Take a good look friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don't see many of the "brightest and the best" among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families....Everything that we have - right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start - comes from God by way of Jesus Christ. That's why we have the saying, "If you're going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God. (Excerpts from 1 Cor. 1:29-31, The Message)


Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Tina Hawk's confessions of a wandering child of God


I stand before you today – unworthy to be speaking. I confess that I am not fully abandoned to God. I want to be, but I’m not. I am a broken, very flawed, wounded, wandering child of God. Is that possible? A Christ follower not following? Somewhere we have this idea that all Christians should “look” a certain way. And yes we should – we should look just like Jesus. But what if we don’t. What if we might on the outside, but don’t look too deep.

I have had times that I reflected the image of God – I know what it is like to be satisfied in his presence. I hope to return there, but for now I’m journeying in that direction. What I can share with you today is my journey. We all have one. I am not fully abandoned; I am not fully healed, fully restored, completely put back together, or fixed. But I am me – Today you won’t get the perfect example to follow or a “do this” and get close to God plan. But you will get a true, authentic look into one life who is trying to make sense of it all and many times failing miserably.

Have you ever walked away from God? Not abandoned yourself, but abandoned God? I mean, made a deliberate choice that right now God – I’m good, I can handle this, thanks, but no thanks? Your way has brought me here – in this place, now I’m going to handle it for a while. Can we do that – and still call ourselves Christian? Today we are learning to abandon all for God – but have you ever just abandoned him? I have and it all started about 2 years ago – maybe even years before that.

I have been a Christian for 24 years. I was raised in Church and in a Christian home. In high school and college I sought God with a strong desire. I met my husband in the 9th grade, married at 21, became a teacher, and then a mom. Life continued and became increasingly more complicated. I went to Bible studies, church, was serving at church. I was a growing and maturing Christian. I had times of spiritual highs and times of deep intimacy with God. I still had my issues, pride, self-righteousness, insecurity, but I had a heart for God.

I could share with you miracles observed, daily provision by God, being content in Christ, hearing him speak, and a peace that passes all understanding. But I could also share with you how a season of childhood sexual abuse jades your perspective of your worth, your value, your self image, your view of men and marriage. I could share how trying to live your life being perfect, pleasing people at all cost in an effort to feel valuable and worthy – always leads to failure. I could share painful miscarriages, and broken friendships. But couldn’t we all share hard stuff? Life is tough. Some days life isn’t fair. We all have good and bad things in our lives that we could share. Isn’t life like that – pain mixed with joy. I would love to stand before you as a great example of always turning to God in my pain, but I have often turned away. I confess that I am a weary wanderer, who daily struggles to find her way back. I am judgmental. I struggle with pride. I need the constant approval of others. I often see the bad in people and circumstances. Sometimes, I even struggle with lust. Gasp – a woman who lusts?

Today I want to share with you that in the midst of my pain, struggles, and sin. God is continuing to speak to me, to gently woo me to himself. He continues to lovingly draw me closer to himself. After you walk away from God, can you ever find your way back? I’m here to tell you yes, 100times yes. I am daily journeying my way back to full abandonment.

Today I want to share with you about my niece, Kyla, and my journey through her disease and death. I want to share my journey through doubting and questioning God, all the bad in the world, and dealing with inexpressible grief.


I’ve always wanted to be a mom, ever since I was little. I never wanted a career, job, or big adventure – I just wanted a family. After college, I taught 2nd grade and was a media specialist. I wanted kids so I could quit work and stay home. During my 4th year of teaching I became pregnant and shortly after had a miscarriage. 5 months later, I quit my job to care for my niece, Haley. 10 months later, Korinne was born. 7 months later my niece, Kyla was born. 2 years later Luke was born. My prayers had been answered. I continued to care for my sister’s girls during the day Monday – Friday. I had 4 kids under the age of 5 in my house. Talk about crazy.

