1. 50 Days of Hope: Daily Inspiration for Your Journey Through Cancer
    Lynn Eib
    Tyndale House / 2012 / Imitation Leather
    Our Price$11.99 Retail Price$14.99 Save 20% ($3.00)
    5 out of 5 stars for 50 Days of Hope: Daily Inspiration for Your Journey Through Cancer. View reviews of this product. 8 Reviews
    Availability: In Stock
    Stock No: WW364491
4.7 Stars Out Of 5
4.7 out of 5
(6)
(2)
(0)
(0)
(0)
Quality:
4.6 out Of 5
(4.6 out of 5)
Value:
4.7 out Of 5
(4.7 out of 5)
Meets Expectations:
4.7 out Of 5
(4.7 out of 5)
100%
of customers would recommend this product to a friend.
SORT BY:
SEE:
Displaying items 1-5 of 8
Page 1 of 2
  1. CFCRuss
    5 Stars Out Of 5
    Very Inspirational
    February 1, 2023
    CFCRuss
    Quality: 5
    Value: 5
    Meets Expectations: 5
    We have read most of Lynn Eib's books. They have provided comfort to us through my wife's cancer journey, and these were bought to give to friends. I highly recommend using her work for anyone going through the ups, downs, and sideways of cancer.
  2. CFCRuss
    5 Stars Out Of 5
    This is a wonderful encouragement
    June 2, 2020
    CFCRuss
    Quality: 4
    Value: 5
    Meets Expectations: 5
    We have been dealing with cancer for most of a year now and all 3 of Lynn's books have been wonderfully uplifting for both of us (survivor and caregiver). We have recommended them to others already and will continue to do so.
  3. lynnePA
    5 Stars Out Of 5
    50 Days of Hope by Lynn Eib
    August 5, 2015
    lynnePA
    Quality: 5
    Value: 5
    Meets Expectations: 5
    A close friend gave me this book shortly after I was diagnosed with breast cancer. It was exceedingly helpful. Ms. Eib put to words many of the feeling that I was experiencing. Since I read this book, I have given it out to many friends who are walking with cancer, and it has helped them. It helped to know that the feelings I was experiencing were normal, and helped put things in perspective. I highly recommend this book.
  4. Mazzou
    St. Louis, MO
    Age: 18-24
    Gender: female
    4 Stars Out Of 5
    Encouraging little book
    July 23, 2012
    Mazzou
    St. Louis, MO
    Age: 18-24
    Gender: female
    Quality: 3
    Value: 3
    Meets Expectations: 4
    50 Days of Hope by Lynn Eib; 237 pages

    A small, soft-covered green diary-like volume, this book offers daily words of hope for wisdom and strength a full 50 days!

    Although the words contained would brighten any reader's life, it is specifically designed to meet the needs of cancer ''victims''.

    I must admit, by God's grace, I have not had the shadow of cancer over myself or my immediate family but, as I'm sure is the case with most people, I know several dear friends who have had cancer. I found it difficult reading this book, since I'd rather ignore the world of cancer altogether. But in conclusion, I'm glad I did read it....it helps me better understand the struggle going on mentally with cancer patients.

    Good quotes from the book:

    ''....The eagle doesn't escape the storm but uses it to lift himself higher. He rises on the winds that bring the storm. God has allowed a storm of cancer in your life, and He will give you His strength to rise above it until He ultimately calms it.'' (pg. 55)

    ''Waiting goes against our very nature but draws us closer to the Lord better than just about anything else.'' (pg. 61)

    ''Waiting reminds us we aren't God, that's an invaluable lesson...every time we get impatient, annoyed, frustrated with waiting, we demonstrate our desire to be in charge. When we wait for others, it puts us at their mercy. They are controlling our schedule, our pace of life, and our agenda. Things are out of our hands....most of us don't want to be at the mercy of someone or something else. But the Bible says we are at God's mercy for every breath we take.

    ''In Him we live and move and exist'' (Acts 17:28)'' (pg. 61)

    In pages 45-46 I don't quite agree with the statements that ''life is not fair, but God is''....

    I explain: It's very simple: as sinners, we deserve all the pain of this world, even as Christians, because we live in a sin-cursed world! And suffering in this world should only make us long for the perfection of heaven! As for fairness...''what's not fair'' is that we all don't have cancer!

