Turning Hurts Into Halos
For the first time, he discusses many of the difficult events of his life. He provides positive examples to show readers how he got through them and how they can emerge victoriously also.Pastor and motivational speaker Robert H. Schuller is perhaps most renowned for his weekly “Hour of Power” church service, broadcast worldwide from the glass Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, California. In Turning Hurts into Halos, Schuller uses his storytelling skills and personal anecdotes to explain th
List Price: $ 16.98
Price:



Absolutely Amazing Book.,
Dr. Robert Schuller guides us once again to learn to live in the positive. It is a caring and well written book with stories that each and everyone of us can feel. We do know life has moments of pain and with this book we can come to understand how to turn the hurts into halos and scars into stars!!!!
Was this review helpful to you?
|Insightful Truth,
In choosing to respond appropriately to suffering you ensure that the experience leads to something beneficial. Free will is involved in that decision. Dr. Schuller writes, “I promise you that there is gain in every pain.” Our reaction to pain is crucial! That choice determines whether we will expeience the benefits associated with the suffering process.
Hurts do not endure permanently. Pain passes. Trials end. He tells us to view pain as a process not an event. God has a purpose for everything. People who have made significant marks are the ones who have responded successfully to adversity. Thank God Dr. Schuller is in that group and left this work and others showing us that we too can make our way through life’s challenges.
Was this review helpful to you?
|Never be victimized again – only victorious!,
Dr. Schuller’s first chapter is so aptly titled! “Welcome To The Human Race” – we are all hurting human beings! What sets us apart is our ability to recognize that the hurt is not punishment from God, but instead a reality of our life on earth. Schuller takes his reader through a series of practical analyses of hurt, in much the same way that Elisabeth Kubler Ross taught us to move through the stages of grief. How heavy is the hurt? How hardy (what is its lifespan)? and, How healthy is this hurt? He reminds us frequently that we must constantly examine our priorities and renew our faith that with God, all things are possible. Not an easy road to take, but worth it.
The book is written in an easy to follow manner and uses real life illustrations of both the author’s personal struggles with hurt and those of others who survived life’s worst tragedies and came out of these fires strengthened and renewed. Had Dr.Schuller omitted his own experiences, this would be just another sampling of inspirational story gathering. But as the “father of possibility thinking” was feeling victimized, he realized that he “needed to delve deep into the meat and potatoes of handling hurts and get over that seductive, self-absorbing, pity-party reaction.” And he shares the wisdom of his exploration with us in an easy to read format that time and again reminds us of Schuller’s powerful commitment to God.
Both believers and non-believers will find this book helpful as they search for the skills to cope with the hurts that come with divorce, death, destruction and our perceived failures. I liken it to Christian counselor Gary Smalley’s teaching that we must learn to “treasure hunt” within a hurtful experience and find ways to bring acceptance and peace back to our lives.
This may be the ultimate gift book for a hurting friend!
Was this review helpful to you?
|