
Trying to Make Peace With a God of Cancer
As a person of faith, there are two core truths I’ve strained to hold onto even in the most difficult, painful, discouraging moments of my life: God is. God is good.
As a person of faith, there are two core truths I’ve strained to hold onto even in the most difficult, painful, discouraging moments of my life: God is. God is good.
People often come to me when they are in the throes of spiritual crisis; when the doubts and the questions and the conflicting voices have finally overwhelmed them. I know
Pain in the present can blind you. It can obscure the future so fully that you’re no longer able to believe anything beautiful is still possible, that joy is ever going to be
Fear can make you freeze. Worse than that, it can make you silent. The first time I questioned my theology (I mean really questioned it), I was flat-out terrified. Not terrified of God, per
As a person of faith, there are two core truths I’ve strained to hold onto even in the most difficult, painful, discouraging moments of my life: God is. God is good.
People often come to me when they are in the throes of spiritual crisis; when the doubts and the questions and the conflicting voices have finally overwhelmed them. I know
Pain in the present can blind you. It can obscure the future so fully that you’re no longer able to believe anything beautiful is still possible, that joy is ever going to be
Fear can make you freeze. Worse than that, it can make you silent. The first time I questioned my theology (I mean really questioned it), I was flat-out terrified. Not terrified of God, per