    It's not fair that God should give you the grace to live in His beautiful world....and to Christians: it is not fair that He should grant you the gift of salvation!

    I hope you understand me....we are such sinful creatures. All we deserve is hell. But showed AMAZING grace by saving many, and giving them the promise of a glorious eternity with Him! As for the others, God really does show a lot of common grace towards them by allowing them to live here for a season, enjoying the blessings around.
  5. tristinedenise
    Kenosha, WI
    Age: 35-44
    Gender: female
    5 Stars Out Of 5
    Hope and Inspiration
    July 10, 2012
    tristinedenise
    Kenosha, WI
    Age: 35-44
    Gender: female
    Quality: 5
    Value: 5
    Meets Expectations: 4
    A little too late.

    That's how I felt when I started reading, 50 Day of Hope, by Lynn Eib, for review.

    My mother had already died of recurring breast cancer when I started reviewing this book. I had hoped it would give me some kind of comfort, but instead, all it did was make me wish I had the book years earlier to give her some kind of reassurance and hope during her struggle.

    This beautiful pocket size, leather-like soft cover book by Lynn Eib, shares amazing stories of struggles, sorrows, inspiration and hopeful stories of cancer patients and survivors, including Eib, who survived colon cancer. These stories also include scriptures, prayers and profound insight into God's character during extreme difficult times such as cancer.

    I'm finding that more and more people are having to face the brutal reality of cancer in their lives, either their own, or a loved one. As a matter of fact, two days before my mother died, one of my friends mother passed away from brain cancer. It's becoming all too common these days. Who can we turn to in situations like this? Who can we trust? One of my favorite quotes from Eib is simply put:

    "Don't confuse life with God." (pg. 45)

    Eib was explaining how she felt when she received the news about her own cancer, and how she just didn't feel it was "fair."

    "If God really loved me so much, why did He allow an unfair thing like cancer to strike my life?"

    I know my mother felt that way, too. She felt her cancer was punishment for a whole life of wrongdoings. Eib encourages us:

    "Go ahead and say it: It's not fair that I have cancer. It's not fair that my loved one has cancer...Life is not fair, but God is not life." (pg. 26, Day 11)

    I remember how this struck me when I first read it (and even now rereading it again and writing it for you). I've always reassured my readers to be real and raw with God, to never hold back in our pain and suffering and let God know how we feel. But I love this statement. God is not life. He may be our life, but He is not this life. And she ended that particular day beautifully with this prayer:

    "Please help me to accept that life has been unfair to us but still to believe that You will be faithful to us. Please help me to develop a relationship with You apart from my circumstances and to learn to trust You despite the unfairness of life."

    This book isn't just for cancer patients, it is also intended to help loved ones who are enduring the heartache of watching someone suffer through chemo and radiation treatments. It is uplifting, heartfelt, and inspirational. It offers honest insight into how to continue having a close relationship with God while going through something as painful as cancer.

    Eib's daily doses of hope aren't cheesy, positive-thinking, new agey, hippie chants. She also won't ask you not to acknowledge your pain and how you feel about being the one suffering with cancer and all it entails. She allows you to feel what you feel and lets you know it's okay to feel that way, while providing real ways to approach God through it all.

    "Don't worry, my friend, if today your faith is not very big. Just be sure to put it all in a very big God." (pg. 168)

    I only wish I would have had an opportunity to have shared this with my mother. It wouldn't have cured her by any means, but maybe it would have relieved some of her worries and concerns. Maybe it would have comforted her during those moments when cancer felt like it defined and owned her.

    "...We also beat [cancer] moment by moment as we allow God, not cancer, to control our thoughts. We beat it hour by hour as we remember that God's power within us is greater than the cancer. And we beat it day by day as we trust in God's strength and not in cancer's weakness." (pg. 159, Anyone Can Beat Cancer chapter)

    I highly recommend sharing this book with anyone you may know who is riding the emotional roller coaster of cancer. I am not reluctant to say that it truly will offer days of hope ahead.

    I received this book for free from the Tyndale House Publisher book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255 "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."
Displaying items 1-5 of 8
Page 1 of 2