Guest Devotional #1: Faith in the Storm

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Guest Devotional #1: Faith in the Storm

Guest Devotional #1: Faith in the storm

-by-

Jenny Entsminger

 

“We walk by faith and not by sight” 2 Corinthians 5:7 NIV

 

“Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful”

Hebrews 10:23 NIV

 

“May your unfailing love be with us Lord, even as we put our hope in you.” Psalm 33:22 NIV

 

I have found that doctors sometimes go to the worse possible places when a cancer diagnosis is given.  Hearts sink upon receiving the news, and pressures mount.  Besides the innate concern for survival is an immediate life change of diet, daily care, exploring treatment options, decisions regarding work, and mounting financial concerns. Its enough to make you scream and run for the hills!

 

Reeling when you hear those words: “You have cancer” while observing the doctors grim look - plus simultaneously, managing the thousands of questions bombarding your thoughts - is more than overwhelming.   I often think of my daughter who mentions in her testimony she did not know how to act as one labeled with cancer. She knew she had to be strong for her family. While feeling rotten with chemo and radiation, her life transformed without her control, which was the scariest part!

 

When you don’t feel good, your faith is affected. Yet, this is the most vital time you need to feed your soul with faith!  Feed your soul on the life-giving word of God.   Meditate on scriptures that are meaningful, plant hope, and choke out discouragement.  This is not a pie in the sky solution, but one that roots deeply in our inner being.  Roman 10:17 NIV says: “Faith comes by hearing the message and the message is heard through the word about Christ.” My daughter finds strength not only through her favorite Scriptures (some on notecards placed in her room) but also through her Christian music. Before every scan, when “sanxiety” is high, she rests her soul to the sound of beautiful timeless hymns. We can never loose our hope! 

 

As explained by the popular Christian website GotQuestions.org,

“Biblical hope is built on faith. Hope is the earnest anticipation that comes with believing something good. Hope is a peaceful assurance that something that hasn’t happened yet will indeed happen…The relationship between faith and hope can be illustrated in the joy a child feels when his father says tomorrow. [They are going to an amusement park.] The child believes he is going to the park…based on his fathers’ word. – that is faith. At the same time, that belief within the child kindles joy- that is hope.”

 

The child s natural trust in his father’s promise is faith. The child’s squealing delight and jumping in place are the expressions of hope.

 

Without faith, there is no hope. Find time to combat the overwhelming fight with cancer in mind, soul, and body and with FAITH.   Feed your mind, your heart, your soul with faith! Enjoy reading scripture and finding encouragement. Thus your hope will bloom and flourish!  And as always pray!   Prayer has a powerful effect on us.  When you are too weak to pray, enlist others to pray for you.  Dear friends, never forget God is on your side!  He loves you beyond measure! May his arms of peace and comfort protect you and give you inner faith!

 

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Devotional #7: Understanding Suffering

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Devotional #7: Understanding Suffering

Devotional #7: Understanding Suffering

 

 

I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. – Romans 8:18 NIV.

 

 

We have established throughout the previous devotionals that Christ is not the author of suffering.  So, if God does not “give” us suffering, why does He allow us to suffer? This is an incredibly complicated question.  I will tackle this complex question with my understanding of a few truths I have found in scripture. I must acknowledge that there are other authors that have studied this question in greater detail: Joni Eareckson Tada, Ravi Zacharias, and Corrie Ten Boom to name just a few. I also must acknowledge that, although there are reasons God allows suffering, it does not mean he delights in our suffering.  As previous established, suffering was not part of God’s original plan for mankind.

 

As discussed in Devotional 5, while sickness is not a punishment for sin, our sin and the sin of others can cause us pain. However, I would like to address in this devotional other reasons why God may allow suffering. As a reminder, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” 1 John 1:9 NIV.

 

 

First, scripture tells us that suffering makes us better people, “Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.” James 1:2-4 NIV.  Few people understand this better than those who have experienced the loss of a child. Only those who have experienced such loss are equipped to comfort others who also loss children. “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God.” 2 Corinthians 1:3-4.  Of course, we would prefer to not suffer at all.  For me, I would have given anything to have not lost my baby nephew Elijah.  I am comforted in knowing two things: I will see him again, and God has not wasted the experience.  Elijah’s short life has impacted me and my family to serve and have unmatched compassion for others who have lost loved ones.

 

Second, our suffering allows God to demonstrate his power and perform great miracles. By the time the tumor in my brain was discovered, it was the size of a lime. It was not discovered for quite a while despite my visits to several different doctors. Likely, my tumor didn’t start off as a presumably “terminal” cancer.  My mom and I had wondered why God had allowed so much time to go by before it was discovered.  One day my mom said, “Perhaps God wants to perform a greater miracle.”  This statement had a huge impact on me because, for the first time, I could see how God could use my tragedy to demonstrate His glory. 

 

Consider the death of Lazarus.  Four days after Lazarus had been laid in a tomb, Christ rose Lazarus from the dead. Mary and Martha questioned Christ, noting that is He had arrived earlier Lazarus would not have died.  Christ allowed Mary and Martha to suffer extreme grief for several days before He raised Lazarus from the dead, but not because He lacked compassion. In fact, Christ had great compassion for Mary and Martha, and felt the pain himself.  Scripture said, “Jesus wept. Then the Jews said ‘See how much He loved him!’” John 11: 35-36 NIV. God may have delayed saving Lazarus to demonstrate that even death was subject to Christ’s power.  The fact that Lazarus had been in a tomb for four days had caused the people to question the power of Christ. John 11:37-39 NIV.  Christ responded,  “’Did I not tell you that if you believe, you will see the glory of God?” John 11:40 NIV.

 

Third, suffering can be a direct attack from Satan. We have seen this throughout scripture. Job, written around 1900 BC, is known to be the oldest book in the Bible outside of Genesis. Job covers the story of a righteous man directly attacked by Satan, who caused destruction to his children, his property and his health. Ultimately God restores to Job double his property, and equal number of children and 140 additional years of healthy life. As we move through scripture we see numerous ways in which Satan attempts to cause destruction in the lives of humans, even those close to Christ, like Paul and John. Continuing through the book of Revelation, we know that the righteous will suffer until Christ returns. I have come to believe the more good we do for Christ, the more Satan will attack. But we must also remember that greater is He who is in us than he who is in the world. Paraphrasing 1 John 4:4 NKJV.

 

Lest I be misunderstood, please do not assume that the reasons stated above make the tragedies that happen in our lives okay or “worth it.” All I know is that God has immense love for us. 1 John 3:1 NIV. I also know that, for those of us who know God, He will not waste our tragedies, “ And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28 NIV.

 

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

 

1.     Think of a time you suffered.  Why do you think God allowed you to suffer?

 

 

 

 

2.     Listen to the story of Joni Eareckson Tada at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVXJ8GyLgt0. How does Joni’s experience live out the promise God makes us in Romans 8:28.  Did Joni say anything to you to help you come to terms with suffering you are experiencing?

 

 

 

 

3.     Think of 3-5 scriptures of Bible stories that demonstrates the depths of Christ’s love for us. How can these scriptures/stories help us process our suffering.

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Devotional #6: More Than I Could Handle

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Devotional #6: More Than I Could Handle

Devotional #6: More Than I Could Handle

 

“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

--Matthew 11:28-30 NIV.

 

Anytime I faced suffering, whether caused by a death, or by divorce, or by my health, the most common and most scripturally unfounded cliché that was spoken to me was, “God does not give you more than you can handle.”  This cliché is so embedded in our culture that I have even heard pastors or leaders of Christian ministries repeat it without thinking. Other Christians will defend this statement without reason or justification. Once I posted on Facebook about how this statement actually increased by suffering by making me feel insufficient and inferior because so often my pain was more than I could handle.  I was shocked to see how many people insisted that I was wrong and lectured me about it. 

 

There are at least two fundamentally incorrect presumptions in the statement.  Firstly, it presumes that God is the giver of suffering and pain. As we learned in devotional #5, God is not the author of suffering.  We live in a fallen world and our suffering is a result  of that.  We know that Satan, and not God, has come to steal, kill and destroy. John 10:10 NIV.  Presuming that God gives us pain only serves to perpetuate the incorrect view of an unloving God, and not the loving God who sent his own son to Earth to suffer death on a cross so that we humans could be reconciled with God once and for all.

 

Secondly, the statement presumes that we, as humans, do not need to rely on God for help in times of trouble, because we should be able to handle our problems on our own without Him.  This is the opposite of what the Gospel tells us. Time after time, God calls us to rely and depend on Him in our times of trouble. Matthew 11:28-30 NIV; Exodus 14:14 NIV; Psalm 23 NIV.  This can result in a sinful and exaggerated pride—in that it implies, “I don’t need God. I can work through my pain alone.”

 

Of course, anyone who has experienced significant and extreme suffering knows that we, as humans, are incapable of living this life and carrying our own burdens without some form of relief.  When I was in college, for two summers I worked as a waitress at Red Lobster.  Many of my fellow servers were living such difficult lives-often filled with poverty, abuse and abandonment—and they were young. Those who did not know Christ turned to self-destructive behavior to cope—drugs, alcohol, sexual promiscuity, and even crime.  If you do not know that you can cast your burdens on Christ because His “yoke is easy” and His “burden is light,” as humans we will turn to something else to help us cope. 

 

I have often wondered whether this cliché derived from a misunderstanding of 1 Corinthians 10:13 NIV, “No temptation has overtaken you except what is common to mankind. And God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can endure it.” Of course this scripture is about sin and temptation and not about other trials and difficulties. They are not synonymous. While we can resist sin, we cannot prevent suffering from happening to us. Christ tells us that in this world we will face trouble, John 16:33, but he also encourages us, in the same verse to “take heart” because He “has overcome the world.” We take “heart” and our refuge in Christ, not in our own strength because it is Christ, and not us who has overcome the world. Our salvation and strength in is Christ and not the product of our own work. Ephesians 2:8-9.

