Sunday, June 22, 2025

Mildly Sadistic Book Review: A Woman's Journey to the Heart of God

Title: A Woman’s Journey to the Heart of God

Author: Cynthia Heald

Date: 1997

Publisher: Nelson

ISBN: 0-7852-6820-0

Length: 234 pages plus 5 pages of endnotes

Quote: “The Bible is the guidebook to the heart of God.”

First of all let’s note that Heald describes her vocation as a ministry to teach young women. 

Stereotypical men are meant to be turned off by the sentimental language in this book. Women who want Christianity to mean that it’s their duty to be “happy” or “popular” are meant to be seduced by it, although they may be disappointed that that’s not what the book’s about.

As regular readers know, there’s nothing new in me saying that Christians should be careful not to confuse being a Christian with the worldly ideals of “happiness” or “popularity” (that so conspicuously meant so little to Jesus). Christians have much to be happy about and should be good friends to have, but “happiness” and “popularity” are luxuries that aren’t necessarily available to everyone.

If we are healthy we’ll tend to feel cheerful (eupeptic), and if we’re not we may feel anxious, depressed, grumpy, or exhausted—and although distracting ourselves from those feelings can help us work through them, the spiritual life, all by itself, won’t change our physical condition. The feelings will persist. 

If we live in places, or attend churches, or work in offices, where adults re-create the social patterns of middle school social cliques, the mere fact that we’re following Jesus and not the Queen Bee of the ruling clique will make us conspicuously unpopular.

And in fact the way too many church ladies try to seem happy and popular, in order to give others a good impression of their Christian life etc. etc., actually has a repulsive effect on people who may be Christians but shudder at the thought of being like those weird, creepy church ladies.

Or like their male equivalents. A boy I liked at university (who was a Christian) once agreed to go with me to a prayer meeting “as long as they don’t ask me to pray out loud, or hug other guys.” I assured him that this group didn’t do that sort of tacky stuff. So of course that was the night some idjit decided to try doing them...Talk about the Christian Life’s Embarrassing Moments. This is a woman’s review of a woman’s book addressed to women readers, but the problems definitely have their male counterparts. Christian men should write about them.

We need more writing, generally, addressed to Christians who are not going to find fellowship among the evangelical extroverts.

Long ago an extrovert church lady asked me, “How can you see another person, a whole separate child of God, and not want to get to know him or her, not want to claim that person as a friend?”

I said, “Of all the people you’ve claimed as friends in your life...if you get paid on Friday, and on Wednesday you have one loaf of bread left and no money, and one of your friends hasn’t got even a loaf of bread before Friday, how many of your friends would get half of your loaf?”

“Well...well, none of them, actually,” she spluttered.

“The people I want to call friends,” I said, “are the ones who’d get half of my last loaf of bread.”

I was underwhelmed by one of Cynthia Heald’s other books, a strangely mismatched collection of “morning devotional” pieces with a focus on “calm” that struck me as suitable for bedtime reading, but downright unhealthy for mornings.(Maybe living with a hypothyroid patient sensitized me to the dangers of inappropriate clinging to “calm.”)  I was tempted to start burning this one when I read the nauseous opening poem about how “Sorrow...is a carefully chosen tool in [God’s] hand.” 

We need laws about this kind of...of blasphemy. God is not the sort of stupid, abusive parent who thinks we need to inflict pain on children to teach them things. God has enough sense to know that, of the ways people learn things, pain is the least efficient. Rather, God allows us to make choices that have consequences, many of which involve sorrow. It’s important for new Christians to know that the joy of the spiritual life does not remove all future feelings of grief and pain, that some people have in fact become better singers by singing through the pain of arthritis; but I wish churches could agree that people who pretend that (always other people’s) sorrow is going to make them better people, smirk-smirk, need to be made better people, immediately, by the discipline of flagellation. Whack! “Since you like sorrow, Sister Heald, please tell your students how you believe the blood running down your back is making you a better person today!” Whack!

