Stranger's Gift e-bog
113,76 DKK
(inkl. moms 142,21 DKK)
True Stories of Faith in Unexpected Places In this very personal, welcoming book, Pulitzer Prizewinning author Tom Hallman, Jr., shares his journey of faith from indifferent agnostic to growing believer. Faith, Hallman tells us, is looking in the mirror in the morning and wondering why. Its about doubt and hope. Its catching a glimpse of a beacon piercing the fog of life and walking toward it, ...
E-bog
113,76 DKK
Forlag
Howard Books
Udgivet
3 april 2012
Længde
240 sider
Genrer
HR
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781451617511
True Stories of Faith in Unexpected Places In this very personal, welcoming book, Pulitzer Prizewinning author Tom Hallman, Jr., shares his journey of faith from indifferent agnostic to growing believer. Faith, Hallman tells us, is looking in the mirror in the morning and wondering why. Its about doubt and hope. Its catching a glimpse of a beacon piercing the fog of life and walking toward it, never knowing if youre headed in the right direction, but pressing onward. Youll meet ordinary people and be drawn into conversations that ask probing, almost intrusive questionsconversations that linger in your mind and resonate with your heartfrom the ache of a mother who watched her baby die after only twenty days of struggling for life to the peaceful strength of a man working with those whose present situations mirror his past. Within these pages, youll find real and honest accounts of everyday people whose discoveries of faith will inspire and comfort you on your own journey. *** The security lock thumped open, and I stepped into Level 3, a neonatal unit where I had been drawn to a drama played out minute by minute. As I stood above two cribs along a back wall, I wondered less about doctors, nurses, and medicine and more about God. Two babies had been born with a congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Both had been placed on a heart-lung bypass machine to let their organs rest. One boy had no name. His mother was a crack addict. After giving birth, she abandoned her baby and never returned to the hospital. In the adjacent crib lay Jonah Van Arnam. His parents were active members of a church and visited their son daily to pray for him and the nurses and doctors. One afternoon, a nurse pulled me aside and told me a miracle was taking place: the crack addicts baby was getting better. But . . . Jonah was dying. Why had God abandoned this couple and their son? Where was this so-called loving God? from chapter 6