With compassion born of painful experience, William Blaine-Wallace invites us to simply sit with human suffering, to companion those who are ravaged by its force, and to wait for the unspeakable, inexplicable peace of God who has been present (and suffering too) throughout. "A mother, whose daughter died at the age of twelve, said that for the longest time she felt enveloped in a thick fog of numbness, despair, anger, and sadness. Yet, through the mark of years in the company of family and friends, the fog lifted. What remain are memories, which can be touched now and then over the span of a day: 'I gently tap my chest, just over the heart, and remember.'" This book is a similar tapping of the chest. After spending many years among the dying and bereaved as a counselor and companion, clarity slowly emerges that enables veiled articulation of a grace at the center of the community of bent and broken people; what Flannery O'Connor called the "image at the heart of things."
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1 A Proximate Heaven Chapter 2 The Energy of Insufficiency Chapter 3 The Tie that Binds and Rebuilds Chapter 4 God's Time and Our Times Chapter 5 Our Times Chapter 6 Holding Out for Connection Chapter 7 Boundaries and Being Loved Chapter 8 Spilling or Sharing Chapter 9 The Agency of Holy Anger Chapter 10 Praying Powerlessness Chapter 11 Re-enchanting Persons Chapter 12 Caring and Not Caring Chapter 13 The Profundity of Play Chapter 14 Compassion Overload Chapter 15 Out of the Darkness Chapter 16 The Closet's Cost Chapter 17 Listening to the Long Goodbye Chapter 18 A Heartful Helplessness Chapter 19 Scarcity and Abundance Chapter 20 Inspiriting Institutions