Friday, 10 January 2014
A PROMISE KEPT BY ROBIN LEE HATCHER
A PROMISE KEPT by ROBIN LEE HATCHER is a beautifully told story of forgiveness and the faithfulness of God.
Allison Kavanach, who is divorced from her husband Tony, moves to her great aunt Emma's log house in order to make a new start in life. Allison feels disillusioned as she really believed Tony would be delivered from his addiction to alcohol and that God would heal their marriage. Instead he went from bad to worse and walked out when she gave him an ultimatum.
It is here in this beautiful place, encouraged by the secrets she finds in her great aunt Emma's journals, that the Lord restores her relationship with Him as she reads his Word and draws close to Him again. She makes some good friends and really settles in to her new community and is beginning to heal when her daughter, Meredith, asks if her father can come and spend Christmas with them. Allison is not keen on the arrangement, but agrees for her daughter's sake. The holiday goes surprisingly well and leads to them spending more time together as a family. I like the way Allison's and Emma's stories run almost parallel, although they are different. Both stories show the goodness of God and the importance of trusting Him, not only with one's own life but with that of one's loved ones.
The Lord does answer prayer, there is no doubt about that, but the answers don't always come immediately or in the way we want them to. It is in the waiting and trusting that we grow as Christians. The story is sensitively told and it is close to the author's heart as it is really her own story.
Allison Kavanach, who is divorced from her husband Tony, moves to her great aunt Emma's log house in order to make a new start in life. Allison feels disillusioned as she really believed Tony would be delivered from his addiction to alcohol and that God would heal their marriage. Instead he went from bad to worse and walked out when she gave him an ultimatum.
It is here in this beautiful place, encouraged by the secrets she finds in her great aunt Emma's journals, that the Lord restores her relationship with Him as she reads his Word and draws close to Him again. She makes some good friends and really settles in to her new community and is beginning to heal when her daughter, Meredith, asks if her father can come and spend Christmas with them. Allison is not keen on the arrangement, but agrees for her daughter's sake. The holiday goes surprisingly well and leads to them spending more time together as a family. I like the way Allison's and Emma's stories run almost parallel, although they are different. Both stories show the goodness of God and the importance of trusting Him, not only with one's own life but with that of one's loved ones.
The Lord does answer prayer, there is no doubt about that, but the answers don't always come immediately or in the way we want them to. It is in the waiting and trusting that we grow as Christians. The story is sensitively told and it is close to the author's heart as it is really her own story.
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