O Susan!: Looking Forward with Hope After the Death of a ChildHope Publishing House, 1991 - 115 páginas A true classic on the meaning of hope when confronted by the death of the young. For a decade people have been asking, "Where can I borrow, buy or get my hands on a copy of one of the best books ever written about sudden sorrow?" Now available in an updated edition, this book is a wonderful guide for those who face the reorganization of their lives following the death of a loved one. Susan Elizabeth Angell, 21, a Pomona College senior, was killed a few short weeks before she was to graduate as a violin major. Word reached the Angell family just as dawn broke over the San Bernardino mountains on Easter morning. Susan, driving back from a camping trip at the Grand Canyon in order to arrive in time to join the Easter festivities and enjoy the family dinner, had fallen asleep at the wheel. Jim Angell's sermon was ready, but was his faith prepared for such tragic news? His story, a survival manual too long out of print, is finally available again. |
Contenido
What Do You Do When It Happens? | 13 |
Grace Is a Mailbox | 29 |
Others Have Made It | 47 |
A Family Looks Forward | 71 |
The Service | 89 |
113 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
O Susan!: Looking Forward with Hope After the Death of a Child James W. Angell Sin vista previa disponible - 1990 |
Términos y frases comunes
Angell beautiful become beginning believe body bring child Christ Christian church clear clothes College comes comfort continues dark daughter dead death dreams earth Easter entered eternal experience eyes face faith feel final forever four friends gift give God's God's love gone grace grief grow hands happened hard heart hope hour human Jesus John keep kind knew later leave less letters light lives look lost Mary meaning memory mind moments morning never night pain parents pass peace person played possible prayers questions remember rest seems share someone sorrow soul sounds stand stars stay story Sunday sure Susan talk tears things thought told tragedy trust turn understand Virginia waiting walk wonder write wrote young