The Restorer’s Son – Bonus Scene
In which Susan grapples with fear.
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The Restorer’s Son – Bonus Scene
In which Susan grapples with fear.
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Last year, I was invited by Creative Communications for the Parish publishers to write daily prayers for the Advent season. Our Lord Emmanuel: Daily Prayers for Advent booklets are now available to order. Congregations and small groups can order bundles, or you can order one for your Advent quiet times this fall.
Blessings!
Sharon Hinck
It started with the strawberries. Lots of holes in the leaves. I’m a haphazard gardener so it took me a while to identify the culprit. But on a sunny day when I was weeding and wondering why the strawberries were such a mess, I spotted them. Nasty red bugs. Everywhere. Huddled in masses. Destroying my Granny’s rose bush, my strawberries, and everything else in their path.
Being an organic type, I squashed as many as I could before they scurried away out of sight. But there were too many for me.
What made this battle particularly poignant for me (besides the fact that I won’t be canning any strawberry jam from the garden this year) was that I’ve had some nasty garden bugs chomping at my spirit lately, too.
It started small. Wanting my book to sell well. Not an evil desire. After all, God called me to write the book, opened the doors for it, and wanted people to read it, right? But soon more little bugs gathered. Wanting my book to sell better than others. Worry that it’s not doing well enough. Craving approval from people. Obsessing over its ranking. Tiny bugs of idolatry. Sin.
Yes, sin. It’s not a popular word. But when I take my eyes off my Savior, that’s where my fallen nature take me. Self-centered, anxious, distracted, unavailable for God’s changes of direction–chewed up by nasty bugs. The bugs in the garden reminded me of how ugly sin is.
And as in my strawberry patch, the infestation is beyond my ability to squash.
But the good news is, it’s not too much for God. His sunlight reveals the pests. His forgiveness wipes them out. Completely. And soon He can bear fruit through my life again.
Have you spotted an invasion in your spiritual life recently? Let’s ask Christ to forgive us and restore the garden of our heart.
Blessings!
Sharon
Great news!
My publisher is offering a special on Stepping Into Sunlight for the next few days.
Only 99 cents for the e-book!
Stepping Into Sunlight
Penny Sullivan, a Navy chaplain’s wife witnesses a violent crime and struggles with post traumatic stress while her husband is on his first deployment.
Far from family and friends, she fights to heal for the sake of her seven-year-old son, even though ordinary tasks take heroic efforts. She’s haunted by flashbacks and is tormented by fear, so she designs a project to speed her recovery: doing one small, kind act for a different person each day.
REVIEWS & ENDORSEMENTS:
“Hinck, a 2008 Christy finalist for visionary fiction, offers an especially grounded tale of sudden trauma and slow healing...Hinck has done her homework on post-traumatic stress syndrome, and is not afraid to show readers that challenges can deepen faith.”— Publisher’s Weekly
In this uplifting novel set in Chesapeake, VA, Penny Sullivan is losing her grip after witnessing a traumatic event. . . Well written and compelling, this title will appeal to readers of Karen Kingsbury, Ann Tatlock, and Angela Elwell Hunt.” — Library Journal
“Like Sharon Hinck’s heroine, I, too, witnessed a crime. It’s been years, but I relived every emotion along with Penny Sullivan. Told with humor and lump-in-the-throat insight, Stepping into Sunlight is a compelling story of learning to live again after trauma. This was my first Sharon Hinck novel, but it garnered her a permanent spot on my favorite authors list.”— Deborah Raney, author of A Vow to Cherish and The Clayburn Novels series
“With emotional and spiritual honesty, Stepping into Sunlight chronicles the rebirth of faith and courage in a young woman traumatized by the unthinkable. Penny, Sharon Hinck’s authentic and endearing heroine, is so convincing that I found myself, well, praying for her. That’s compelling fiction! I laughed. I cried. I asked God a lot of questions. In the end, Hinck’s concise yet poetic language ushered me into a worshipful place. Stepping into Sunlight definitely prospered my soul.” — Patti Hill, author of The Queen of Sleepy Eye
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You can find more of the story in The Restorer’s Son
Blessings!
Super-fan Nina Ruth hosted a party to celebrate the release of The Deliverer.
Swords and cloaks were the dress code.
The menu included ground caradoc sauteed with wild Braide Wood vegetables; lehkan cream & fermented orberry; Rendor wild greens; Clavo; and Hazor Delight for dessert.
The table games were lit by a light trivet. Thanks to Nina Ruth, Jen, and Kristi for sharing their photos of a fun evening through the portal.
If you want to host a fun evening, download the free Sword of Lyric Party Planner at my website.
Please Share This:Today I turned to Nehemiah for encouragement. So much of his struggle
resonates with me. Especially chapter 4, verse 10. “The strength of the
laborers is giving out, and there is so much rubble that we cannot rebuild
the wall.”
Do you ever feel like there’s just too much rubble in the way?
Nehemiah started out strong. He rebuilt the wall to half its height, “for
the people worked with all their heart.”
But Sanballat and his pals continued to jeer, to mock, and to plot against
Nehemiah and the other people in Jerusalem, making the job that much more
difficult.
I hear Sanballat’s echoes almost every day. “What are those feeble Jews
doing? . . . Will they finish in a day? Can they bring the stones back to
life from those heaps of rubble–burned as they are?”
Nehemiah spoke a response to the weary builders. “Don’t be afraid of them.
Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers,
your sons and your daughters, your wives and your homes.”
A friend once reminded me that if a theme in one of my books touches
someone’s heart and encourages them, my work has value. She helped me
realize that in my writing work I am “fighting for my brothers, sons,
daughters…” I want to offer stories that draw eyes to God. Just as
Nehemiah issued a call to courage by saying “remember the Lord,” I want my
stories to reflect and remember the Lord – His love, His grace, His
strength.
Nehemiah doesn’t throw his words out flippantly. Sweat ran into his eyes,
blisters grated his hands as he lifted the next brick, and threats
continued to ring in the air. “Those who carried materials did their work
with one hand and held a weapon in the other.” Not optimal working
conditions.
Whatever building or repairing God has called us to, the key to getting
through the times of overwhelming discouragement are found in Nehemiah’s
clarion words. “Remember the Lord.”
Maybe I CAN write one more paragraph today, after all.
Blessings,
Sharon Hinck
“All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was.” – Ernest Hemingway
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