Drops Like Stars: A Few Thoughts on Creativity and Suffering
By (Author) Rob Bell
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins
18th September 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
248.4
Paperback
144
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 10mm
120g
Rob Bells extraordinary and provocative Drops Like Stars, published as part of the Rob Bell Classics relaunch, explores the relationship between suffering and creativity, and the transformative power of pain.
We plot. We plan. We assume things are going to go a certain way. And when they dont, we find ourselves in a new place - a place we havent been before; a place we never would have imagined on our own. It is the difficult and the unexpected, and maybe even the tragic, that opens us up and frees us to see things in new ways.
Many of the most significant moments in our lives come not because it all went right but because it all fell apart. Suffering does that. It hurts, but it also creates. This book is an exploration of the complex relationship between suffering and creativity, driven by the belief that there is art in the agony. Rob Bell
Few readers will dispute Bell's gentle assertions: that life can be extremely difficult and capricious, that it is often difficult to find God amid suffering, that suffering has a great potential to unify disparate people, and that great bursts of creative energy can arise from pain. Bell explores these issues not by covert biblical exegesis but [by] new-fashioned storytelling. Bell weaves inspiring stories of people who turned their suffering into something transformative. (Publishers Weekly)
Bell fights every impulse in our culture to domesticate Jesus [and] challenges the reader to be open to surprise, mystery and all of the unanswerables Bell has given theologically suspicious Christians new courage to bet their life on Jesus Christ. (Christian Century)
Claiming that some versions of Jesus should be rejected, particularly those used to intimidate and inspire fear or hatred, Bell persuasively interprets the Bible as a message of love and redemption. . . . His style is characteristically concise and oral, his tone passionate and unabashedly positive. (Publishers Weekly)
One of the nations rock-star-popular young pastors, Rob Bell, has stuck a pitchfork in how Christians talk about damnation. (USA Today)
It isnt easy to develop a biblical imagination that takes in the comprehensive and eternal work of Christ . . . Rob Bell goes a long way in helping us acquire just such an imaginationwithout a trace of soft sentimentality and without compromising an inch of evangelical conviction. (Eugene H. Peterson, Professor Emeritus of Spiritual Theology, Regent College, and author of The Message and The Pastor
Rob Bell is the bestselling author of Love Wins, Velvet Elvis, Sex God, Jesus Wants to Save Christians, Drops Like Stars, and What We Talk About When We Talk About God. An international teacher and speaker, he was profiled in The New Yorker and TIME magazine, which named him one of 2011s hundred most influential people.