Runion will hopefully find her audience among those tempted to give up on the church, and perhaps some will stay and praise God if her words can help them do that.
I found this book difficult to enjoy for several reasons. First, she cares more about alliteration than careful exegesis, and she is far too eager to use her own life as a roadmap for others. Also, I have a distaste for books that use first person plural (we, us) as if I’m feeling what she’s feeling and she can presume to know my motives. And I don’t trust people who tell me that I am the characters in the Bible. I didn’t keep records, but I recall her telling me that maybe I was a Joseph, a Peter, a Moses, or that people out to hurt me were my Judas, etc.
Mostly, though, I was turned off by her personal examples. She writes a chapter about not quitting, but the chapter’s main content is the story of how she quit a job… but, like, stayed a few extra weeks to make sure she transitioned well. In fact, she had a lot of examples of quitting considering it was a book about staying. She quit her church, even though her dad was the pastor, and she remains confident she could not have grown had she not left. She puts too much emphasis on changing circumstances and not enough on how God can teach us and shape us even in our current circumstances. Perhaps she was trying to highlight that she stayed in the faith even while she moved jobs and churches. However, I’m not going to be able to recommend this book to my friends. I know many people who’ve showed incredible perseverance and faith in God as they have stayed through challenging ministry seasons, and I’d prefer their wisdom about staying over Runion’s any day.
She’s eager and wants to help, and I appreciate that. She just comes off as someone who has spoken about herself far more than she’s listened to others, and this almost reads more like an apologetic for her life’s choices to describe how a life of leaving for greener pastures was ACTUALLY a form of staying.