""Modern theology needs the rediscovery of the category of consolation.
This book is rich of consolations because it takes the cry of lament
seriously."" --Jurgen Moltmann ""A timely, accessible, and valuable
book. The recovery of the biblical traditions of loss and hurt is
intrinsically worth doing, more worth doing in an increasingly
disestablished society."" --Walter Brueggemann, Columbia Theological
Seminary, Emeritus ""This cross-disciplinary collaboration is . . .
poignant and compelling testimony to the personal and communal power of
lament and its importance to the practice of ministry. This book is the
one that I have been waiting for."" --Christie Cozad Neuger, Brite
Divinity School ""Few books in the literature of lament have drawn
together so much material from the biblical, theological, and pastoral
spheres as Rachel's Cry."" --Patrick D. Miller, Princeton Theological
Seminary ""Honesty with God is the doorway to authentic hope and faith.
. . . This is one of the most liberating books I have read in a long
time."" --James Newton Poling, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
""This is the first book to bring scattered discussions together into
one coherent whole . . . with deep Christian insight and conviction,
with vivid examples, and with learning which is as gracefully
communicated as it is broad and deep in its substance. I will be keeping
it near at hand, so as to return to it often."" --Nicholas Wolterstorff,
Yale University ""Rachel's Cry is not only a timely book, it is an
urgently needed resource for people who long for a way to live with
irrational suffering. Unless we recover the prayer of lament, we are in
danger of being trapped in powerlessness, cynicism, and despair.""
--Herbert Anderson, Catholic Theological Union, Emeritus ""I found it
difficult to put this book down. Rachel's Cry convincingly argues that
an authentic and empowering spirituality requires the language of lament
and protest alongside praise and thanksgiving."" --Nancy J. Ramsay,
Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary Kathleen M. Billman is dean
of academic affairs and professor of pastoral theology and counseling at
Lutheran School of Theology in Chicago. Daniel L. Migliore is Charles
Hodge Professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological
Seminary.