Healing and Wellness
For fifty years Good Grief has helped millions of readers, including NFL players and a former first lady, find comfort and rediscover hope after loss. Now this classic text is available in a new edition with a foreword by one of the nation's leading communicators of medical health care information. An afterword by the author's daughters tells how the book came to be.
For fifty years Good Grief has helped millions of readers, including NFL players and a former first lady, find comfort and rediscover hope after loss. Now this classic text is available in a new edition with a foreword by one of the nation's leading communicators of medical health care information. An afterword by the author's daughters tells how the book came to be.
Grief is a universal experience. We all go through it, whether it is the loss of a parent, a sibling, a friend, a job or pet, or being an immigrant in a new country or retiring.
Letters to Stephen is an account of one person's day by day struggle to deal with death while in the process of recovery. James Taylor's personal experiences and reflections on grief draw readers into issues such as symptoms of grief, the search for meaning, and the beginnings of acceptance and thankfulness.
With Ralph as narrator, these stories are each visually interpreted in their own way - by animation, illustration, or puppetry. One story is even performed by young people in India.
Stories include:
This convenient and attractive card captures a visitor
Reflective music sets a soothing background for prayer and reminds visitors of your congregation's desire to welcome them into a ministry of Christian fellowship and support.
THE LUTHERAN DIGEST, established in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA in 1953, is a general interest publication and Lutheran pastor’s tool for outreach ministry. Its blend of secular and light theological material provides believers reading entertainment and spiritual supplement and subtly persuades non-believers to embrace the Lutheran-Christian faith. Its theme…summarized in one word…is “Hope.”
