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Scarred By Struggle, Transformed By Hope

Scarred By Struggle, Transformed By Hope

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Everyone goes through times of pain and sorrow, depression and darkness, stress and suffering. It is in the necessary struggles of life, however, that we stretch our souls and gain new insights enabling us to go on. Building on the biblical story of Jacob wrestling with God and on the story of her own battle with life-changing disappointment, Sister Joan Chittister deftly explores the landscape of suffering and hope, considering along the way such wide-ranging topics as consumerism, technology, grief, the role of women in the Catholic Church, and the events of September 11, 2001. We struggle, she says, against change, isolation, darkness, fear, powerlessness, vulnerability, exhaustion, and scarring; and while these struggles sometimes seem insurmountable, we can emerge from them with the gifts of conversion, detachment, faith, courage, surrender, limitations, endurance, transformation, and (perhaps most important) hope. Each of these struggles and gifts is discussed in a chapter of its own. Meant to help readers cope with their own suffering and disappointment, Scarred by Struggle, Transformed by Hope is, in Sister Joan’s words, an anatomy of struggle and an account of the way hope grows in us, despite our moments of darkness, regardless of our regular bouts of depression. It is an invitation to look again at the struggles of life in order that we might remember how to recognize new life in our souls the next time our hearts turn again to clay. Neither a self-help manual nor a book offering pat answers, but supremely practical and relevant, this book will richly reward those readers seeking solace in the empathic, wise, and accessible meditations of a fellow struggler.

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What Readers Say...

"Joan Chittister—mystic and prophet—has given us yet another perspective on holding fast to hope..."
-Miriam Therese Winter

"I was deeply moved by Joan Chittister’s courage and insight and by her insistence that we are all capable of them as well."
-Rabbi Harold Kuschner

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There is a deep-down bone weariness that comes with struggle. The sheer weight of going on knowing that nothing we can do will change things as they are, that there is no going back to what was, exhaust the timbre of the soul. We want to give up. We want to quit. We want to give in to the thing that has defeated us and die. But the very fact that we do not succumb to the weariness of the impossible, that we endure, that we keep on keeping on touches into the hope of eternal justice, eternal good, everlasting possibility. Then we see that our creating God who goes on creating—whatever the apparent failures of the process—asks the same of us. When we refuse to give up, either on ourselves or on the world around us, we become our own small sign that God is, that in the end right will prevail, that hope lives. Endurance is the light of hope in a continuing darkness that must somehow, somewhere give way to the light of dawn.

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Discussion Questions

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Awards

Best General interest Award for 2003—Association of Theological Booksellers

2004—Catholic Press Association, Third Place Book Award