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Description
Christ does not wait for you to be less broken before drawing near - his gentleness is most present precisely where the breaking has been deepest. There is a version of faith that the weary and the wounded often encounter - one built on strength, perseverance, and the quiet pressure to hold it all together. It is not untrue. But it is incomplete. Because the Christ of the Gospels does not only call the strong to follow him. He actively seeks the bruised reed, the smoldering wick, the sheep that has wandered furthest from the fold. His gentleness is not a minor attribute - it is among the most radical things about him.This book explores the tender, often overlooked gentleness of Christ as a living source of comfort for those who feel too broken, too ashamed, or too far gone for anything grace might offer. It invites readers to look again at the Jesus of the Gospels - not the distant, demanding figure that shame sometimes constructs, but the one who touched the leper no one else would touch, who spoke with extraordinary care to the woman at the well, who wept openly at a friend's grave, and who reserved his harshest words not for the broken but for those who added burdens to them.Drawing from Matthew 11:28-30 - "Come to me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest" - and the broader witness of scripture, these pages explore what it means to receive Christ's gentleness rather than simply admire it. That his yoke is described as easy not because the life of faith requires nothing, but because it is carried in the company of One who is, by his own testimony, gentle and humble in heart. Theology becomes pastoral here: the doctrine of Christ's human compassion is not merely academic - it is the very ground on which the broken are invited to rest. A routine disruptor who overcame chaos in his consulting days, crafting self-help habit systems, business guides for flexible operations, and historical accounts of productivity shifts in wartime economies.



