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Monday, January 12, 2015

Set In Stone


With the way life can change so suddenly it seems plausible that those who have lived a while could lose their idealistic view of life, becoming cynical or even fearful of the future.

For most of my life I've taken literally the words of Jesus when he said;

 John 14:13-14
"Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son.  If you ask me anything in my name, I will do it."

My faith in the name and power of Jesus has carried me through many things that otherwise could have destroyed me.  When I first believed, when faced with something difficult, it came naturally to ask Him to intervene and I wouldn't even hesitate.  The peace and comfort and trust I had in Jesus was immeasurable.  Then someone claiming to speak for God "re-instructed" me about His nature and willingness to make good on that promise in John 14.  I was never a bible scholar in my youth or my teens.  So, when this person bestowed upon me his ideas regarding John 14:13-14, I honestly didn't know what to think.  The end result of this person's "wisdom" was to plant the tiniest seed of doubt within my heart.  But still, my lifetime habit of asking with faith continued unhindered and unquestioned well into my late twenties.

It wasn't until I was married and became pregnant with my first child that the seed of doubt that was planted in my heart so long before was given opportunity to grow...and it grew quickly.  After a very painful and trying pregnancy, my first little one died within my womb.  The pain of never being able to hold that little one was almost unbearable at times.  There were hurdles in my grief that I had never known I would have to endure.  Things that seem like they should be simple enough were not simple at all.  For instance, packing away baby items and finding a "new home" for them was devastating.  Paying remaining hospital bills and things like that were tormenting reminders of what had happened.

Losing a child in miscarriage is a very difficult thing, especially in a society that devalues the life of an unborn child.  It's almost as if people don't really consider it a death at all, but rather, categorize the loss as one of a lesser pain when compared to the death of a "real" child someone had the privilege to hold.  The comments people would make, and their pathetic attempts to offer their  condolences was astounding.  Two of the worst comments were, "Well, you baptized the baby, right?" (as if you don't baptize your baby it would go to Hell) and, "Oh well, you can always have another one" (as if this one didn't count).  These and many other comments added to my pain in ways that are very hard to explain, and even more difficult to understand unless, of course, you've experienced this kind of loss.  But the most painful and unbelievably dismissive comment came from my ER doctor who dismissed our tears and callously tried to tell us that what we had just endured was not the death or loss of a baby.  The pathologist, however, was a Christian man who lovingly affirmed the humanity and worth of the life that we mourned.  That meant a great deal to us.                

Even though it seemed like an eternity before I could conceive again (which brought about a whole different kind of grief), Paul and I were blessed with two beautiful girls.  But then the unthinkable happened again.  God allowed me to lose my fourth baby too.  That loss became the cathartic situation that brought to the surface the doubt in my heart that God would make good on His promise.  My question at the time was, "How could God allow me to grieve so deeply again?".  It was as though I had dealt with my first loss by subconsciously considering it my "payment of dues"...that life is pain and that we all must suffer in some way or another, as if it was my moment of extreme pain and loss that God was going to allow me to go through in order for me to "really know" what it was like to "need" Him and trust Him.  And I did desperately need Him, no doubt about it.  But, with the loss of our fourth little one, my faith in the words of Jesus were really shaken.  Maybe that is too plain of a way to put it.  Maybe it was more that my faith in my understanding of His words was shaken.  Either way, I no longer believed that I could ask for anything and have it given.  Because I had asked for the life of my babies and their deaths were evidence to the contrary.

God had tested the limits of my faith and it was found severely lacking.  I cried harder and became angrier than I did with the loss of my first baby.  Not because I valued one child over the other, but because of my failed expectations.  But here I was, spiraling with grief again, and there was hardly a soul who seemed to be able to identify with me and give a comforting word.  And the most devastating loss was my faith in God's goodness and intentions toward me.  My idealism was finally shattered, and it seemed unredeemable.

Through the years, and a total of five miscarriages and seven live births, I have come to the Only Place of Rest.  In my unknowing, in my searching, in my pain and my confusion God has held me.  He has seen me through the doubt and brought me to a place of understanding.  Even when I do not understand what He is doing in allowing pain, I can trust that it is His goodness that is supreme.  It is superior to my own desire to love and hold my babies.  That means I had to realize that even my motherly love was inferior to God's will.  That was a very big and humbling pill to swallow.  I mean, what is more pure and powerful than a mother's love?  I'm here to tell you that it is God's Love.  It is unmovable, unshakeable, unwavering, never failing, unending, unquestionable, un-reproachable and limitless.  Jesus is that Love.  And it is in the name of Love that God hears and speaks to His children.      

In His mercy, God allowed me to see that my faith, though shaken by the words of a man, is not rooted in something movable and fallible.  My faith is set in the stone of God's eternal and True Love.  His word and His integrity are not subject to man's qualifications and certainly not man's limitations.

Somewhere in between the pain of my grief and the promise He gave in John 14, is a truth that harmonizes the two.  What I know is that Mercy is central to my pleas.  And though I ask for my babies, maybe Mercy was the answer that my heart was really seeking.  Maybe He took my babies early to spare them or Paul and I a hardship that was more than we could bear.  Once I came back to God and simple childlike trust in His goodness, asking in the name of Jesus was no longer a stumbling block.   

