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The Pieces Join:

Navigating Faith, Trauma and Recovery
by Beth Keith


Book Launch  28 April 6.30-7.30pm at Sheffield Cathedral 

 

The evening will be a chance to gather, hear a little about the book. There will also be refreshments and an opportunity to chat afterwards. Books will be on sale for £15. 
Evensong starts at 5.30pm if anyone wants to come to that beforehand, there will be a short break before the book launch. 

About the Book 

When trauma tears us apart, can the pieces ever truly come back together? In The Pieces Join, Beth Keith offers a compassionate and courageous exploration of recovery for those wounded by abuse within the Church. While many works highlight the realities of trauma and misconduct, this book turns its gaze toward the slow, sacred process of recovery - of re-joining what has been broken.

Drawing on moving personal accounts, survivor stories, and deep wells of Christian theology, Beth Keith exposes the ways in which Church systems can both harm and heal. She weaves narrative and theological reflection into a tapestry of hope- where atonement and forgiveness are not given as easy answers but as a complex journey through pain. The Pieces Join fills a vital gap in pastoral care literature, offering wisdom and clarity to those navigating the aftermath of spiritual and sexual abuse within Christian contexts. It speaks with insight and tenderness to all who seek to understand trauma within the Church - pastors, chaplains, and survivors alike.

Beth Keith brings the wisdom of a theologian, the heart of a pastor, and the honesty of one who has walked alongside the wounded. This is not a book about patching over the past, but about how faith, when practiced with humility and truth, can help make something new and whole from what was shattered.

The Pieces Join A5 Flyer DIGIT

Reviews

"This is a wise and courageous book. Writing as a practitioner and a theologian, Beth is adept at weaving together theological, psychological, and personal insights in a way that invites others to begin their own work of understanding and healing."
Bishop Joanne Grenfell, former lead Bishop for Safeguarding, Church of England. 

"I have been waiting for this book. Beth Keith has unpacked the devastating impact of abuse and trauma with clarity and compassion. This short book helps us to think about how we can begin to repair the damage. It is a gift to the church, and to every person who has been harmed by the church. I encourage anyone thinking about ministry in the church to read it."
Andrew Graystone, advocate for survivors of church abuse.

"I have had the privilege of working alongside Beth and I have seen how her pastoral heart and her love for people have made such a difference in so many lives. In this powerful book Beth shares how she has seen, and felt, trauma and the misuse of power within the church, and how it has wounded so many people. She brings her wisdom, her faith, and her heart for people into each chapter, and I am sure this important book will make such a difference in the lives of those who have experienced trauma, and those who want to help and support them."
Mark Russell, OBE, Chief Executive of The Children's Society.

"Personal, pastoral, and powerful. Beth Keith writes about trauma with remarkable honesty and openness, drawing on her experience as both priest and scholar to offer homiletic readings of biblical texts that are informed yet accessible. What makes this work particularly compelling is its prophetic stance; it is a challenge issued from within the house, calling Christians to a deeper reckoning with the effects of trauma (for themselves and their communities) and the texts that can guide our response. Keith gives of herself in the book, not just asking of the reader, bringing a vulnerability and authenticity to her engagement with trauma and its aftermath. A profound and deeply human contribution to contemporary theological reflection."
Dr Siobhán Jolley, Lecturer in Christian Studies, University of Manchester. 


"This book is disruptive – in the most positive and welcome sense that word can have. It will challenge readers to be honest with themselves about their theological convictions and invite them to grow in their faith. It has enlarged and enhanced my understanding of sin and grace, of justice and forgiveness, of recovery and reconciliation. I shall never say the Lord’s Prayer or take the Eucharist in the same way again, and for that I am grateful. This beautifully written book is a prophetic reflection on the immense effects of abuse and the call to walk with and care for those who have experienced it."
Revd Dr Casey Strine, Minor Canon Theologian, Sheffield Cathedral.

https://canterburypress.hymnsam.co.uk/books/9781786226013/the-pieces-join 

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