(4.9/5) This is going to be, I hope, a detailed and helpful review. For the unsuspecting reader, this “book” is really a series of essays, most (but not all) of which are written by Jim Wilson. Additionally, I recommend reading a hardcopy of this book — and buy a new highlighter.
Chapters 1-6 are, in order: How to Be Free from Bitterness, Forgiving Others, Man’s Anger, Fits of Rage, Taking Offense and Bridling the Tongue. These writings themselves are worth the read and demand an outstanding review. These are really the reason I rate this so highly. Jim’s writing on what bitterness is, what it looks like, why and how to find roots of bitterness before they, like tree roots under sidewalks, cause many more stumbling blocks to arise. I’d like a hardcopy just to reference the many key principles in these chapters. Once I reread, I will add them to my review.
Chapters 7-9 are, in order: Introspection, Relationships with Parents, and Saturation Love. These… I’ll have to think about. They did not resonate, but did challenge me. I’m not sure what I think entirely of them but I (currently) have critiques of them all:
1. Introspection is deemed by Jim a worldly and conceited term. And while it certainly can be, I suppose I’m skeptical because of how important “self-awareness” has been in my own life, and to be self-aware one must practice (some kind of) introspection.
2. Relationships with Parents are given by Jim one allowable status, and, I’m not sure how I feel about it. Particularly, he states that parents have authority over their kids in a way that implies no timeframe — that even children become adults ought to submit to the 𝙖𝙪𝙩𝙝𝙤𝙧𝙞𝙩𝙮 of their parents. Albeit no child earns the right to dishonor their parents, this could’ve used a deeper dive into what that truly means and looks like.
3. Saturation Love is certainly an interesting concept and, I think, applies only part of the time. Jim did not put limits on this (that I recall), and I think there must be — or, at least, it must be made very clear that the ways be think we should be loving aren’t always the right or Godly ways to love. In other words Saturation Love works with the right definition of Love, but could be disastrous with the wrong definitions of Love (and we all have those in certain areas).
Chapters 10-13 are, in order: How Does a Woman Become Secure?, The Responsible Man, Letters: Questions and Answers, and The Gospel. These were similarly well-written as chapters 1-6, with chapter 12 (a series of letters between Jim and Vicky) standing out as a remarkably helpful and challenging correspondence for those of us who can’t stop “trying”.
In the end, read this book, take notes, and be challenged. Be free from bitterness.