`The quiet courage of a family in dire adversity could not be better demonstrated – John Symons describes the tragedies that struck at the heart of a poor but devoted family. Humanity and the valour of the human spirit shine from every page.’ This England // `Utterly compelling. A portrayal of how this cruel disease affects a family and the courage of their response; deeply moving and profound in its sensitivity, placing the story ... in the wider theological context of how to make sense of human suffering.’ Rachel Brookes, Nursing Sister, who has cared for Huntington’s disease patients
This book tells the story of two people, born in poverty, who found each other and married in a world at war. They brought up and educated a family, but while their two sons were still very young, the father, a strong man who had served for twenty-five years in the army in India, developed the symptoms of Huntington’s disease. This cast a deep shadow over the family as his condition deteriorated over the next twenty-five years, but their faithful experience of God's love and their deep love for each other gave them the strength and sense of purpose that brought them safe to the end, a meaning expressed in the words of Mother Julian of Norwich: “Do you want to know what our Lord meant in all this? Love is his meaning. In this love our life is everlasting. All this we shall see in God without end.” Love is His Meaning recreates in a new way and as one book, as the author always wished, the story first presented in Stranger on the Shore and This Life of Grace, both of which captivated readers. This new book has allowed the author to draw together the separate stories of his parents and of their families, before they were married, the story of their marriage and of his mother's long life after his father's death. This treatment, of parallel lives, gives a picture of life in our country over the whole of the twentieth century, allowing the reader to grasp what life was like for many ordinary families in those days when the power of the Christian Faith was more influential and widely experienced.
Les mer
This book tells the story of two people, born in poverty, who found each other and married in a world at war. The husband developed Huntington's disease. This is the story of their marriage and how love and faith gave them a sense of purpose.
Les mer
Preface - 1 Dad, 1953 - 2 Florence Louisa and William - 3 `On Chorea’ - 4 `One and All’ - 5 India - 6 `Floruit’ - 7 Commissioned - 8 Matchmaking - 9 Home Leave - 10 Interlude - 11 Dear Octopus - 12 `When you and I were seventeen’ - 13 `Tea at Gunters’ - 14 `The test of the heart is trouble’ - 15 Interlude - 16 Courtship and Marriage - 17 Home Thoughts from Abroad - 18 Making a Home - 19 `Huntington’s explains it all’ - 20 Number - 21 At Risk - 22 The Two of Them, Together - 23 Interlude - 24 No Way Out - 25 `I love you, my darling’ - 26 `… down to Oxford’s towers’ - 27 `Dearly loved husband, father and brother’ - 28 A New Life - 29 Windwhistle - 30 Neighbours and Friends - 31 A Pattern of Life - 32 Time Passes - 33 `Gone are the days…’ - 34 `What can’t be cured…’ - 35 `The best thing that ever happened to me…’ - 36 `A Ring of Faithfulness’ - 37 A Last Gift - 38 `Such sweet sorrow’ - 39 A Walk - Epilogue - Acknowledgements
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780856835285
Publisert
2019-04-08
Utgiver
Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
130 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
288
Forfatter