The Slow Work of God

What the Past Can Teach Us about Loss, Grace, and Conversion

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The Slow Work of God

What the Past Can Teach Us about Loss, Grace, and Conversion
$17.99
no. 6073752
3.7 out of 5 Customer Rating
COPE, RACHEL

The Slow Work of God

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God knows that mortality can be impossibly hard, and He knows that seeing clearly takes time. His work- "the immortality and eternal life" of His children (Moses 1:39) - is thus a slow work, a gracious work, a work that gives us time and space to sit with our suffering, to lament our losses, to heal our hearts and minds.

In The Slow Work of God, Rachel Cope shows us what the conversion process looks like through a careful study of the Doctrine and Covenants and the spiritual journeys of courageous women and men featured in and around it - people like Lucy Mack Smith, Joseph Smith, Elizabeth Stewart, Nancy Lampson Holbrook, E. G. Jones, and Ruda Martins. This exploration helps us understand what each of these individuals felt as they encountered death, loss, failure, abuse, disappointment, injustice, war, and a pandemic. It highlights their hope in the face of despair, their transformation from brokenness to wholeness, and their redemption and conversion in the context of painful loss. In studying the lives and faith of these real people, we can learn how to make meaning out of devastation and discover that loss and suffering carve out a place for conversion and healing.

Connect with Latter-day Saints from generations past to consider what the Doctrine and Covenants can offer us today on our path to restore our relationships with ourselves, others, and the divine - our path to becoming wholly converted to God.

Author: COPE, RACHEL
Number of Pages: 192
Publisher: Deseret Book Company
Size: 5" x 7.9"