Kyla was born with Cystic Fibrosis, a disease of the lungs and digestive system. This is a genetic disease that shortens the life expectancy of its victims to around 36 years old. She had an intestinal blockage at birth and had surgery. She spent 3 weeks in the hospital after birth. When she was 3 months old, I began keeping her during the week, along with her sister Hayley, and my Korinne who was 10 months old. At 9 months old she had another intestinal blockage which led to 7+ surgeries and over 70 days in the hospital. God spared her life – which in itself was a HUGE miracle.

She came home with her intestines on the outside of her body – which I had to clean several times daily. She was on a feeding tube and required much care. These 2 girls who came to my home everyday – were very much like my own. They were like sisters to my own kids. Throughout Kyla’s childhood, she endured much pain and many trips to the hospital. She did have good times as well. She was a big ball of giggles and sunshine all wrapped up in one. She never met a stranger and even then, she would talk to them. I got to enjoy her giggles every day until she started school, then I had her in the summers and when she was home sick from school.

I often traveled with my sister, Theresa, on hospital visits so that Kyla’s dad Jeffery could stay with Hayley. We would joke that I was Kyla’s 2nd mama. In the hospital when her mom was talking to doctors, I would hold her. When she started feeling better, we would take walks around the floor of the hospital and play games to pass the time. The last 4 months of her life was filled with pain and suffering. The amount of medicines she was given at 9 months old had destroyed her liver. Her lungs were diseased and failing also. I was getting ready to start the process of donating part of my liver to her. It was in those times that I began to question why God would allow one of his beloved children to suffer. I began to question the scriptures that talk about asking and receiving, having faith to move a mountain, etc. We were praying believing with faith, but God had a different plan. I didn’t like his plan, not one bit. It was then that I thought I knew more than God. I had forgotten that God loved Kyla more than I could even imagine. She had suffered enough and was going to live with him. She was not flesh of my flesh, but she was heart of my heart. She was one of my own.

She was 8 years old when she died. It was the worst day of my life. Not so much the death – that was kind of a release of Kyla into a life better, a life without pain and suffering. It was the death, but it was also so much more. Haley had been living with us for weeks while Kyla was in Pittsburgh. We kind of adopted her for a while. That morning I got a call from Theresa, telling me that this would probably be the day she would die. I got the kids up and off to school. I came back home, prayed and waited. I tried to decide should I fly up there or stay home. I decided to stay and wait. Around 11 am it started to snow, in October – it was snowing. They weren’t just flurries; it was huge flakes coming down. At that point, I knew she had died. It was if these were angel tears falling from heaven, not tears of sorrow, but tears of joy because beloved Kyla had come home. She got her new body, new lungs, and new liver.

I finally got the call that right about the same time it began to snow, she had breathed her last breath. My heart broke into. The hard part was ahead. I had to drive to Rosman Elementary, find Haley, her sister who was in the 5th grade and tell her that her one and only sister, the one she has loved and played with since birth had died. I held her as she shook and screamed, No! No!, N0! I held her as her body shook with sobs. I held her as both our worlds crumbled. I could not make it better. I didn’t have a way or the words to make it better. I had never felt so helpless or weak.

The weeks and months that followed were hard – but almost better, no hospital, no continued worry, no watching her body in pain. I clung to God and he was my strength. Psalm 119:28 says: “I collapse from grief. Sustain me by your word.” And he did. As the days went on, the numbness subsided and forever without her began to become a reality. How do you move forward without her? How do we keep on living joyfully without her? I began to retreat inward. I do that often, especially when I am overwhelmed. I pulled away from friends, family, everyone. I hid – inside my own skin. It began to get dark.

At this same time I realized that a friendship – one that had sustained me for so long – was over. It had been over for quite some time, and other meaningful relationships had taken its place. But at this time, the reality of this separation was fully realized. It was like a divorce, grief, hurt, rejection, and loss. Several months later, I had to return to work for financial reasons. I wanted to be a stay at home mom. All these things sent my life into a tailspin. This was not the way my life was supposed to turn out. I didn’t sign up for this.

