Discover Your Healing and Freedom

To live a full, healthy Christian life you will need healing along the way. Healing from injustices, against abuse, self-hatred, entrenched personal sin, broken relationships, rejection, destroyed trust, lost dreams, depression, loneliness. Sin and wounds can often be tied to even physical pains. Things that hurt us along life’s way can have a profound effect on our body and on our personality, decision making, and on our relationship with God and others.

In ten profound chapters, Peter Horrobin unpacks the Christian healing ministry for us all. In ways that anyone can understand, he explains how getting the foundations right changes everything. And how when we apply the principles in God’s Word, and follow the teaching of Jesus, every single one of us can take huge steps forward in our personal journey of healing. You don’t need to be a theologian to either understand it or receive God’s healing for yourself. An excellent resource for both personal healing and for use in local churches. Ideal for small group use. This is an updated edition of the book that was originally published by Sovereign World Ltd as Discover Healing and Freedom.
“Well balanced, puts personal healing and freedom in the wider context of a true understanding of God, salvation, making Jesus Lord and loving myself.” —Rt. Rev. Graham Dow, formerly Bishop of Carlisle

£9.99   149 pages; paper back cover; Size – 13.8 x 1.2 x 21.6 cm;  ISBN: 978-1068407239

Commendations

"An excellent, concise and practical resource for experiencing the fulness of life Jesus promised . . . interwoven with stories of how this teaching has impacted many . . . a contemporary "toolkit" for the reader to apply to their own lives. I wish I'd had this resource available in my years of leading churches." Rev. John Sainsbury, formerly Lead Pastor of Garstang Free Methodist Church

"Well balanced, puts personal healing and freedom in the wider context of a true understanding of God, salvation, making Jesus Lord and loving myself." Rt.Rev Graham Dow, formerly Bishop of Carlisle.