Summary: Drawing upon the Book of Job and Tolkien’s idea of “eucastrophe,” proposes that when we face pain and adversity, we are at the place where great good can occur.
The American dream of the good life is an illusion. Despite our curated Instagrams, life often goes sideways in painful ways. A parent loses a child. A disaster destroys a home. You experience a series of financial reverses. A friend is diagnosed with a serious or terminal illness. We struggle with a chronic affliction for which there seems to be no remedy. If you live long enough, you discover that a good life of peace, health, family accord, great friends, and prosperity comes undone. What hope have we in the face of the inevitable catastrophes of life?
Benjamin Windle has faced painful adversity from a dangerous dog attack on a child to the loss of a brother to cancer and fire at one business property and flooding at another in the same year. As he wrestled with these matters, he turned to the book of Job and studied J.R.R. Tolkien’s idea of the “eucatastrophe”–the good catastrophe–when seemingly terrible things bring out qualities of courage, resilience, and hope in the lives of those who suffer and face adversity.
He begins with Job’s self-description of the stump that at “the scent of water” buds to life (Job 14:7-9). When we face devastation, do we seek “the scent of water”? That doesn’t mean we are not honest about our brokenness, our pain, our failures. Alluding to Leonard Cohen, he observes that “It’s the cracks that let the light in.” With Tolkien, he argues that pain and hope are not opposites but close relatives. Sometimes, it simply comes down to practicing hope in the ordinary, not unlike Stephan Curry’s practice in a rough backyard court where he determined to make shots rather than chase the missed ones.
Windle tells great stories to illustrate the great good that often accompanies adversity. He recounts the Keith Jarrett performance in Paris, a best-selling recording, where he learns that the piano he requested was not available and the old one available was out of tune with sticking keys. He ended up improvising one of the most amazing performances of his life. To illustrate how friendships can sustain us in adversity, he describes the two hundred hands that passed children hand to hand out of flooded caves in Thailand.
Ultimately hope is rooted in the character of God and our everlasting destiny. Adversity draws us to lean deeply into these realities. Windle offers us a framework for leaning into that hope beginning with sitting in the pain, mining the good, and seeing eternity. He doesn’t inundate us with cliches and sentimentality but he does call our attention to how pain and hope meet in many lives, from Job’s to his own. The chapters are short, easily read with artwork and quotes that tastefully introduce each chapter. This is a good book to read if the dream of a good life has become a nightmare, and you are wondering how to live with hope when everything is going wrong.
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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher.