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Touching on topics like fear, worry, dissatisfaction, anxiety, and
body image, Alyssa Bethke walks you through issues that rob you of
your joy and helps you recognize them for what they are:
distractions. With all of its expectations and contradictions, this
world can take a major toll on us. Be skinny, but not too skinny.
Work and hustle but stay home and be a good mom. Be wild and free
while tidy and pure. Love your husband but be independent. In
Satisfied, Alyssa Bethke shares a compelling collection of
relatable essays that will help you stop focusing on what you lack
and start feeling grateful for what you have. Along with healthy
recipes and cozy home images, Satisfied will provide you with the
knowledge that you are not alone in your fight to be fulfilled.
Alyssa shows you the ways in which you are enough-not only for
those around you, but for yourself.
How do we find contentment in God when we feel so hidden? Sara
Hagerty unfolds the truths found in the biblical story of Mary of
Bethany to discover the scandalous love of God and explore the
spiritual richness of being hidden in him. Every heart longs to be
seen and understood. Yet most of our lives is unwitnessed. We spend
our days working, driving, parenting. We sometimes spend whole
seasons feeling unnoticed and unappreciated. In Unseen, Sara
Hagerty suggests that this is exactly what God intended. He is the
only One who truly knows us. He is the only One who understands the
value of the unseen in our lives. When this truth seeps into our
souls, we realize that only when we hide ourselves in God can we
give ourselves to others in true freedom--and know the joy of a
deeper relationship with the God who sees us. Our culture applauds
what we can produce, what we can show, what we can upload to social
media. Only when we give all of ourselves to God--unedited,
abandoned, apparently wasteful in its lack of productivity--can we
live out who God created us to be. As Hagerty writes, "Maybe my
seemingly unproductive, looking-up-at-Him life produces awe among
the angels." Through an eloquent exploration of both personal and
biblical story, Hagerty calls us to offer every unseen minute of
our lives to God. God is in the secret places of our lives that no
one else witnesses. But we've not been relegated to these places.
We've been invited. We may be "wasting" ourselves in a hidden
corner today: The cubicle on the fourth floor. The hospital bedside
of an elderly parent. The laundry room. But these are the places
God uses to meet us with a radical love. These are the places that
produce the kind of unhinged love in us that gives everything at
His feet, whether or not anyone else ever proclaims our name,
whether or not anyone else ever sees. God's invitation is not just
for a season or a day. It is the question of our lives: "When no
one else applauds you, when it makes no sense, when you see no
results--will you waste your love on Me?"
In Love That Lasts, New York Times bestselling author of Jesus >
Religion Jefferson Bethke and his wife, Alyssa, expose the
distorted views of love that permeate our culture and damage our
hearts, minds, and souls. Drawing from Jeff's "prodigal son"
personal history and from Alyssa's "True Love Waits" experience,
the Bethkes point to a third and better way. Blending personal
storytelling with biblical teaching, they offer readers an
inspiring, realistic vision of love, dating, marriage, and sex.
Young people today enter adulthood with expectations of blissful
dating followed by a romantic, fulfilling marriage only to discover
they've been duped. They learned about love and sexuality from
social media, their friends, Disney fairy tales, pornography, or
even their own rocky past, and they have no idea what healthy,
lifelong love is supposed to be like. The results are often
disastrous, with this generation becoming one of the most
relationally sick, sexually addicted, and divorce ridden in
history. Looking to God's design while drawing lessons from their
own successes and failures, the Bethkes explode the fictions and
falsehoods of our current moment. One by one, they peel back the
lies, such as the belief that every person has only one soul mate,
that marriage will complete you, or that pornography and hook-ups
are harmless.
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