I cannot comprehend the devastation that follows the loss of a child to suicide, but Jean Williams can. I'm privileged to be part of the launch of her book, God's Mercies after Suicide: Blessings Woven through a Mother's Heart. Jean will be posting the devotional on her blog.
Jean Ann Williams lives in Southern Oregon with her husband Jim. Although one of their children has passed on to the Great Beyond, their two remaining children have blessed them with thirteen grandchildren, their Baker’s Dozen.
To learn more about Jean Ann Williams visit her on Face Book, Twitter, and her blogs Love Truth and Jean Ann Williams: Author.
http://joshua-mom.blogspot.com/
http://jeanannwilliams.blogspot.com/
Jean's book will release in installments, on her blog, beginning March 16. She will post three times per week - Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. The posts will have three parts for each chapter - the devotions, My Mother Memories, and a journal page for the reader.
Until the book releases in print readers can journal on their own, using the suggested headings below:
• ~Your Mother Memories~
• ~Your Prayer of Praise~
• ~A Scripture of Encouragement~
From Jean Ann Williams:
On March 16, 2015, it will be eleven years since my son left his family and friends with our grief, questions, and the memories of him.
“When our children die, we want their lives to have mattered. We long for the world to know they were here.”
God's Mercies After Suicide opens with this preface:
Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old.
Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not
perceive it?
—Isaiah 43:18-19
I had a dream. I dreamed the nightmare never happened. Our son Joshua never passed on to the hereafter. He married and had children. Then I woke, and knew the dream was only that—a dream. We live with our reality.
I’ve written these devotions for those of you who have shared the deep heartache of a child’s suicide. Through my writing, I believe God wants me to share from my heart to yours, by encouraging you and giving you ways to cope. You can have hope and peace after a suicide. God has helped me and He wants to help you. The loss is horrific, but God is faithful. He brought me through this dark time, and He wants to do the same for you.
A yearning to write this story came five years into my journey of loss. I sensed a dawn of courage within myself, but I haven’t come this far in a blink, nor on my own. Although I knew I’d lose my nerve, only to gain it back time and again before I completed my story, I also knew I’d have the help from the Lord God, and the folks He sends my way.
Am I full of courage? Yes! Yes, I shout, with God’s hand upon me.
God, when I falter, I pray You will renew my strength. In Jesus’s name. Amen.
God’s Mercies after Suicide: Blessings Woven through a Mother’s Heart is a devotional of two hundred and nineteen pages–30,000 words– and is intended for mothers who’ve lost children to suicide. This book is a friendly, approachable, inviting book that helps mothers feel welcome and at ease to allow them a peaceful time to reflect on their loss and the child they miss. Each chapter has three sections. The devotional begins with Scripture and where the author tells the story of her loss and then ends in a prayer. The second part is of the author’s anecdotes and memories of her son. They are short and sweet, with a dramatic style rather than a how-to. The author reenacts moments in her child’s life and recalls how she felt to see the different stages of growth and challenges he faced in life. The concluding part to each chapter is a journal page for the readers to write their memories of their child. It allows them space for both memories and grieving, a prayer of praise, and a Scripture of encouragement.
When a mother has lost a child, there are times when it’s hard to mingle with other people. Each God’s Mercies after Suicide chapter can be read and journaled in the privacy of a mother’s home, giving her a bit of hope and rest for another day. The book is distinctive in that it combines coping with the pain of loss while encouraging mothers to search for their own blessings. The book reaches out from its pages and wraps mothers in the warmth and love of their heavenly Father.
It has been stated by sufferers of loss to suicide that the topic of suicide is taboo, and that the survivors feel they’ve been isolated from the normal hum of life. In truth, the ones left behind after the suicide do have a valid point. Included in the preface of the book is this paragraph: “I’ve written these devotions for those mothers who have shared the deep heartache of a child’s suicide. Through my writing, I believe God wants me to share from my heart to theirs, by encouraging them and giving them ways to cope. Mothers can have hope and a due measure of peace after a suicide. God has helped me, and He wants to help other mothers. The loss is horrific, but God is faithful. He brought me through this dark time, and He wants to do the same for all mothers.”
Mothers of loss from suicide face separate concerns—concerns that are not taught nor thought about when they become parents. No one wants to consider that they’ll give birth to a child who could die by suicide. The mothers who endure this type of pain need a resource that considers their exclusive struggles and offers honest help from one mother to another—not in a step-by-step format but in story form, which draws the reader into a world they may know all too well.
Jean, thank you for sharing from your heart. I know your journey will minister to others who are traveling this painful road.
Grace and peace to you from God,
Bonnie
Bonnie, you did a marvelous job of featuring me on your blog. I appreciate you so much! God bless you and all that you do. In Jesus. Jean
ReplyDeleteBlessings to you, Jean.
ReplyDeleteWhew! I can only imagine--but don't want to! I am not commenting to "win" this book--I want those to read it who need it as much as they need the good Lord---it sounds marvelous, and invaluable. God bless you, dear mama! My grandmother's daughter, my mother, committed suicide at age 50--my g'ma was almost 80 and so shocked and traumatized it steered her into quitting alcohol cold turkey. They both were full blown alcoholics. G'ma Maggie's heart never recovered, but God carried her on. And both were released from the drink's terrible hold. Sigh...
ReplyDeletePatti, thank you for stopping by and reading Bonnie's blog and our post. Please do pass on the word about the book. God bless you and keep you! Jean
ReplyDelete