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Home/Lifestyle/Books/Laughing at the Days to Come

Laughing at the Days to Come

Thompson has already been where she calls her readers to go, and serves as a trusted guide.

Written by Tim Challies | Friday, January 17, 2020

Laughing at the Days to Come is a book about embracing and enduring life’s trials with divine joy. It is about gaining the kind of vision of that Proverbs 31 woman who can look into an unknown future and a long path of suffering and still rejoice. I think it’s fair to say that it’s written primarily for women, but there is no reason a man can’t read it and benefit just as much. Its great strength is not the story it tells, but the doctrine it teaches.

 

A book about suffering is usually born from adversity in the life of the author, and that’s exactly the case with Tessa Thompson’s Laughing at the Days to Come: Facing Present Trials and Future Uncertainties with Gospel Hope. When she was in her mid-teens, she was diagnosed with Neurofibromatosis Type 2 (NF2) and began to lose her hearing. Her father had been diagnosed a short time before, so she had been a first-hand witness to his struggles to adjust to a difficult new reality. Then, sure enough, her hearing began to fade as well so that she, too, was soon completely deaf. This trial, as well as some others that appeared a little later in life, form the backdrop for her story.

She says rightly that “It is times like these, when our hearts are fragile, our circumstances grim, and our futures uncertain, that the enemy of our souls loves to come and plant seeds of destruction in the soil of our hearts. And unless we are vigilantly working to keep the soil pure, the remaining sin within us will jump at the chance to water those seeds.” Indeed, her first instincts were to blame God for her loss. She knew the words of Job, “The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD.” But before she could echo those words from the heart, she “needed to know more about His character and, particularly, His countenance. Was He sympathetically looking down on me as a father who longs to comfort his injured child? Was He angry with me, and taking delight in my suffering? Was He indifferent, turning His face away because He had other things to attend to?” She had to know about the character of this God who would permit something she would never have chosen for herself.

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Related Posts:

  • Proverbs 31, the Incarnation, and Women (and Men) of God
  • Christian Suffering––Blessings, Not Curse!
  • Our Suffering Profits Us and Benefits Others
  • Hope When Life Unravels
  • Suffering as a Christian

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