A period of days of darkness followed. I don’t know if any of you have experienced depression before, but this was the first of many dark times within the past 2 years. A darkness settled on my soul that I couldn’t lift. I would look around and think, why am I so sad still? The self induced isolation continued – for weeks/months. During this time, I would have glimpses of hope. I had great friends who would check on me and encourage me.

I had lost my trust in God – that he had the best plan for me, that he would use everything for my good. I was mad that he didn’t answer my prayers the way I wanted and he wasn’t following my plan. I began to question the value in prayer, why pray if God was going to do what he wanted anyway? I believed that God could do anything, including rescue me from my darkness, I just didn’t believe he would. I let my darkness, seep into my soul. I still went to church, still read my Bible, still read books about heaven and God, but I was becoming numb to God himself. Was a relationship with him really worth all this? I walked away from God, but not religion. I became my own god, finding my own way. You talk about miserable. Without God, I started to look for other ways to find joy, my value, my purpose.

In the months that followed, God continued to woo me and speak softly to me. I had times of seeking him, but still times of darkness and sadness. I began reading Pete Wilson’s book Plan B. He wrote this book about what happens when your life doesn’t turn out the way you planned? About when your dreams shatter – Is God here and does he care. Everyone has shattered dreams. Everyone has been let down and needs healing for our brokenness. He explores why God allows suffering and pain. He says: “Your dreams may not be happening and things aren’t turning out as you expected, but that doesn’t mean your life is spinning out of control, it just means that you are not in control.” He asked many questions that started my journey back to God. He asked: “Is it possible that you don’t really want God – you want what you think God can give you?” Sometimes we want our dreams more that we want God. We want what God does, instead of Him. I had to confess, that was me.

He also talks about the frustration with a Christianity that can fit on a bracelet, t-shirt, or bumper sticker. You know the kind that has everything figured out. Sometimes Christians have more questions than answers. Even though we know God is with us, sometimes we feel utterly alone. Even though we believe, we doubt. Even though we suspect God knows what he is doing, we really don’t want to do this his way. In John 16:33 “I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace. In the world you have trouble and suffering, but take courage – I have conquered the world.” There is a paradox that there is a God who is big and powerful and loves us, but we live in a world that seems to be falling apart. Jesus says, I have defeated the world. The cross is the only reason we still have hope. There is no limit to what God will do to draw us to himself. God really does love us more than we can imagine.

I was scheduled to go to Thailand on a mission trip 5 days after Kyla died – which I cancelled. The next year I went and last year I went again. These were times of finally feeling alive again, hearing God speak, being connected to him again. I wanted to move to Thailand. I wanted to feel this all of the time. I thought it was Thailand that I missed so much when I came home, but it was God. I had found Him again in Thailand, but I had left him there too. Both times when I returned, the darkness settled in again. I had times of darkness deeper than I had ever experienced. I thought about running away and starting over. I thought about a life without kids, husband, and responsibilities. I thought about heaven, and wanted out. I would wake up day after day hating my own skin. How do you go on when the sadness is suffocating, overwhelming? I knew I needed to talk about this with someone, or I would never escape its hold. I felt I was stuck in a deep pit. I still had hope from Psalm 145:14 “The Lord supports all who fall, and lifts up all who are bent over.” Psalm 103:4 says: "He is the one that delivers your life from the pit”.

I began to share some with Jim. Some of my feelings, not all cause he would just freak out and have me committed, but a little at a time. I started to pray again, at times. I could hear him speak, and feel his presence again.

