A review by shansometimes
Field Notes for the Wilderness: Practices for an Evolving Faith by Sarah Bessey

hopeful inspiring

5.0

Although I've long aimed to read authors I disagree with, Sarah Bessey is a good example of someone I would've written off as a heretic just a few years ago without even examining what she actually believes. Thank God for growth.

With that growth and curiosity has come an element of fear and grief for me. Anyone who can relate would likely find FIELD NOTES FOR THE WILDERNESS as helpful and transformative as I did. As I mentioned in a previous book review, I haven't gone through a "deconstruction" process (at least not yet), and I haven't left the Church; I've merely let my intellectual and spiritual curiosity compel me to ask bigger questions and seek good answers.

But this book is a blessing and the foremost guide for those deconstructing, reconstructing, or reconsidering their Christian faith. FIELD NOTES FOR THE WILDNERNESS isn't a book of answers, though—it's a book that offers comfort, hope, belonging, acceptance, exhortation, and encouragement. It's filled with gentle nudges to be gentle with ourselves, invitations to consider what we're for now and not just what we're against, affirmations that the loving and sovereign God is with us on the journey, encouragement that faith evolutions are healthy and normal, and wisdom Bessey has gathered through her own experiences "wandering in the wilderness."

I got from this book what I thought I would get from her book OUT OF SORTS, which turned out to be more of a memoir. FIELD NOTES FOR THE WILDNERNESS is a guide, and exactly the type I needed at this time in my life. It's written with such clarity and grace. I'd recommend this to anyone who has ever struggled with the Church or wrestled with faith and anyone who'd like to understand the pain and 
predicament of those who have. 

*This review is based on a digital ARC provided by the publisher via NetGalley. 

"Sometimes one of the greatest gifts God gives to us is losing our religion. We have to be committed to unlearning the unhelpful, broken, false, or incomplete things if we want to have space to relearn the goodness, joy, and embrace of God."