is the God of impossible love" (237). And the story showcases the fervent faith, fearless evangelism, and social commitment that God's faithfulness elicits from Craig, Médine, and others as the pages unfold the tale.
If you want to hear a story of deep and abiding romance, read this book. If you want to hear a gripping tale of odds-defying action and suspense, read this book. If you want to feel the flames of faith fanned within your soul, read this book.
If you're human, read this book!
I cannot think of any person I know to whom I wouldn't recommend this powerful true story.