Theresa had a miscarriage the year after Kyla died. Months later we found out that she was expecting again. 2 days after this past Christmas, Brinley was born. 2 weeks later we found out that she also has cystic fibrosis. I just called to check on her and Haley answered the phone. She said that Veresa was there telling her mom that Brinley had CF. Haley was crying, and once again I felt helpless. I couldn’t make it better this time either. This brought back all of the hard painful memories of Kyla’s sickness and death. I cried, cried, and cried. Not that we didn’t know this was a possibility, but I couldn’t believe God would do this again. We had prayed and prayed. How could I explain to Luke that even though we prayed every night for 9 months for Brinley to be born without CF, God’s plan was different. I can remember Korinne saying once that she wished Adam and Eve had never sinned. I agreed and asked her why. She said cause then no sickness would be in the world and people wouldn’t get CF and die. I was so mad at God. I went to bed and woke up with this thought: I may be mad and hurt, and sad, but I don’t have anyone besides you. Who do I have but you? Bad things are going to happen to all of us, with or without God. I’d rather go through them with him than alone.

What I’ve learned from my wrestling:
• I could never fully value God’s love and grace until I realized that I didn’t deserve it. I deserved the complete opposite.
• I would never believe that God would never leave me or forsake me, until I forsook him.

My Judgment:

I have always struggled with self esteem and identity issues for as far back as I can remember. My abuse left a warped view of myself. I was always trying to measure up to the “normal” I saw around me, but somehow never felt enough. In trying to make myself feel better about living in my own skin, I began comparing myself to others. This has led to a habit of having a judgmental attitude of others. In the church, I often would look around at people that I felt “weren’t living right” and begin to judge them. I would find myself thinking: “How can they stand here and praise God, lifting up their hands, when they are so dirty. I thought they were such hypocrites. I would think about their sins and yet their apparent lack of conviction, and it would make me justified in my own sin in a warped kind of way.

If you made a list of the top 10 worst sins of today, what would make the list? Murder? Stealing? Adultery? Gluttony? Pete Wilson says: “we all have an unpublished list on our hearts of people we think we are better than. For the most part our list of sins generally don’t involve the ones with which we personally struggle. We point our fingers at some sins while overlooking others.”

• “It’s ok to be prideful and look down on others, but it’s not ok to choose a gay lifestyle.”
• “It’s ok to be greedy while there are poor living next door, but it’s not ok to have an abortion.”
• “It’s ok to have sex with your boyfriend of 5 years, but you better not cheat on your husband.”
• It’s ok to be unloving to jerks, but you’d better not drink alcohol (well at least not in public)”

These lists of selective sins, pride, and judgments are destructive to our spiritual growth and keep us from an authentic community. In recent days, I have found myself as one of those – those sinful people, standing in church on Sundays. One of those who have consistently made poor choices with my words, attitudes, and actions. I have recently been one of those lifting dirty hands toward heaven – begging for healing, restoration, cleansing, and deliverance. I now see those same people I used to judge in a different light. I care less about the judgments of others. I confess my brokenness, judgmental attitude, pride, selfishness, flesh living, and I also confess my complete need of God. My weaknesses are great, and my mistakes greater. Living by the spirit is a choice, just like living in the flesh. I’ve chosen the flesh for way too long. I’m in the process of finding my way back.

In her book, 1,000 gifts, Ann Voskamp speaks of the type of healing and restoration that is possible for someone like me. God has been using this book to begin changing my perspective and spiritual life. Ann wrote this book based on a dare that a friend had given her to find 1,000 things for which she was thankful. Though this experience, her life was transformed from one of self-hate and defeat to one of joy abundant and overflowing.

I want to share a little of her story and quotes with you and how she spoke directly from God to my soul. When she was little, her sister was run over and killed in the driveway of her childhood home as she watched. She speaks of the pain that a family can experience resulting from the death of a child. She says: “From my own beginning, my sister’s death tears a hole in the canvas of the world. Losses do that. One life-loss can infect the whole of life. Like a rash that wears through our days, our sight becomes peppered with black voids. Now everywhere we look, we only see all that isn’t holes, lack, deficiency.” Tears streamed down my face as I read the words that described my darkness. She wrote: “I awake to the discontent of my life in my skin. I wake to self-hatred. To the wrestle to get is all done, the relentless anxiety that I am failing – I live tired, afraid, anxious, weary – will I ever be enough, find enough, do enough? Will I ever live fully – or just empty? I am a woman who speaks but one language, the language of the fall, discontentment, and self condemnation.”

