Noel Forlini Burt (PhD, Drew University) teaches and lectures widely in the intersection of biblical studies and spiritual formation. She is the author of Hope in the Wilderness: Spiritual Reflections for When God Feels Far Away and Encounters in the Dark: Identity Formation in the Jacob Story. She is certified as a spiritual director (Truett Seminary) and in spiritual formation (Upper Room Academy for Spiritual Formation).
""I loved this book. I often talk to people who ask, 'Why did this happen to me?' or 'Why did God let that happen?' Noel Forlini Burt beautifully guides us through the lives of biblical figures who face wilderness experiences and similar questions. With wisdom, scholarship, an understanding of attachment patterns, and narratives of 'not enough,' the author opens pathways that slowly lead to a healing trust in the God who sees you!"" -- Adele Ahlberg Calhoun, author of The Spiritual Disciplines Handbook, Invitations from God, and Spiritual Rhythms for the Enneagram ""Noel Forlini Burt takes us on a spiritually rich journey informed by her expertise in both the Old Testament and spiritual formation. She has drunk deeply from the Scriptures themselves as well as from the insights of the desert fathers and mothers and others who have written profoundly about wilderness experiences and their important role in our spiritual formation. Her discussion of attachment theory and our need for attachment to God enriches the rest. This biblically and spiritually rich book is a must-read for all who walk in the desert or are called to minister to those in the wilderness."" -- Roy E. Ciampa, professor emeritus at Samford University ""In this beautifully written book, Noel Forlini Burt engages in conversation with a wide range of voices, both ancient and modern, as she invites the reader into a rich and compelling reflection on Scripture. Her work, however, is not simply a rehearsal of a biblical theme. More profoundly, it is an invitation to the wilderness, the 'place where we learn that God is the one before whom we are all laid bare.' In this moment when Christianity has been so culturally co-opted, we need a book that calls us back to the places of deep faithful formation. This is that book."" -- W. Dennis Tucker, Jr., professor of Christian scriptures at Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary