Nouveauté
Jesus, Don’t Let Me Cuss in Church: Honest Faith for People Who Still Screw Up
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8232978280
- EAN9798232978280
- Date de parution31/10/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurHamza elmir
Résumé
Church taught many of us how to perform; life taught us how to fall apart. This book is for the ones still doing both. In Jesus, Don't Let Me Cuss in Church, Dustin Gross trades polished answers for confession, humor, and hard-won hope. From the "holiest place" in church-the coffee bar-to the therapist's office and the front seat where the prayers sound like rants, he argues that real faith isn't a pageant.
It's the stubborn practice of showing up with your mess and trusting that grace will, somehow, outlast it. With a voice that's irreverent but never careless, pastoral but never preachy, Gross tells the truth about doubt, exhaustion, church hurt, and the persistent shame that says you should have figured it out by now. He points to a Jesus who isn't impressed by our performance and isn't scared of our honesty.
If you've ever muttered the wrong word in the right place, nearly walked out before the second hymn, or wondered whether God is tired of you yet, this book will feel like a hand on your shoulder and a seat saved beside you. This isn't a manual for spiritual success. It's a lifeline for honest people. Come as you are. Grace is already here.
It's the stubborn practice of showing up with your mess and trusting that grace will, somehow, outlast it. With a voice that's irreverent but never careless, pastoral but never preachy, Gross tells the truth about doubt, exhaustion, church hurt, and the persistent shame that says you should have figured it out by now. He points to a Jesus who isn't impressed by our performance and isn't scared of our honesty.
If you've ever muttered the wrong word in the right place, nearly walked out before the second hymn, or wondered whether God is tired of you yet, this book will feel like a hand on your shoulder and a seat saved beside you. This isn't a manual for spiritual success. It's a lifeline for honest people. Come as you are. Grace is already here.
Church taught many of us how to perform; life taught us how to fall apart. This book is for the ones still doing both. In Jesus, Don't Let Me Cuss in Church, Dustin Gross trades polished answers for confession, humor, and hard-won hope. From the "holiest place" in church-the coffee bar-to the therapist's office and the front seat where the prayers sound like rants, he argues that real faith isn't a pageant.
It's the stubborn practice of showing up with your mess and trusting that grace will, somehow, outlast it. With a voice that's irreverent but never careless, pastoral but never preachy, Gross tells the truth about doubt, exhaustion, church hurt, and the persistent shame that says you should have figured it out by now. He points to a Jesus who isn't impressed by our performance and isn't scared of our honesty.
If you've ever muttered the wrong word in the right place, nearly walked out before the second hymn, or wondered whether God is tired of you yet, this book will feel like a hand on your shoulder and a seat saved beside you. This isn't a manual for spiritual success. It's a lifeline for honest people. Come as you are. Grace is already here.
It's the stubborn practice of showing up with your mess and trusting that grace will, somehow, outlast it. With a voice that's irreverent but never careless, pastoral but never preachy, Gross tells the truth about doubt, exhaustion, church hurt, and the persistent shame that says you should have figured it out by now. He points to a Jesus who isn't impressed by our performance and isn't scared of our honesty.
If you've ever muttered the wrong word in the right place, nearly walked out before the second hymn, or wondered whether God is tired of you yet, this book will feel like a hand on your shoulder and a seat saved beside you. This isn't a manual for spiritual success. It's a lifeline for honest people. Come as you are. Grace is already here.






















