Whom He Raised is a deeply honest, spiritually grounded memoir that became a blueprint for transformation. It is the reality of interruption, stillness, and the quiet work of resurrection that continues long after the crisis passes.
This story began without an audience in mind. It was written from a sickbed, while the author lay flat on her broken back after a second freak accident-stripped of urgency, productivity, and performance. There was no agenda. Only a woman who had learned how to survive after loss and hurt, but had not yet learned how to fully live.
From that stillness, Melissa Swonger began to write-not as a teacher, a speaker, or a professional-but simply as herself.
As the story unfolded, something shifted. At the intersection of her personal experience, her faith, and her education, a new perspective emerged. The seminarian and the psychologist were already seated at the table. Then the researcher quietly pulled up a chair-examining the story with care, noticing where patterns repeated, where healing stalled, and where transformation took root. Not only in her own life, but in the lives of those she had walked alongside in seasons of recovery, leadership, and loss.
The memoir unfolds in three movements: The Grave, The Calling, and The Witness. It is not a story about overcoming through grit or striving. It is a story about being changed through kindness, restraint, and patience-first toward oneself, and then toward the world.
Rooted in the Biblical image from John 12:9-"They came to see not only Jesus, but Lazarus, whom He raised from the dead"-this book explores what it means to live as someone who has been raised, yet must now learn how to move differently in a world that refused to pause for grief. How to lead without force. How to heal without urgency. How to create spaces where truth, safety, and transformation can quietly take root.
Related Subjects
Religion Religion & Spirituality Self Help Self-Help Self-Help & Psychology Spirituality