What Comes from Doubt

What Comes from Doubt

A couple weeks ago, the Church celebrated the feast day of the Apostle Thomas.

One of the first readings for the day reminded us that Thomas was known as “the twin.” Okay. That makes sense–no doubt he had a twin brother (or sister, though I’m taking a wild guess and saying he’d only be known as “the twin” if he were one of identical twins) running around somewhere, though we never hear about him (or her). To be known by that nickname in those days, when you were often differentiated from others with the same first name by whose son you are, that isn’t strange at all.

But it’s not how we remember Thomas, is it? We don’t remember him for being a twin. We don’t remember him for the fact that he took the Gospel to India. We remember him for one thing, by one name:

Doubting

Doubting Thomas

Ever since I learned that Thomas did, in fact, go on to do some amazing missionary work (and is remembered better for that in other parts of the world), I couldn’t help but think we’ve given him a raw deal in our memories. And as I was pondering Thomas recently and reading the other Scriptures we have that mention him, something even more striking stood out to me.

Yes, Thomas doubted. He wasn’t there the first time Jesus appeared to the disciples after His resurrection, and when his friends greeted him upon his return with, “Yo, Thomas! You won’t believe it! Jesus–He’s alive again!” Thomas responded in a very human, very understandable way.

Because why wouldn’t he? If you showed up at a friend’s house a few days after another friend’s funeral and were told, “He’s alive again!” you’d look at that friend like they were nuts. Because people don’t just rise from the dead. You’d probably worry that the grief had made them go a little crazy. You might even wonder (depending on the friend) if they were trying to pull a really bad joke over on you (and this was Peter, so…don’t put it past him).

So yeah. Thomas replied with, “I’ll believe it when I see it. And actually, not just see it–I’m gonna have to touch the nail prints in His hand.” (This is, of course, the Roseanna Paraphrase, LOL.)

Thomas was in a place of logic. I don’t think it was just doubt…it was rather belief in what he KNEW. He KNEW that Jesus had been crucified. He KNEW that He had died. He KNEW that He’d been buried.

What else did He know? He knew that Jesus was the Son of God. By this point, Peter had first declared that, and Jesus had praised him for it, so I think it’s safe to say all the disciples had embraced that declaration.

But here’s the thing–no one knew what that meant. Because there had never been a Son of God like this, fully man but something more, born of a virgin, untouched by sin. Jesus was something, someone new. Until this time, the phrase “Son of God” (or the plural “sons” anyway) had been used before but to talk about righteous people in general. Similarly, Jesus frequently called himself the “Son of Man,” and that phrase, too, had been used for other prophets.

Those previous righteous men, those prophets…they all died. And when they died, they stayed dead. By doubting the resurrection, Thomas wasn’t saying that he no longer believed Jesus had been sent from God, that He was of God, that He was blameless before God. What he was saying was that he expected Jesus to follow the rules of every other righteous, godly man before Him–to die and stay in the grave. To leave them only with a legacy.

Perfectly reasonable.

But then comes the part of the story where Jesus appears again, while Thomas is there.

I love this story. I love it because Jesus knew. He knew exactly what Thomas had said, and while I think we often read His words as a rebuke, there’s something so tender about this. He appears before this friend of His, and I imagine Him looking Thomas straight in the (wide) eyes. He appears, so He’s already met Thomas’s first condition–he can see Him. And then He invites. He holds out His arms, His hands, and says, “Touch me, Thomas. Touch the nail prints. Touch where the spear sliced me.” He’s saying, Do what you have to do to believe this is real, that’s it’s me. That I am indeed that same physical self that you saw crucified the other day.

What love! When I think about this, I’m reminded of when my kids were little. There was one night when Xoe, who was probably five or six at the time, woke up in a fright. She went all through the house, turning on every light she could find. She didn’t cry or call out, she just went searching. She looked for me in the living room. She looked for me in the kitchen. She looked for me in the basement, where we watched TV. In her muddle, it didn’t occur to her that it was the middle of the night and I’d be in bed–she just went looking where she usually found me. And the more she didn’t find me, the more panicked she became.

Eventually, she made her way upstairs to our bedroom. Now, this is the part of the story that makes me both laugh and which I hate. David woke up first, saw a silhouette of someone standing by our bed, and screamed. Which made Xoe scream and take off running. I quickly got up and went after her. She was crying in her bedroom, and the story spilled out, that she’d been looking for me and couldn’t find me.

