photo from 2022 of Amy Julia, who smiles at the camera and sits at a desk. On the desk, the book To Be Made Well is propped up in front of stacks of books next to a white mug

Two-Year Anniversary of To Be Made Well

Do you want to be made well?

It’s a question that Jesus asks, but it’s also a question we can ask ourselves. Whether we are talking about our bodies, our political system, our relationships, our marriages, or our emotional lives—do we want things to change? And if we do want that, how does it happen?

I wrote To Be Made Well to offer thoughts on how to answer that question by looking at Jesus as a healer of persons and of communities. Today is the two-year anniversary of this book, and I am so grateful that it continues to be a book that people read and engage with. 

Amy Nicholson reviewed To Be Made Well for Today’s American Catholic recently. She wrote,

“The subtitle of To Be Made Well is An Invitation to Wholeness, Healing, and Hope. I found this slim volume just that. Through the exploration of biblical stories and references to numerous other resources, Becker invites the reader to discover ways to restore wholeness and find healing in body and spirit. She also invites us to share a vision of hope for our society.” 

I hope and pray that this book continues to be an invitation to many, to wholeness, healing, and hope.

photo from 2022 of Amy Julia, who smiles at the camera and sits at a desk. On the desk, the book To Be Made Well is propped up in front of stacks of books next to a white mug
2022

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