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

His Gift

Christmas is here and I've invested good time in preparing for the holiday celebration with cooking, cleaning, setting tables and wrapping gifts .  I'm enjoying the blessings God has given, but my mind has been fixed on something better than the temporal things.  My mind is set on The Gift, Jesus Christ.    

Today as I wrapped things I made and purchased, my heart was filled with joy because of the gift that God gave to all of us even before He founded the world.  Sure, we know that it was approximately two-thousand years ago that Christ actually came to that stable, but it was long before that that He'd determined to come, and it was just a matter of His timing before He actually arrived.  What an amazingly expensive gift He gave!   Truly it was the most costly and elaborate gift ever given.  The Lord of All gave up His heavenly abode and condescended to earth making Himself a lowly babe of plain birth.  And this was determined to be before the foundations of the world!  He knowingly made you and I and all that is, with the  complete understanding that His love for us would demand this very costly sacrifice.  Isn't that astounding?  I'm am just in awe! 

I've seen how easily the hearts of mankind are drawn to inferior things.  As humans created with a greater purpose, people long for the deepest Love, yet they often settle for the cheapest of thrills.   From things like a short substance high, a cheap sexual thrill, an illusive moment of revenge, romance, victory or conquest, maybe it's as simple as that good feeling of personal accomplishment.  No matter what it is, it will never satisfy.  This is because you and I were created for an entirely different purpose than personal glorification.  We were created to glorify God alone.  And our hearts long for what can only be found in the worship of Jesus Christ.  

When we get our eyes fixed on temporal things, we are bound over to failed expectations and disappointment.  Often confusion and depression can set in when the things we reach for so passionately are ripped from our grasp.  

Hebrews 3:1 
 "Therefore, holy brothers and sisters, who share in the heavenly calling, fix your thoughts on Jesus, whom we acknowledge as our apostle and high priest."  

The things of the world, including the "wisdom" it has to offer are worthless things.  We are encouraged then, to fix our eyes on Jesus, who is the greatest gift ever given.   

As you celebrate Christmas this year let the worldly things diminish in your affections.  Enjoy the gifts God has given you, but do not let those gifts or their giving usurp the rightful place of exaltation that Jesus deserves in your heart.  If you fix your eyes on Jesus, the blessings God gives will have their proper place, and the passions that try to war against you will be powerless to overcome you.   

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

In the "No"

Currently my life is filled with peace and joy. Nearly every day I wake up to a hand massage from my loving husband, a steamy cup of coffee and quiet-time for bible reading while my very well behaved children get ready for class and begin their studies. These are just a few of the luxuries that I enjoy. Some call me blessed. Others call me spoiled. I call me extremely grateful.

I have lived long enough to become acquainted with sorrow as well as joy. Through all of life, God has been with me. It may be easy for a man who has not studied God's word thoroughly to conclude that his good life is evidence of God's favor and approval, and that a man's ill fate in life is evidence of God's disapproval. Much of the world believes in this sort of "Karma". And while I do believe God when He says that we reap what we sow, I do not believe it's quite like "Karma". I believe what I've witnessed in both scripture and real life, that while I live and praise God both "good" things and "bad" things may come just like in the life of Job.

I know that God holds my life in His hands and that even in times of suffering and hardship, He may be bringing eternal blessing to my soul. Though the enemy may intend my suffering for evil, God intends it for good. Anyone who reads the book of Job (specifically chapter 33) should come away with the knowledge that affliction readies the heart for surrender. Though a man may feel righteous and just, God's ways are so much higher than our own, that it is nothing for Him to humble us and impart wisdom not only through dreams and visions, but also through suffering in order to "turn a man aside from his conduct" or "keep man from pride".

Job 33:29
"Behold, God does all these oftentimes with men, to bring back his soul from the pit, that he may be enlightened with the light of life."

The book of Job resonates strongly with me. It isn't the typical scenario of a "love story", but to me, it is one of the greatest love stories of all time. In it we see a righteous man afflicted by God's permissive will and Satan's malicious hand. The majority of Job's friends preach at him the sort of "Karma" I mentioned earlier, insisting that there must be some intentional and hidden sin in his life that warranted God's afflicting hand upon him. But throughout the book, Job goes toe to toe with his accusers maintaining his heart of integrity. It isn't until Elihu speaks, then God, that the point of Job's suffering is made clear. And in the end, both Job and his friends are left humbled before God for His righteousness. And God is shown to be supremely merciful and loving. This is as it should be in our own lives.

Like Job, being steadfast in our trust of God brings us the same peace that caused Job to refrain from cursing Him as his foolish wife suggested. Job repented in sack cloth and ashes, calling out to God yet even though he was given no answer for several days and lost everything dear to him, he still praised God. It is easy to exclaim with joy when our prayers are answered with the obvious "yes", but Job demonstrated that we can exclaim with joy and faith even when the answer is "no". He called out to God for relief, and it did not immediately come. He asked for answers, yet was made to wait and endure many words of foolish counsel. All through this he praised God and honored Him.

When I pray, I am often reminded of Job and Elihu. Wisdom is found in surrender, even in the heart of suffering, and my heart is filled with praise to my faithful God, because He is worthy to be praised both in the "yes" and in the "no".