She goes on to say: “once a week on Sunday, my soul’s macular holes spontaneously heal. In that church with the wooden cross nailed to the wall facing the country road, there God seems obvious. But the rest of the week, the days I live in the glaring harshness of an abrasive world. Complete loss of central vision. Everywhere, a world pocked with scarcity.” God means to heal our soul holes that have developed. She says: “God wants to return us to our full glory, since we took a bite of that fruit, it tore into our souls – that drain hole, where joy seeps away. God wants to full us again, with glory and grace.” She changed my perspective when she said: “I wonder too . . . if the rent in the canvas of our life backdrop, the losses that puncture our world, our own emptiness, might actually become places to see. To see through God. That which tears open our soul, those holes that splatter our sight, may actually become the thin, open places to see through the mess of this place to the heart-aching beauty beyond. To Him. To the God whom we endlessly crave.”

She reminded me that : “Jesus – the God man who came to save me, came to save me from prisons of fear, guilt, depression, and sadness.” Her healing came through the deliberate act of giving thanks, daily. She speaks about eucharisteo, giving thanks by Jesus at the last supper, and challenged me to live a life of eucharisteo. She believes the depth of our joy is dependent on the depth of our thankfulness. She reminds me that without God’s word my view of the world warps. You really need to read this book, a book that will most definitely change your perspective.

My Wandering and Prosperity Religion
I didn’t walk away from God all at once, it was a gradual wandering. I somewhere along the way got my theology all mixed up.

• God will never give you more than you can handle
Really? Where did you find that in the bible? It has been my experience that throughout life you will face one situation after another that will be completely beyond what you can handle. It is only when we come to the end of ourselves that we have to rely on God. Believe me, if I could do it on my own, I would. It is my weakness and daily struggles that remind me that I must rely on his strength, not my own.
• That if I work really hard to be a “good” Christian, and follow God – then I will be blessed with more good than bad

That sounds a lot like prosperity religion to me. When did I start believing the lie that if I follow God, then my life will be problem free. Well maybe I didn’t believe that, but if I go to church, tithe, pray, read my bible, love God, treat others with kindness, work hard, only speak good and encouraging words, be faithful to my husband, don’t gossip, serve in the nursery, dress modestly, be a good steward of my money, then I somehow deserve God’s blessing. Don’t get me wrong, these are good and commanded. These are biblical principles that show us the way to a full life. But why do we do them? Because we should? If I don’t God will punish me? Because I’m trying to earn God’s favor, or pay him back for his grace? It is all a matter of motives: trying to be a good Christian or seeking after God, himself. If I do all of these things without God, without seeking him first, it is just empty religion. It is simply a system of do’s and don’ts to justify our behavior and make us feel valued and worthy. It is working to earn God’s favor and blessing. If this is your focus, the focus is on you, your efforts, your control, your choices. You haven’t really abandoned it all. You are just making it look like you have.

What if all you had was God, would that be enough? I confess that many times, I want God’s blessing more than I want him. Think about it deep down, do I want him more, or what he can do for me? Is he enough? Really, just him?

• Him + a husband
• Him + healthy kids
• Him + financial security
• Him + a fit/healthy body
• Him + a fulfilling job
• Him + a big house & 2 cars
• Him + a ministry
• Him + the praise of others
• Him + the recognition as a biblical scholar
• Just him?

He may give you all of these things as well, but what if he doesn’t. Is he still enough? Is he still good? Can we still trust him? I can tell you this I have learned, that without him, nothing is enough. Without him, I cannot be content even with everything else. John Piper says: “That God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him, in the midst of loss, not necessarily prosperity.”

Parting Thoughts – When you walk away from God – can you find your way back? Yes
• Stop running/turn around – he is still here, he never left
• Fix your eyes on Jesus – my focus changes from me to him
• Give up trying to play God and control things – I can trust him. I don’t get better by trying harder, I get better by abandoning and surrender
• Let him woo you – his love is unchanging, unfailing, incomparable, and enough
• Be thankful – choose to see his grace
• Trust that he is enough – because he is
• Share authentically – we have this misconception that after we become Christians that we must pretend that we have it all together. Find authentic community, many times God’s presence can come as a byproduct of people’s presence

I have daily struggles, some days it is still really hard. Now I have more days where God is enough. It is a choice, daily. I must choose Him. I don’t want just enough of God to shine up my exterior. I want Him so completely that it starts on the inside and overflows to those around me. He loves us, completely.

Psalm 139: 1-18 – The Message
God investigate my life; get all the facts firsthand. I’m an open book to you; even from a distance, you know what I’m thinking. You know when I leave and when I get back; I’m never out of your sight. You know everything I’m going to say before I start the first sentence. I look behind me and you’re there, then up ahead and you’re there, too ---your reassuring presence, coming and going. This is too much, too wonderful – I can’t take it all in! Is there any place I can go to avoid your spirit? To be out of your sight? If I climb to the sky, you’re there! If I go underground, you’re there. If I flew on the morning’s wings to the far western horizon, you’d find me in a minute –you’re already there waiting! Then I said to myself, “Oh, he even sees me in the dark! At night I’m immersed in the light.” It’s a fact; darkness isn’t dark to you; night and day, darkness and light, they’re all the same to you. Oh yes, you shaped me first inside, and then out; you formed me in my mother’s womb. I thank you, High God – you’re breathtaking! Body and soul, I am marvelously made! I worship in adoration – what a creation! You know me inside and out, you know ever bone in my body; you know exactly how I was made, bit by bit, how I was sculpted from nothing into something. Like an open book, you watched me grow from conception to birth, all the stages of my life were spread out before you, the days of my life all prepared before I’d even lived one day. Your thoughts – how rare, how beautiful! God, I’ll never comprehend them. I couldn’t even begin to count them – anymore than I could count the sand of the sea. Oh, let me rise in the morning and live always with you!

Monday, April 25, 2011

The Willing Exchange

Posted by Trudy

The story in Mark 1:40 is a familiar one. Jesus heals a leper. Perhaps like me you have learned many valuable lessons from it already. You have seen the compassionate heart of Christ at work, you have been moved by His willingness to touch the untouchable, you have witnessed His power to simply speak a word and command the dirty to be clean. You have watched how He skillfully fulfilled the law and His mission at the same time.

But one of things that I love about Scripture is how God will lift a well worn story off the pages and turn it ever so slightly and blow my socks off with a new revelation from it. That is what happened the last time I read Mark 1:40-45 and it made me love my Savior all the more. Maybe this is not new to you but just in case it might have the same effect on you, I thought it would be worth sharing.

Here is the story:

40 A man with leprosy came to him and begged him on his knees, "If you are willing, you can make me clean."
41 Filled with compassion, Jesus reached out his hand and touched the man. "I am willing," he said. "Be clean!"
42 Immediately the leprosy left him and he was cured.
43 Jesus sent him away at once with a strong warning:
44 "See that you don't tell this to anyone. But go, show yourself to the priest and offer the sacrifices that Moses commanded for your cleansing, as a testimony to them."

I’ve never really understood the reason why Jesus would not want the leper to share what He’d done for Him. After all, leprosy was regarded as humanly incurable...and He just cured it. Only twice in the Old Testament God chose to cleanse a leper. But if people knew that Jesus cured this man wouldn’t that cause many to make the connection that He was God? Wouldn’t that be a good thing?