Now, at this point, she knew where I was. She could see me. But that wasn’t enough for a panicked, frightened little girl. Of course it wasn’t. She needed more than sight. She needed to feel that her mama was there. So I sat in the rocking chair, and I pulled her into my lap, and I held her close. And I’m sure you can guess what I said.

“I’m here, baby. I’m right here.” My arms around her told her this truth more than my words, more than seeing me had done.

Thomas wasn’t a child–but I think we’re all that child, aren’t we? When the One we love best is nowhere to be found–and we’ve all gone through those trials where we can’t sense God clearly–we go looking. Or maybe we hear other peoples’ stories, and that empty place inside says, “It’s not enough to just take your word for it. I need to experience Him myself.”

And that’s exactly where Jesus met him. I love that He didn’t just say, “See? Here I am.” He invited the touch. The same man who had told Mary Magdalene not to embrace Him because He hadn’t yet gone to the Father gave Thomas permission to touch Him.

Then comes another part I love. Just the invitation was enough. Thomas, so far as we see in the passage, didn’t actually reach out to touch the wounds. Instead, I imagine him dropping to his knees, fully recognizing something no one else had given voice to yet in Scripture. He did not just say, “Jesus, Son of God!” No. What did he say?

“My lord and my God!”

Sit with that a minute. Thomas, the one we know as the Doubter, was the FIRST PERSON to identify this crucial part of Jesus. Not just that He was the SON of God, but that HE IS GOD.

From Thomas’s doubt came the greatest proclamation, the greatest insight, the greatest faith. He took a leap no one, not even Peter, had taken before him.

Jesus’s response is that rebuke we know so well: “Do you believe because you’ve seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen, but still believe.”

But…is that really just a rebuke? In part, yes, but fully? I’m reminded of that line from Romans 10:

How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? 15 And how are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”

Yes, blessed are those who believe without seeing…but we can only believe through our senses. In Paul’s words, we still have to HEAR about this miracle. And how do we hear about Him? Because people tell us. They tell us the story.

And this is EXACTLY what Thomas went on to do. He took that good news out into the world so that others could believe without seeing.

So if you’re in a season where you can’t feel Him…can’t hear Him…can’t feel His touch… If ever you’ve doubted, wondered, struggled… If maybe you cling to that knowledge but it feels hollow…

It’s okay. You’re not alone. But know that, just like Thomas, your story doesn’t stop there, and neither does God’s love for you. He will show up, in that locked room. You’ll see Him. But He won’t leave it at that–He’ll invite you into His arms with all the love of the Father. He’ll hold you close, as His beloved child.

I love that doubt is not the end of Thomas’s story. It’s just the beginning. And it’s the very thing that opened his eyes to that most mind-boggling, amazing truth. The thing that let him declare what I pray we all proclaim as we look upon Him someday:

“My lord and my God.”

Word of the Week – Pinpoint

Word of the Week – Pinpoint

The word pinpoint was trending recently on EtymOnline.com, so naturally, I had to click in and see what was so interesting. And what I learned was that the way we use it most often–“to locate precisely”–is actually an aeronautic term dating from 1917.

Before that, pinpoint was a noun only, dating from around 1849, and it meant (gasp) “the head of a pin.” I know, I know. You never would have expected that! 😉 But as the field of aeronautics developed, they borrowed the word to mean “place identified from the air,” presumably because they could put a pin in a map, and it was used to ascertain where the aircraft was positioned. Hence, that verb we know so well today, which was aviator slang back a century ago. Phrases like pinpoint accuracy are from WW2 and was still aviator slang, used for precision bombing.

It’s Release Day! The Spy Keeper of Marseille

It’s Release Day! The Spy Keeper of Marseille

Welcome to the Launch Day Celebration
for The Spy Keeper of Marseille!

Squeeee! It’s release day for this beautiful book, my second World War 2 historical romance!

This story is super special…because it’s based on a true story. I took some liberties, of course, fictionalizing the love story and compressing some things for the sake of a coherent novel–and mashing a bunch of historical figures into just a few characters. You’re welcome. 😉

But this is the story of an unsung heroine who changed the tide of the war. The female head of France’s largest intelligence network, Alliance. I mean, did you even know that a WOMAN was in charge of France’s biggest intelligence group? I didn’t, until I began the research for The Collector of Burned Books, and as soon as I learned about the historic Marie-Madeleine Fourcade, I knew I wanted to tell a version of her story.

