Faith After Rupture: Habakkuk and the Struggle to Trust God When the World Stops Making Sense explores what happens to faith when the world fractures--when justice fails, suffering lingers, and God seems silent. Drawing on the prophet Habakkuk, the book follows a journey that begins with protest, moves through confusion, and ends not in easy answers but in a hard-won, resilient trust.
This is not a book that explains suffering away. Instead, it gives readers permission to ask dangerous, honest questions--How long? Why? Where are you, God?--and discovers that such questions are not signs of weak faith but the beginning of a deeper one.
The purpose of the book is to help readers--especially those shaped by loss, moral injury, or disillusionment--recover a form of faith that can endure rupture. Its central claim is simple but demanding: faith after everything falls apart is not the same as faith before--but it can still be real, still be faithful, and still be lived.