
“Then one morning my [Sunday school teacher used my mother] as an example of sin for our lesson.… I remember asking my mother, ‘What does hypocrite mean?’ She couldn’t find a way to answer. I started to cry. She set her jaw. That was the last Sunday we went.”Growing up in a small town in New Hampshire, Kate Young Caley attended a strong community church where everyone was treated like family, memb...
Paperback: 157 pages
Publisher: Shaw Books (December 16, 2003)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0877880735
ISBN-13: 978-0877880738
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.4 x 8.2 inches
Amazon Rank: 4721294
Format: PDF ePub fb2 TXT fb2 book
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I am relatively well read in religious memoir, and more often than not, I find they follow either one of two paths. The first can be an "Amazing Grace" path where the person has made several serious errors in life and comes to faith, much like John N...
sly helped one another, and all the kids were made to feel special. Then, suddenly, everything changed. Her father was hospitalized for many months and her mother was forced to take a job as a waitress to support the family. But the job required Kate’s mother to serve alcohol, which went against the church’s covenant, and the family, banned from attending services, soon found itself emotionally ostracized from the community.In this compelling memoir, Kate Young Caley recounts the hurt and confusion she felt as a young girl, her subsequent questions concerning the Church, and her thoughtful and determined personal journey back to God. At once the story of a family profoundly transformed by tragedy and an incisive look at the meaning of God’s love, The House Where the Hardest Things Happened beautifully illustrates what it’s like to try and find God when you’ve been told you have no right to Him.