My heroine is Zelie Bellarose, a widow, mother of two small children, and not convinced that she’s the “man for the job” when the founder of Alliance hands her the reins and then is arrested. But she steps up, because she wants her kids to grow up in a free France. She uses the gifts God has given her–a sharp mind, a commanding personality, and a beautiful face–to do the job. And when people continually underestimate her? Well, she uses that too.

Then there’s my heart-throb hero, Marcel Laurent. A concert pianist, a POW who returns to Paris in a prisoner exchange…and soon realized his release was arranged so that he could join Alliance as their laision to the arts sector. Because you see, Alliance wasn’t filled with trained spies. They were filled with ordinary people going about their daily lives…but with eyes and ears open. Ordinary people who passed along everything they saw or heard that had to do with the German military. And those in the arts were brushing elbows with them constantly. Marcel is also tagged to conduct a Youth Orchestra, which will allow him to travel freely all over the country…and use their weekly radio transmissions to send coded messages to the Allies.

Music has always spoken to Zelie’s soul…but she’s determined that Marcel won’t. Even if he seems to see in her what no one else does.

Marcel knows that loving Zelie is like chasing a shooting star–he could never catch her, and if he did, he’d be burned. But he can’t stop chasing, can’t stop hoping, can’t stop loving her for the flash of light she is in the darkness.

The music of The Spy Keeper of Marseille

With a professional musicial as a hero, OF COURSE we have lots of music mentioned in the book. In fact, music becomes a bit of a love letter from Marcel to Zelie, part of the language they speak with each other. And you can listen along! The Spy Keeper of Marseille’s playlist is available on Spotify, YouTube, and Apple Music. Click the links below to go straight to the platform of your choice.

What Early Readers Are Saying

September, Goodsreads Reviewer

This book is a great mix of romance and twists and turns you will not expect. It kept me on my seat until the very end!

Kaetrianne R.

The Spy Keeper of Marseille was, once again, a five-star read by Roseanne M. White. Her novels always blow me out of the water as she manages to mix heartfelt faith, interesting characters, spellbinding plots and sweet romance like only her novels can.

Ashli R.

With suspense, rich historical detail, and characters who stay with you long after the final page, this is an outstanding and deeply moving read for fans of Resistance stories and powerful women in history.

Alyssa M.

There is so much redemption and forgiveness and faith woven into these pages. It’s hard to put down with characters that become like friends. It will also change how you think about certain things in the best ways. Add The Spy Keeper of Marseille to your TBR immediately. It’s truly exceptional WWII fiction.

Exciting and romantic! With a strong baseline of little-known history, a sweet melody for Marcel and Zelie’s building love, the rich harmony of Zelie’s personal growth, and jarring notes of danger and betrayal, The Sky Keeper of Marseille thrills. Roseanna M. White has written another stellar World War II novel.

Sarah Sundin

Bestselling, Christy Award-winning author of Mists over the Channel Islands

Rich with tension and tenderness, The Spy Keeper of Marseille captures the quiet ferocity of a woman and mother who lives out the dangerous beauty of doing what’s right–even when it could cost her everythin. Roseanna M. White delivers a story as brave as its heroine, proving that love and courage can change the course of history.

Jaynre Tromp

Bestselling author of Darkness Calls the Tiger

The Spy Keeper of Marseille

In occupied France, a woman becomes a spy for the Resistance and rises to lead the largest intelligence operation in the country in this propulsive new World War II historical novel by bestselling author Roseanna M. White.

Marseille, France, 1941. Zelie Bellerose never fit the mold of an army officer’s wife. She was too passionate in her convictions, too indifferent to societal expectations. After her husband is killed in the war, Zelie focuses on securing a brighter future for her children, hoping to help free her country from the Nazi regime by joining the Resistance. She is soon one of the most trusted operatives in Alliance, and when their leader is imprisoned, she takes command, hiding her identity from all but a few. With enemies closing in, Zelie must earn the trust of her network and prove herself to those who doubt a woman’s place at the helm of France’s largest spy ring.

Marcel Laurent was a renowned concert pianist before joining the French army and being sent to a POW camp. Freed in a prisoner exchange by a wealthy businessman with ties to the Resistance, Marcel agrees to spy for Alliance by conducting a youth orchestra, gathering intelligence from patrons who are loose-lipped Nazi sympathizers. Marcel’s weekly radio broadcasts introducing the orchestra’s performances give him the perfect cover to send coded messages over the airwaves.

As Zelie and Marcel grow closer through their shared love of music, she begins to rely on him. But betrayal from within Alliance puts everything they’ve fought for at risk. When a double agent infiltrates their ranks and the two are captured, their bond faces its greatest test . . . and any misstep could jeopardize not only Alliance but the very outcome of the war.

