This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. S. Jeyran Main will be awarding a $10 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.
God’s Surprising Way: The Path to Lasting Joy, Healing, and Love guides readers into the upside-down kingdom of God, where human expectations are consistently overturned. In this transformative journey, the humble are exalted, the last are lifted, and true greatness is found through servanthood, surrender, and sacrificial love. Through Scripture, theological insights, and historical reflections-from Augustine and Luther to Bonhoeffer and Nouwen-readers discover how God’s surprising ways cultivate lasting joy, deep healing, and authentic love.
Each chapter explores a distinct paradox of the gospel, demonstrating how humility, generosity, and obedience can transform relationships, communities, and personal faith. Practical reflections and prompts invite readers to integrate these principles into daily life-choosing forgiveness over resentment, service over recognition, and trust over control.
With accessible scholarship, devotional insight, and concrete application, this book reveals the practical power of God’s reversals. It challenges conventional assumptions about success, power, and happiness, inviting believers to live counterculturally in alignment with Christ’s teachings. God’s Surprising Way is both an invitation and a roadmap: to encounter God’s transformative presence, embody the values of the Kingdom, and experience joy, healing, and love that endure.
Enjoy an Excerpt
Jesus captures this dynamic in the Beatitudes, declaring, “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted” (Matthew 5:4) and “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth” (Matthew 5:5). At first glance, these promises seem upside down: mourning is not usually associated with comfort, and meekness rarely leads to inheritance. Yet Christ reframes human experience by grounding joy, healing, and love in God’s character and purposes. By letting go of pride and self-reliance, believers open themselves to God’s transformative presence (Augustine 1998, 72).
The parables of Jesus illustrate these principles. In the story of the lost sheep, the shepherd rejoices over the one found, highlighting that God’s joy is relational and restorative (Luke 15:4–7). Similarly, the parable of the prodigal son demonstrates that love often precedes merit: the father restores the wayward son, celebrating his return rather than condemning his failings (Luke 15:11–32). These narratives show that God’s approach subverts human expectations, creating spaces where joy, healing, and love coexist with brokenness and humility (Nouwen 1981, 52).
Historical theologians have reflected on this paradox. Augustine notes that “joy is the reflection of God’s eternal delight within the soul, not the applause of men” (Augustine 1998, 72). Bonhoeffer emphasizes that discipleship requires surrender: joy and peace emerge not in controlling life, but in trusting God even amid suffering (Bonhoeffer 1959, 112). Nouwen extends the idea into relational terms: when we embrace vulnerability and minister from our wounds, healing flows both inwardly and outwardly (Nouwen 1981, 52). Together, these voices remind us that the kingdom’s blessings are cultivated in hearts surrendered to God’s reversal of worldly values.
Practically, living this paradox involves embracing small, intentional acts of faithfulness. Choosing to forgive a persistent offense, offering service without recognition, or loving those society deems unworthy cultivates resilient joy, deep healing, and love that endures. Paul exhorts, “Be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love, in honor giving preference to one another” (Romans 12:10). When we act according to God’s upside-down principles, we participate in the tangible expression of the kingdom, where the last are lifted, the humble are exalted, and the surrendered heart is filled with grace (Packer 1973, 215).
The story of Joseph illustrates the paradox of God’s kingdom. Betrayed, imprisoned, and overlooked, Joseph experienced pain and injustice, yet God’s providence turned his suffering into a means of salvation for many (Genesis 50:20; Owen 1677, 121). Similarly, David, overlooked as the youngest son, was raised to kingship according to God’s plan (1 Samuel 16:11–13). In both cases, joy and love were inseparable from humility and trust, while healing emerged through God’s providence.
The paradox of joy, healing, and love challenges human intuition but aligns with divine order. Living these truths requires surrender, humility, and attentiveness to God’s ways. Each act of humility or service becomes a conduit for divine joy, a channel for healing, and an expression of love, reflecting the radical, surprising ways of God’s kingdom in everyday life.
About the Author

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Jeyran Main has spent years immersed in the world of books as an editor and publisher. She is the author of The Radical Realism of Jesus: A Framework for Living in the 21st Century and serves as Editor-in-Chief of Living in the Light of the Cross magazine. Through her platform, HeavenlyHarmonyHub.com, she provides resources that encourage thoughtful engagement with faith. Guided by a passion for seeking truth, Jeyran explores how God’s counterintuitive Kingdom wisdom overturns human expectations and invites readers into a life marked by joy, healing, generosity, and love.

God’s Surprising Way: The Path to Lasting Joy, Healing, and Love guides readers into the upside-down kingdom of God, where human expectations are consistently overturned. In this transformative journey, the humble are exalted, the last are lifted, and true greatness is found through servanthood, surrender, and sacrificial love. Through Scripture, theological insights, and historical reflections-from Augustine and Luther to Bonhoeffer and Nouwen-readers discover how God’s surprising ways cultivate lasting joy, deep healing, and authentic love.










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