God of the Valley

A journey through grief

Steve Griffiths

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If I could choose only one book from the dozens written about bereavement, this would be it.
Home and Family

Content

Beginning with the toughest question - 'why?' - Steve Griffiths explores suffering and how we can question, rage, weep and eventually find consolation in God's arms, no matter how desolate our situation. Reflecting on the pain of his wife's long illness and eventual death at the age of 36, he writes as one who has personally known prolonged grief, but also as a church minister who has preached and shared pastorally with bereaved families the insights found in scripture.

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Endorsements

If I could choose only one book from the dozens written about bereavement, this would be it.
Home and Family

This is truth through story, through poetry, through the experience of God's people down the ages. it shows us how the Bible can speak with peculiar power and relevance to our own experience of personal loss. And it is full of Christian hope.
David Winter

Tackles issues of loss, the reactions of those around us and the emotions and consequences of bereavement with a frankness that is incisive.
Methodist Recorder

Helps the Bible make sense to the real human experience of death and dying.
Church of Ireland Gazette

Author info

The Revd Steve Griffiths is Rector of a team of churches near Cambridge, having previously ministered in the Birmingham area, London and Essex. He specialises in youth ministry and has trained youth workers around the world as well as in the UK. Formerly Director of the Centre for Youth Ministry at Ridley Hall, Cambridge, he has written books and articles on pastoral theology and was founding editor of the Journal of Youth and Theology.

Reviews

From Reform Magazine - May 2011

Convincing biblical insights drawn from personal grief

Steve Griffiths' wife, Clare, died from a brain tumour at the age of 36. Their daughter, Rebekah, was eight years old. His sister also died from cancer. In this book, Griffiths addresses his experience of grief, and explores some of the biblical and theological questions and insights he discovered on his journey. He demonstrates how they affected his own feelings and faith.

In my 40 years in pastoral ministry, I have more than once come across those who write down an account of their pain. They then put it away, and often, years later, they simply tear it up. Griffiths chose to publish his, and I confess to approaching the result with a degree of cynicism - I distrust books that aim to help others by setting out very intimate experiences.

C S Lewis, in A Grief Observed, says: "Talk to me about the truth of religion and I'll listen gladly. Talk to me about the duty of religion and I'll listen submissively. But don't come talking to me about the consolations of religion or I shall suspect that you don't understand." Remembering this, there were moments in the book when I wanted to shout at Griffiths to avoid smugness: "Your answer will not be everyone's answer. Please don't make us feel guilty if we can't share your happy conclusion." He sometimes comes dangerously near to seeing his own grief as the most important thing in everyone's lives - not just his.

But Griffiths does convince. He is so authentic. Who has lost a loved one and not experienced a deep feeling of guilt? In this book, it's there. Or anger? It's also there (interestingly against the church!) Or hated God? That's there too. He makes a determined - and successful - effort to challenge the biblical witness and to harvest from it comfort and understanding. And he wins through his personal struggle.

Bereavement is the ultimate personal experience. This is why I conclude that there are those who will find this book immensely supportive, and those who will be merely irritated. There is no way to tell the difference in advance.

John R Smith is a United Reformed Church minister at Morningside United Church, Edinburgh

Book details

  • ISBN: 9781841018263
  • Published: 19 November 2010
  • Status:
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 128
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