I want to trust you, but I don't Moving forward when you're skeptical of others, afraid of what God will allow, and doubtful of your own discernment

Lysa TerKeurst

Book - 2024

"New York Times bestselling author Lysa TerKeurst shows you what to do with your skepticism and distrust so you can heal from past betrayals and move forward with strength and resilience"--

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248.4/TerKeurst
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 248.4/TerKeurst (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 27, 2024
Subjects
Published
Nashville, Tennesse : Nelson Books, an imprint of Thomas Nelson [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Lysa TerKeurst (author)
Physical Description
xxv, 219 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781400211821
9781400251209
  • Introduction: Fear Has the Louder Voice Right Now
  • Chapter 1. Quietly Quitting on Hope
  • Chapter 2. What Is This Feeling… Discernment or a Trigger?
  • Chapter 3. Red Flags and the Roots of Distrust
  • Chapter 4. Rips and Repairs
  • Chapter 5. And I Didn't Want to Be Alone
  • Chapter 6. How Can I Trust God When I Don't Understand What He Allows?
  • Chapter 7. How Can I Trust God When the Person Who Hurt Me Got Away with It?
  • Chapter 8. What We Don't Trust We Will Try to Control
  • Chapter 9. Ice Makers and Oceans
  • Chapter 10. The Secret to Really Healing
  • Conclusion: One More Thing God Wanted Me to Know
  • Update From Lysa
  • Bonus Chapter: When the Organization That Should Have Helped Me Actually Hurt Me
  • Bonus Resource: Trust Is a Track Record: 10 Scriptural Truths to Remember God's Faithfulness
  • Follow-Ups From Lysa:
  • Getting the Help You Need
  • Some Important Notes to Consider on Abuse
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller TerKeurst (It's Not Supposed to Be This Way) issues a gentle invitation for Christians to swap out blind trust for one based in intuition and faith. After her marriage collapsed, the author became paralyzed by a sense of distrust in her friends (some of whom abandoned her), herself, and most troublingly God, who'd failed to intervene while allowing "the people who hurt me... to carry on." Tracing her recovery, she describes learning to discern between emotional triggers and real signs of untrustworthiness, recognize red flags, and repair severed relationships by watching for genuine change in the other person's actions. Perhaps most challenging was restoring her faith, which she eventually did by letting go of expectations for God to ease her suffering and instead appreciating life's smallest moments, from biting into a ripe peach to listening to music "that calms my mind and makes me exhale." Despite flimsy bits of pop psychology borrowed from her therapist, the author's central idea--that trust is rooted in faith as well as personal discernment--is realistic and flexible, making room for readers' anxieties (which should be shared with God) and limitations ("What my mind can't understand, my heart tends to distrust"). It's a boon for wounded believers looking to get back on their feet. (Oct.)

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