Jw-org ●

He tucked the bookmark into his pocket. He wasn’t sure if he would ever walk through those gray doors again. But he knew he wasn’t done searching. And perhaps, he thought, that was the most honest prayer he had offered in fourteen months.

“That’s good,” Elias had said. “That’s really good.” jw-org

He remembered the last time clearly. It was a Tuesday night for the midweek meeting. He had sat in the second row from the back, his leather-bound Bible open to the book of Jonah. Brother Vance, an elder with a kind, tired face, had read the paragraph aloud. Something about “fleeing from one’s assignment.” He tucked the bookmark into his pocket

But the answers felt different now, because the questions had changed. It was no longer “Why is there suffering?” It was “What do I do with my own?” And no brochure—no matter how well-designed—had a page for that. And perhaps, he thought, that was the most

Elias held the cardboard rectangle for a long time. He remembered his mother’s hands—dry, cracked knuckles from decades of cleaning other people’s houses. She had never been a public speaker or a pioneer with hundreds of hours. She was just a woman who believed that a resurrection would come, and that she would see her own mother again.

He pressed send.

“Hey Mark. I’m not coming back yet. But I wanted to say I don’t think God hates me. I just don’t know what I believe anymore. If you want to get coffee sometime—not to ‘encourage’ me, just to talk—let me know.”