Fortunately there’s not a lot of rubbish about the supposed value of sorrow in this book, although there is some. Most of the book is standard advice about the spiritual life: faith, forgiveness, study, worship, prayer, practicing virtue, choosing the right company, putting God first, witness, acts of charity, arranged in the sequence Heald found new Christians facing each thing. Each chapter draws on the Bible and quotes a few older devotional books. Heald tries to be tactful, often evading any specific or practical details that might embarrass the readers to whom they’d be useful, but occasionally aiming a firm point at herself: “I will never be alone with another man.” “I was in the wrong.” “I have asked for direction, but...”

One nugget of real wisdom appears on page 97. It is customary for Christian writers to repeat the standard advice that everybody needs to go to church. In an ideal world, church meetings would be the place where we all found “wise traveling companions” and were drawn to “that which is lovely and Christlike.” In the real world, I’ve known many Christians who found that “living a radically obedient life,” in the sense of reserving a day for “rest,” prayer, and worship, was incompatible with churchgoing; in fact, for some of us going to church seemed to be “walking with fools.”

People who instantly want to claim everyone as a “friend,” without particularly admiring the so-called “friend,” without having shared any meaningful experience with the person, without feeling any special loyalty to the person, are not offering love and good will to humankind. Their real motive is fear. They are fundamentally very unhappy, probably because their brains aren’t fully developed, and they try to control their inner pain by controlling the people around them. That is what is really going on when they demand attention for themselves. Because of their neediness and lack of respect for others, they are positively dangerous to any younger Christian who might ever mistake the neurotic ideas that spew out of their ever-babbling mouths for a “message from Heaven.” Given half a chance, they’ll indulge their craving to feel “one up” by tearing their “friends” down, and their advice will become more of a “message from Satan.”

In contemporary North American culture, they tend to have learned that they can always attack introverts just because we’re not extroverts, and “if you really had a loving heart...” blah blah blah. Introverts need to be vigilant about this. I’m not sure how much churches can do about it short of flagellation. I don’t know whether flagellation or any other discipline could improve a true extrovert very much, since they have incomplete brains, but just shutting them up might make churchgoing a little less harmful to serious Christians. And getting them out of the churches, where they do not, in the strict sense, belong, might bring serious Christians back in.

Meanwhile, introverts who are serious about following Jesus no doubt need to be careful about association with people who drink and gamble and use bad language, as everyone has heard, but I have found that I need to be even more careful about association with verbal abusers. Like my self-accepting introvert friends, I enjoy health, sanity, and sobriety too much to be seriously tempted by the sins of the flesh. On the other hand some introverts are naturally so hyper-conscientious that we take verbal abusers’ accusations seriously and lose the faith to despair, and others of us are naturally inclined to return every verbal attack that is served to us. Neither of those things draws us nearer to the heart of God. In fact the company of extroverts generally tends to drive me away from God, even if they are bullying someone else, or merely wasting time. Wise choice of friends means that, until I know for sure that people are wise and loyal and particularly congenial to me, the time I spend with them needs to be brief and impersonal. The fewer words, the better. My practice of mercy and charity, toward all the people who are my neighbors (or townsfolk or fellow believers) but are not called to be my close friends, thrives on “conversations” that consist of orders, prices, and thanks.

So what is the nugget that’s worth the price of the book, on page 97? Buy a copy and find out.
There may well be churches in which some introverts feel drawn to “that which is lovely and Christlike.” As a young singer I visited many churches, throughout the Eastern States, and I can’t say I found one; what I remember as being “lovely and Christlike” were rare experiences and seem, upon reflection, to have been limited to songs or windows. If you feel that you really are supported, respected, and affirmed in following Jesus’ example, at a church, by all means join it. If you find a church where “fellowship” is understood entirely as the feeling people get, when kneeling between pews and columns and hearing unseen living voices join a song or prayer from the other sides of those separating devices, that other people you know nothing about are worshipping the same God along with you, even that is a wonderful thing.

Personally, I have had to find my Christian fellowship in the way Heald explains on page 97 of A Woman’s Journey to the Heart of God, with or without the companionship of other Christians who didn’t find Christian fellowship in the organized churches either. And if I’d found an evangelical Christian book that mentioned this idea sooner—at least ten years before this book was published—I would have felt blessed.

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