Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

A quiet mind to suffer with : mental illness, trauma, and the death of Christ / John Andrew Bryant.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Bellingham, WA : Lexham Press, [2023]Description: xxi, 293 pages ; 21 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1683597044
  • 9781683597049
Subject(s): Summary: "This is the story of Christ's nearness to my own suffering--my mental breakdown, my journey to the psych ward, my long, slow, painful recovery--and how Christ will use even our agony and despair to turn us into servants and guests of the mercy offered in his gospel"--page [4] of cover.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 248.862 B915 Available 33111011316037
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Publishers Weekly starred review - Christianity Today Book Award Winner for 2024 Christian Living / Spiritual Formation - Illumination Book Awards Gold Medal Winner 2024 for Illness/Death/Dying - SWJT Book of the Year Honorable Mention 2023 for Counseling


"This is a stunning book, so rare and so beautiful. I cannot recommend it highly enough." --Matthew A. LaPine

Suffering has been made holy by Christ's proximity to it.

This is the story of Christ's nearness to my own suffering--my mental breakdown, my journey to the psych ward, my long, slow, painful recovery--and how Christ will use even our agony and despair to turn us into servants and guests of the mercy offered in his gospel.

We cannot answer suffering. And yet suffering demands an answer. If Jesus is the answer to suffering, what kind of answer is Jesus? Everything that could be taken from a person was taken from him. The worst things a person could be made to see and feel were seen and felt by Christ. All of this came to a point in the nails driven into his hands and became a word that cannot be unspoken--his body broken and his blood poured out for us. Suffering has been made holy by Christ's proximity to it.

"This is the story of Christ's nearness to my own suffering--my mental breakdown, my journey to the psych ward, my long, slow, painful recovery--and how Christ will use even our agony and despair to turn us into servants and guests of the mercy offered in his gospel"--page [4] of cover.

Powered by Koha