Cole wrote this book in the aftermath of the sudden death of his 3-year-old son, Cam. The subtitle of the book summarizes it well. Cole lists the Biblical truths that sustained him in the initial shock of his son's death, as he tried to regain some "normalcy" in his life, and over the long haul.
This is good, solid truth-telling. As Cole says in his introduction, all hope flows out of the person of Jesus Christ. As he said to his wife when she gave him the news of his son's death, "Christ is risen from the dead. God is good. This doesn't change that fact."
Here are the twelve truths he discusses: grace, gospel, resurrection, faith, empathy, providence, doubt, presence, sin, joy, service, and heaven. At first blush, you might think some of those would not be comforting, but Cole expertly explains how they are. And he does this not in a dry, academic way, but out of the raw pain of loss of his son and the tender comfort of God's Son.
This paragraph from the Introduction summarizes the message of the book well: "The gospel is not just an evangelistic principle; it is a message that gets you out of bed in the morning. The sovereignty of God is not some debatable proposition; it is the assurance that your child's death is not a meaningless accident. Grace is not simply a word in a hymn; it's the very thing you rely on when you are so bereaved that you cannot imagine living another day. Faith is not just a cliché term for religion; it is the thing that picks you up off the carpet where you have been crying for over an hour."
Whether you have experienced tragedy in your life, or know someone who has, or simply want your hope in God strengthened, I recommend this book.