But as I read the next verse, something hit me that I had never seen before:

45 Instead he went out and began to talk freely, spreading the news. As a result, Jesus could no longer enter a town openly but stayed outside in lonely places. Yet the people still came to him from everywhere.

Because of this awful disease lepers were not just deemed unclean -they were isolated from society. Until this point, it was probably early enough in Jesus’ ministry where He was still able to enjoy some freedoms without being mobbed by crowds of people who wanted something from Him. Maybe He longed for people to know Him first before they latched on to the miracles He could perform and maybe that is why He asked the leper not to tell anyone....at least for a time.

But verse 45 says that the leper chose to disobey Jesus’ instruction and spread the news of his cure and because of that Jesus could no longer enter a town openly but had to stay outside in lonely places.
 
Did you catch that exchange?

"In lonely places"

The leper, once isolated, was now cured and free to leave the lonely places.

Jesus’ willingness to cure him cost Him His freedom and sent Him to the lonely places.

He didn't get leprosy, but he traded places with the leper.

People still sought Him, but not so much to know Him as to "take" from Him.

And yet, knowing that would happen, He still did it.

It floors me to think of what Jesus  exchanges for me.   

Wholeness for broken-ness
Beauty for ashes
Purity for filth
Freedom for captivity
Joy for mourning
Sinlessness for sin
Fellowship for isolation
Righteousness for unrighteousness
Life for death

And He does it so willingly....at great cost to Himself.

I can’t wrap my mind around the depth of  that kind of compassion.

"Pierced for my transgressions, crushed for my iniquities; the punishment that brought me peace was upon Him and by His wounds I am healed" Is.53:5

Lord let me never forget what the exchange costs You!






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, April 21, 2011

To pray or not to pray...that is the question

Growing up in the Presbyterian Church, I “learned” at an early age that we are “predestined” either to heaven or to hell. In my 12 year old brain, that equated with the understanding that it really didn’t matter what I did in life because God had already decided my future for me, and I had no choice in the matter whatsoever. That false knowledge led me down a path that would soon become my ruin.

Somewhere in my early 30s, I heard the word of God read for the first time in church. I mean, a pastor actually opened a Bible from a pulpit and quoted from it….L-O-N-G passages of truth that my aching soul was finally ready to hear and absorb. I really don’t recall that ever happening in the church I grew up in, but it could have. Truth be told, as a child I was far more interested in counting the letters of the alphabet one by one in the bulletin I held than I was in listening to the preacher.

Life’s circumstances since my childhood have given me plenty of opportunities to question the power of prayer. Everything from believing that the gay guy friend I had would be wooed into the Kingdom by my prayers of faith (he committed suicide instead) to believing that my son’s best friend would beat cancer and live to the ripe ‘ol age of 100 (she died at 17) plagued my thoughts. And somewhere in it all, I questioned again: What was the point of prayer if God – mighty and all-knowing God – had already decided our destiny?

1 John 5:14-15 claims: Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petition that we have asked of Him.

Really? We have what we asked of Him? Then why did my friends die when I pleaded for them to live? Did I miss something? Absolutely, I did. Those 4 little words…according to His will…..they just had to be there didn’t they? So I wonder, do we ask things of God that are in accordance with His will, or ours?

1 Timothy 2:1-4 says: The first thing I want you to do is pray. Pray every way you know how, for everyone you know. God wants not only us but everyone saved, you know, everyone to get to know the truth we’ve learned: that there’s one God and only one, and one Mediator between God and us – Jesus.

Well I prayed that my friend would be saved, and instead he committed suicide. What’s up with that, God?

Deut. 30:15-20 (parts) – I have set before you today life and good, death and evil….choose life, that both you and your descendants may live…

Okay, I get it. He had a choice, and he didn’t choose You, God. But my other prayers for healing…what about those?