 

Giveaway

Word of the Week – Spy

Word of the Week – Spy

Tomorrow, I’ll be celebrating the release of The Spy Keeper of Marseille. This is the second book of mine with the word spy in the title (along with Circle of Spies), but would you believe I’ve never featured the word here before?? Gasp! This must be rectified immediately! 😉

Spy has quite a long history in the English language! Both the noun and verb forms date from the mid-1200s, and though we likely got our version as a loan-word from French, most European languages share a very similar word for this, and they all trace back to the oldest Germanic language, from the root word spehan. The German, in turn, traced back to that first indo-european language we appreciate as PIE, and its root of spek-, which meant “to observe.”

Which is, of course, what the word means–to observe, or one who observes, often through concealment. To investigate, to watch carefully. By the mid-1400s, the verb had developed the sense of “to play the spy, conduct surveillance.”

In the noun side of things, the term spymaster dates from 1943 and was the inspiration for “spy keeper” in my novel…we loved that word but decided that my female spymaster wouldn’t want the masculine “master”…but “spymistress” just didn’t do the job, LOL. So we went with “keeper” instead. Unique, and I love it!

The game “I spy” also dates from the 1940s.

Title Reveal!

Title Reveal!

Okay, I’ve never actually done a title reveal before…because usually I just talk about the books I’m writing, and I often just use the title as it ends up.

For my next World War 2 historical romance, which will come out in July of 2027, I’d been calling it The Memory of Freedom. I knew it was likely to change, though. It didn’t quite fit the others I’ve done with Tyndale, and I couldn’t for the life of me come up with something better. 

If you read my newsletters, however, you might remember me talking about it as I was writing. About how I structured this one a little differently, with scenes every few chapters from later in the war, when the heroine is in a concentration camp. In fact, the first chapter begins with her intake at Ravensbruck. So we know from the start where she ends up–and we see both how she got there and what shaped her into the person who becomes a leader, an inspiration, in the camp.

Don’t worry! As always, this book has a happy ending, I promise! 😉 And also as always, this “war book” has very little actual war in it, LOL. My reader friends and I were just talking about this recently.

So here’s the character board I was using for inspiration as I wrote the story–I’d already shared it in a newsletter, but if you haven’t seen it yet…

Amalie is my heroine, and I just LOVE the contrast of those two photos–Amalie chic and soft and happy in Paris when the story begins in 1943. And then Amalie bold and brave and defiant in Ravensbruck in 1944. Same girl, same war. And yet what a change.

Amalie, you see, is a translator. She’s also a spy–gathering intelligence from the German military men she meets through her job with the French Industrialists Syndicate. And what sets her apart is that she has perfect recall. Everything she sees. Everything she hears. Everything she’s ever done is filed away in her mind. My Amalie is based on a real person who did the very things I wrote about, and it’s her adventures I’m telling here through my fictional lens.

Jules, my hero, is also based on a real person. He and Amalie went to university together, fell out of touch, and then ran into each other on a train…where he recruited her into his intelligence work.

The other characters you see pictured here are Yves (pronounced Eve, but a traditional male name in French) and Rosette–also university chums; Trudie, the daughter of a German officer with whom Amalie becomes friends; and Helene, a comtesse whose mansion is a safe house for Jules’s intelligence cell, called the Druids.

My editor and I threw out ALL SORTS of words and images to try to find the perfect title for this one. Here are a few of our suggestions:

  • Call
  • Call Sign
  • Sparrow
  • Remembrance
  • Informant
  • Agent
  • Operative
  • Operation
  • Translator
  • Pact
  • Project
  • Network
  • Target
  • Agency
  • Undercover
  • Bureau
  • Radar
  • Waves
  • Transmission
  • Equation
  • Science
  • Formula
  • League
  • Baltic Islands
  • Enemy Shores

So…are you ready to see what we decided on? I love it! Here it is!

The Translator’s War.

I love the simplicity of it. The to-the-point-ness. And it’s a perfect match to what the story is really about. Amalie was determined to use her skills with language to make a difference in the war. She sought out opportunities to help, refused to accept this was France’s future, and deliberately tossed herself “into the lion’s den,” as the real woman, Jeannie Rousseau, put it. This is one of those stories that it was an honor to tell, and I am so excited to see it come to life over the next year!

I just turned in my cover questionnaire for it, so I’ll have that to show you in a few months. For now…I’m so excited to have the title set and hope you love it just as much as I do!