Q&A with Nancy Guthrie
Author of The One Year© Book of Hope
For many people, the worst thing they can imagine happening to them
is to lose a child. Nancy Guthrie has known that loss, not once,
but twice, burying a daughter, Hope, and a son, Gabriel, who each
lived only six months due to a rare and cruel metabolic disorder
called Zellweger Syndrome. So Nancy knows what it is like to yearn
for hope when life seems dark and difficult. Her own search for understanding
and meaning in the scripture is reflected in the year's worth of
daily devotions she has written for others who are hurting in The
One Year© Book of Hope.
Q. What have you learned from your own experience
of grief that influenced what you have written for others who are hurting
in The One Year© Book of Hope?
A. I suppose my own sorrow opened my eyes
to the sorrow of others. Before I had Hope I was blissfully
unaware or perhaps just conveniently naïve about the
hurts of others—the on-going pain that many people
live with day in and day out—and I liked it that way.
But having walked through deep grief myself, I now understand
what it is like to feel hopeless in the midst of loss, desperate
for relief, and searching for meaning. I know what it is
like to wonder if life will ever be good again, if you'll
ever have joy again.
Q. How have you found healing for the hurt you've
experienced?
A. The secret for me has been to take my most
significant questions about who God is and how he works to the
scripture in a quest for understanding and a search for intimacy.
As my understanding of God and my experience of God has grown and
expanded through suffering, I've come to see my suffering as a
blessing, as an opportunity to become more God-dependent and God-aware,
and less self-sufficient and self-absorbed.
Q. Who did you have in mind as you wrote the daily
devotionals for The One Year© Book of Hope?
A. I thought of various friends or people
I've interacted with—those stinging from divorce, grieving
the death of a loved one, struggling with a difficult diagnosis
or health issue, or coping with a prodigal child, as well
as those whose difficulty might not be what they would describe
as "big" but is none-the-less very real and painful
to them. And the truth is, all of us deal with some form
of suffering at some point in our lives that we have to make
sense of and submit to.
I suppose more than anything The One Year© Book of Hope is
a daily call to deeper discipleship, an invitation to walk with God
in a closer and more committed way. Some of my friends who read the
book and gave me input as I was writing it told me that they didn't
feel like they had to be suffering in a significant way to feel like
the book was for them. It is for anyone who wants to go beyond superficial
consumer Christianity to knowing and walking with God in a rich and
rewarding but perhaps costly way. I hope that as they work through
the book week by week, they will discover that Jesus is worth whatever
following him and trusting him may cost them. He's that good, that
reliable.
Q. The One Year© Book of Hope is prefaced
with a quote from C. S. Lewis' Mere Christianity that reads, "Comfort
is the one thing you cannot get by looking for it. If you look for
truth, you may find comfort in the end; if you look for comfort you
will not get either comfort or truth—only soft soap and wishful
thinking to begin with and, in the end, despair." Why did you
preface the book this way?
A. Because I think much of what is offered to hurting people in an
effort to bring comfort doesn't, because it is not rooted in truth
or is just half-truth. Often what is offered is more sentimental than
scriptural. Or oftentimes the scriptures offered to hurting people
are what I call, "pat-you-on-the-head-passages" that sound
good and seem to offer hope, but it is hope that is more about getting
what you want from God than about getting more of God, more about getting
his cooperation to work out your plans than about conforming to his
plans.
Q. What do you mean?
A. Many scriptures that are commonly shared with
those who are hurting seem to tell people only what they want to
hear—that God is going to make everything okay and that he
will come through for them in the way they want him to. And then
when he doesn't, they're really disappointed with God and tempted
to walk away from faith. So rather than going to scripture with
the aim of plucking out what sounds good to us, we need to come
to scripture with an aim of seeking to meet God in it, to discover
him for who he really is, and to grow in our understanding of what
he is doing in the world. In the daily devotions for The One
Year© Book of Hope, I've come to the scripture with the
questions I have struggled with in the wake of my loss in my own
search for truth to dispel the darkness. And on the surface, the
truth I've discovered is not always what I was hoping to hear,
but as I dig deeper I discover it is what I need most.
Q. Can you give us an example?
A. An example would be whether or not I can expect
God to protect me. Many verses suggest that God protects those
he loves, but I also see in the scripture that God did not always
protect those he loved from hardship, persecution, or even death.
So one week the book explores exactly what God has promised in
regard to protecting us. On the surface what we discover may not
be what we are looking for, but we find that in reality the protection
God offers is much deeper and more pervasive than we once thought.
Another example would be miracles and healing. When we read, "Ask
anything in my name and I will do it," or read the stories of
miraculous healings in the gospels, we develop a picture, and even
an urgent expectation, that God will respond to our faith with the
physical healing we desire. But many of us have experienced the reality
that God does not always heal our bodies. So pursuing the truth, and
pursuing God in the midst of that truth is transforming. We discover
that our spiritual health is more important to God than our physical
health, and on the surface that may be disappointing to us because
our value system just doesn't line up with God's value system. But
our bodies are going to die, and our spirits are going to live forever.
Q. What do these things have to do with hope?
A. Hope is a very misunderstood word in our modern
language and culture. Most of the time we use "hope" to
describe our wishful thinking. We're hoping something will happen
but we have no confidence that it will. But when the Bible talks
about hope, it is speaking of something that is sure, but not yet
a reality that we can see. And while hope impacts how we live in
the here and now and infuses even our suffering with meaning, real
hope involves a view to eternity—a God-secured, God-infused,
God-glorifying eternal future. Our confident expectation of this
hope-filled future is based solely on the word of God and his promises
to us. That is why genuine hope is found only by searching the
scriptures.
Q. What is the biggest mistake people who are hurting
or grieving make that keeps them from embracing hope and life?
A. We look for comfort in many other places
and in many other people rather than in God alone when all
the while he is inviting us, "Come to me, all you who
are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest." We
reach for the telephone or the TV remote or the bottle or
the refrigerator to soothe the hurts in our lives rather
than learning how to come to God alone for the comfort we
crave. The sad truth is that when we read God's promise that
he will walk with us in the valley, we're a little disappointed.
We want more than that because we don't really believe the
presence of God with us in the midst of sorrow or difficulty
will be all that great. We want what God can give us more
than we want God himself. I hope that readers of The
One Year© Book of Hope will come to value the gift
of God's very presence in their pain.
Q. In what ways is grief different for a person of
faith than it is for the person with no faith?
A. Well in many ways it is the same. Pain
and loss doesn't hurt less for the believer, though we might
think it should. Faith does not inoculate us from pain. But
genuine faith does infuse us with hope. It fills us with
confidence in God's goodness, God's love, and God's sovereignty
and it plants our fondest hopes in the soil of heaven, not
this earth. Genuine faith helps us to stop expecting so much
from this world and this life and comforts us with the confidence
that heaven will not disappoint us like life does. |