Remember when David prayed that his sick son might live? (2 Sam. 12:16-20) He fasted and prayed fervently, but in the end, his son died. What did David do then? He got up and praised the Lord, washed his face and ate. Strange behavior for a father who would be burying his son a few hours later. I have to believe in that story that David trusted God more than he trusted himself.

I will not pretend to understand why some requests are granted and others seemingly are ignored. But this I do know: God is faithful. We see but dimly. He sees so much further down the road than we can possibly imagine.

He is the Great Physician. He is our Healer. His word confirms this to be so. Who are we to question the why and how of that healing?

Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints. Ps. 116:15

Healing for my son’s friend did, in fact, take place. Her cancer-ridden body was made whole in His sight – but not ours - at her physical death.

Choose life. Maybe those that we have prayed physical healing and life over who died in this life did, in fact, choose life. And perhaps theirs were the prayers answered in faith believing.

Oh God, increase my faith.

Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need. Hebrews 4:16

To pray or not to pray….there really is no question. We have been invited to bring all our cares to Him, because He cares for us.

James 5:16: The effective, fervent prayer of a righteousness man makes much power available. (The same power that raised Jesus from the dead is alive in you if you have claimed Jesus as your savior!)

So, God, I do pray -
Give me understanding, according to Your word. Ps. 119:169

Amen. (So be it)

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Distorted image made new

In the day that God created man, He made him in the image (likeness) of God. Gen. 5:1

This is the story of ED. ED is not your typical male friend. But he wants to be your best friend. He will cheat you out of your God-given destiny with his lies, but you have stared into that distorted mirror way too long, and you believe that the image you see is really you. He will starve you away from the truth of who you are.

I personally have never met ED, but I know someone who has. She is the most beautiful young lady you could ever imagine, and yet ED told her so many lies that she took them to heart and made them her very own. And he almost killed her.

ED’s real name is Eating Disorder. And he became to Kimberly the eye of perfection. In reality, all he did was distort the truth to make it seem real.

Most of us have caught his eye, even if we did not give heed to his voice. And most of us began our gaze into the mirror of distortion around the age of 6 as grandparents told us we were the most beautiful things alive and we held the mirror to our faces to prove it was true.

Around the age of 10, however, as the chocolate made its way through our pores in the form of pimples, we gazed into that distorted mirror again – this time with disgust.

Mirrors are supposed to display the image of ourselves. And the Word of God says that In the day that God created man, He made him in the likeness of God. But somewhere along the way, Satan came up with a pretty clever distortion of the real thing, and some of us believed that what we saw was utterly disgusting and frumpy rather than the glory of God being poured out through us.

Statistics show that eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any mental illness; however, only 1 in 10 people with an eating disorder actually receives treatment. Staggering, but the cost of inpatient treatment nears $30,000.

Nestled within the smoky little town of Brevard is Tapestry Residential Treatment Center for Women with Eating Disorders. Who would have thought that our quaint little town tucked away such a place for healing?

Some of you may know Kimberly Jones. She came to BCC from Tapestry, where she first found healing for her physical frame, and then through BCC found healing for her mind and spirit as well. God is so good!

Kimberly has organized a benefit called Operation Beautiful that will take place in Asheville on May 27, 2011 whereby she hopes to create awareness of this life-threatening disorder. All proceeds from the benefit will go the H.E.A.L. Tapestry Fund to help alleviate the financial burden of a woman in the community without insurance who needs intensive treatment at the Tapestry recovery program here in Brevard.

At our upcoming retreat this weekend, we will give our ladies opportunity to participate with Kimberly by donating to this fund either financially or with the provision of items to raffle/auction at the benefit. By doing either, you will be helping to save a life.

You can read testimonies and find more information by going to these sites:
Project H.E.A.L. - http://www.theprojectheal.org/
Operation Beautiful – http://www.operationbeautiful.com/
Tapestry – http://www.tapestrync.com/