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Where do you run when it hurts?After the diagnosis, the betrayal, the failure, or the long grey ache of a life that did not become what it was meant to be, the soul must do something with what it has been given. And in that moment it moves in one of two directions: toward the One who could receive the suffering and make something of it, or toward the nearest thing that will make the suffering stop. His Serenity is about that motion, and about what is at stake in the running.There is a peace that is given and a peace that is seized. The first is received from God with an open hand; the second is manufactured — wrung from a drink, a drug, a distraction — by a hand that has closed. This book makes a single, patient argument: that to prize the seized peace over the received is idolatry, the setting of a creature in the place that belongs to God alone. And it presses that argument into the one province where it works its most intimate and least visible damage — the peace of the soul itself.But this is not a book of prohibitions, and it is not a tribunal. It does not divide the world into the clean and the unclean, or legislate what may be touched and what may not. It says should not, never cannot — because the wrong was never in the substance but in the movement of the heart, and God alone reads the heart. The proud abstainer, who has made a throne of his sobriety, stands here under the very same charge as the one he condemns. No superiority is offered to anyone.At its center is a claim that sets it apart from every merely cautionary treatment of these questions: that the one who anesthetizes his suffering does not simply trade a true peace for a false one — he forfeits the suffering itself, and the suffering was the raw material of nearness to God. The wound is not only damage. It is a door. And the same substance that seals the door also clouds the eye that would have found it.Drawing its argument from Augustine, Luther, Calvin, Aquinas, Owen, and Edwards, and resting its whole weight on Scripture, His Serenity descends through the anatomy of the sedated will — the two peaces, the forfeited wound, the blurred sight of God, the captured will, and the body that Scripture calls the temple of the Spirit. It meets the hardest cases without flinching: the glass of wine at the wedding, the claim that a substance opens the door to the divine, the prescription of the physician. Then it turns and climbs — toward the disciplines that are the soul's true refuge in its troubled hour, and toward the peace that God alone gives, to hearts that have learned, at long last, to receive it rather than to seize it.It ends where it began: in the unclouded sight of God, and in His serenity — the peace the world cannot give and, for that very reason, can never take away.Where do you run when it hurts? This book is written to turn the troubled soul toward the only rest that was ever its own.
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