“But as for me, the nearness of God is my good.”

— Psalm 73:28 (NASB)


THE NEARNESS

Letters on the Treasure of God’s Company in an Ordinary Life

Jarred Fenlason

The Nearness book cover — click to enlarge The Nearness back cover — click to enlarge
Read the Opening Letter Download Free Study Guide

You are tired in a way sleep doesn’t reach.

Not the tiredness of doing too much, exactly, but of being too much — too visible and not truly seen, always reachable, always presented. Somewhere along the way, life became a stage whose lights never go all the way down. And the part of you that longs to be simply known has learned to keep quiet. But it has not died. It aches at odd hours.

Underneath it, quieter than everything and patient as roots, there is a leaning. A tilt of the soul toward Someone. What you have wanted, under everything you have wanted, is God. Not information about Him. Not a technique for reaching Him. Him.

And here is the news these letters carry, almost too kind to be believed: that wanting did not begin with you. Long before you leaned toward Him, He leaned toward you.

He is nearer than you dared believe, and gladder to have you than you dared hope.

SOUGHT FIRST

The old Scripture says His eyes run to and fro throughout the whole earth — searching eyes, a Father’s eyes, moving through the crowd for a face He loves. They were never scanning past you toward someone more impressive. You were never auditioning. You were being sought.

The hunger you thought was your own idea is the echo of His. He wanted first. And this changes the shape of everything, because it means the life you were made for is not somewhere ahead of you, waiting to be earned. It is beside you, waiting to be entered.

NOT A LADDER, BUT A DOOR

The Christian life is not a life lived for God with communion as its reward. Being with Him — wanted, welcomed, near — is the life. It is not earned but entered.

There is no ladder. Whatever you have been told, God is not waiting at the top of your best efforts to see whether you make it. The door was opened from His side, brought near by the blood of Christ, so there is nothing left to earn; there is only Someone to be with. He is already in the room.

THE GODWARD TURN

The whole practice of this book is small enough to fit in a coat pocket. He is already near; you do not have to get His attention. So through the day, you turn — not your body, your attention — toward Him. Some turns last two seconds at a red light; some are a long sit before the house wakes.

You will drift; everyone drifts. You come back without accusation or self-contempt, because the returning is the practice. A cook found it among his pots and pans. A cupbearer found it in a half-second before a throne. And a Bible teacher kept an empty chair by the kitchen stove, because the Friend who met him there sometimes came at half past two in the morning.

FOR THE THIRSTY

The Nearness is fourteen letters written by a father to his daughter — and, in hope, to you: the thirsty one, the tired one, the one half sure that a warm, daily companionship with God is reserved for other people. People with quieter houses. More discipline. More time.

These letters say otherwise. From a burned-out prophet fed under a broom tree to a failed disciple restored over breakfast by a charcoal fire, they trace one steady claim: the nearness of God is not a reward for the spiritually gifted. It is a gift already given in Christ — waiting in the car line, over the stove, in the quiet chair before the house wakes.

If you have loved Brother Lawrence or Tozer, these letters walk the same road — at your own kitchen sink.

THE JOURNEY WITHIN

The Nearness unfolds across fourteen letters and 142 pages — moving from the ache that starts it all, through the searching eyes and the Father’s face, into the practice of the Turn, and finally to the fire that restores, the winter that waits, and the circle of the friends of God.

  • Letter 1Something Nearer Than This
  • Letter 2The Searching Eyes
  • Letter 3The Father You Didn’t Know You Had
  • Letter 4The Nearness
  • Letter 5The Treasure in the Field
  • Letter 6What Cannot Be Lost
  • Letter 7The Godward Turn
  • Letter 8A Time and a Chair
  • Letter 9Come Away
  • Letter 10Stay With Us
  • Letter 11The Glad Cost
  • Letter 12The Charcoal Fire
  • Letter 13The Winter Tree
  • Letter 14The Circle of the Friends of God

The letters open with an invitation and close where they began — in a kitchen, beside a chair that has always been yours.

Read the Opening Letter

THE ONE BREATH

The whole practice of the book, sayable in a single breath — taught three times across the letters and left whole on the closing page, to carry with you into an ordinary day.

He is already near; you do not have to get His attention. So through the day, turn — not your body, your attention — toward Him. Some turns last two seconds at a red light; some are a long sit before the house wakes. Carry a word of His in your pocket to turn with. Anchor a few turnings by design — a time, a chair — and let the rest fly free. You will drift; everyone drifts. Come back without accusation or self-contempt, because the returning is the practice. And when you rise, go with Him into the next thing.

FREE COMPANION RESOURCE

Designed for an 8-week small group or church study, the Discussion Guide walks through the fourteen letters with reflection questions and simple practices — a time, a chair, a word to carry — for learning to live near, together.

Download the Study Guide

KEY CONCEPTS

A few of the “words to keep” the letters leave you with — the vocabulary of a life lived near.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jarred Fenlason

Jarred Fenlason is the founder of Encounter Press and the author of The Interval, The Trembling Beloved, and The Man Who Knew God, the biography of Walter Beuttler — the Bible teacher whose kitchen chair you meet in these letters.

His translations and editions of the contemplative classics include Hidden in God, The Spiritual Flower Garden, The Mystic of Caen, and Intra Muros — several of the friends of God in these letters are voices he has spent years living with on the editor’s side of the desk. He holds a Doctor of Ministry from United Theological Seminary.

These letters began at his own kitchen table, for his own daughter. He keeps a time and a chair in Moravian Falls, North Carolina, where he lives with his wife, Rochelle.

QUESTIONS READERS ASK

What is The Nearness about?
The Nearness is a book of fourteen letters by Jarred Fenlason on the treasure of God’s company in an ordinary life. It holds one steady claim: the nearness of God is not earned by the spiritually gifted but is a gift already given in Christ — available in the middle of a distracted, ordinary day, and entered through a small practice the book calls the Godward Turn.
Who is it for?
It is written for the thirsty and the tired — those who sense that a warm, daily companionship with God is reserved for other people with quieter houses, more discipline, or more time. If you have loved Brother Lawrence’s The Practice of the Presence of God or A. W. Tozer, these letters walk the same road, at your own kitchen sink.
Is there a free study guide?
Yes. A free companion Discussion Guide, designed for an 8-week small group or church study, is available to download here. It walks through the fourteen letters with reflection questions and simple practices.
Who wrote it?
Jarred Fenlason, D.Min., founder of Encounter Press and author of The Interval, The Trembling Beloved, and The Man Who Knew God. He holds a Doctor of Ministry from United Theological Seminary and writes on the presence of God and the contemplative tradition. The letters began at his own kitchen table, for his own daughter.

GET YOUR COPY

142 pages · Published 2026 · Encounter Press

Paperback
$12.99
Coming soon
Hardcover
$22.99
Coming soon
Kindle eBook
$7.99
Coming soon

Available soon on Amazon. In the meantime, download the free study guide.