 

Believing the cliché that “God does not give you more than you can handle” perpetuates pride, a misunderstanding of God’s nature, and self-destructive behavior. We should not be surprised that this destructive cliché has become so embedded in the way Christians seek to comfort. The devil loves to use verbiage that sounds righteous, but actually causes damage.  Instead of this cliché we should be saying something like, “I’m so sorry for your pain. It is more than any human can bear, but you are not alone.  Christ says you can cast your burdens on Him and that He will never leave you or forsake you. He loves you and can be your Prince of Peace and comforter.”

 

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

 

1.     Have you ever experienced a struggle or pain that was more than you could handle? Who or what did you turn to for help? What was the result?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Read the story of Paul and Silas praying in prison in Acts 16:25-34.  Why do you think Paul and Silas chose to pray instead of escape? Was God able to help Paul and Silas in a way that they could not help themselves?  What other benefits came from Paul and Silas relying on God rather than themselves?   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.     How does putting our burdens on Christ serve to glorify Him?

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Devotional #5: No Condemnation

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Devotional #5: No Condemnation

Devotional # 5: No Condemnation

 

 

Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit who gives life has set you free from the law of sin and death. – (Romans 8:1-2 NIV).

 

            About a year after my diagnosis, I was invited to a Christmas Party by friends. I was excited to go because I had become so socially isolated during my initial chemo and radiation that I rarely got such invitations from friends.  At this party I met a couple that I had not met before. The man in the couple wanted to pray for me.  I never turn down prayer, so I consented.  Unfortunately, the prayer was more damaging than helpful.  The man claimed that God was telling him that I was not experiencing healing because there was sin in my life.  While I knew this was not true, the fact that someone would make this claim was just shocking. I now understand this is more common than an average person would think.

 

A  similar scene struck me when I watched the movie “Miracles from Heaven,” in which a young girl who had been undergoing years of treatment for a painful and life threatening digestive condition known as Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction. There is a scene in that movie which appalls many people. In this scene, members of the girl’s church approach her mother and tell her that they believe that God is punishing the daughter for sin. 

 

Of course, this is mindboggling to those of us who are close to God because we know that God does not operate this way.  In fact, if we know Christ, we are free from the law of sin and death. While it is true that the “wages of sin is death,” scripture tells us there is “NO condemnation” for those of us who have accepted Christ as our Lord and Savior.  God’s love for us, regardless of our acceptance of Him, is also abounding. “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” – Romans 5:8 NIV.

 

We must be clear that the origin of sickness and pain is with Satan and not God.  Human bodies were not intended to deteriorate. Satan’s temptation of  Adam and Eve to commit the original sin allowed disease and turmoil to enter our world. Undoubtedly, there are physical consequences to some sin. Examples may include self-inflected physical damage caused by substance abuse, or physical damaged caused by another’s sin, such as a violent assault. Make no mistake about it, Christ does not punish His followers with illness. Satan, however, may use violence or sin to cause pain. Scripture tells us that the devil seeks to cause death, while Christ offers not just life, but an abundant life. As Christ tell us, “The thief (meaning Satan) comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.” John 10:10 NASB.  

 

That God allows diseases, pandemics, and even natural disasters does not mean He is the cause or that it is His desire.  Simply put, bad thing happen because we live in a fallen world.  Christ’s demonstrated this in His consistent physical healing during His ministry on Earth.  In fact, when Jesus was unable to perform other miracles in Nazareth because of the people’s unbelief, he still healed the sick. See Mark 6:1-5 NIV.  The Gospels are full of story after story of Christ’s healing, from leaper (Matthew 8:1-4 NIV) to the bleeding woman (Luke 8:43-48 NIV)  to the blind beggar (John 9:1-12 NIV).  

 

If you have accepted Christ as your Savior, you sin is covered by His blood. If it were not, His atoning work on the cross would be diminished. “But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.” Isaiah 53:5 NIV.

 

If anyone suggests that God is using illness or physical disabilities to correct or punish you for sin, remind yourself that when you accepted Christ you became a new creation and that Christ has already paid the price for every sin you have committed or will commit in the future. 

 

We must also be exceptionally careful in claiming to speak for God.  Everything must be weighed against scripture and formed in a way that edifies those in pain rather than serving the Devil’s purpose of causing more destruction. Again, it is typically best to express sorrow and offer prayers for healing than say anything else.

 

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

 

1.     Do you believe Christ’s sacrifice on the cross covers our sin once and for all? Why or why not?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Read the story of Christ healing the blind beggar in John 9:1-12.  How does/did Christ use  this tell us  and His disciples about the relationship between sin and sickness? 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.     How should we respond to people who believe that God punishes His people with sickness for their sins?

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Devotional #4: Believing in God's Promises

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Devotional #4: Believing in God's Promises

Devotional #4: Believing in God’s Promises

 

“Not one of all the Lord’s good promises to Israel failed; every one was fulfilled.”

– Joshua 21:45 NIV

 

One of the more shocking remarks I heard during my cancer battle came only a week or two after my diagnosis.  A friend of mine called and said, “You need more faith. God’s answers are always ‘Yes and Amen.’”  I had heard this saying many time. Years later, I looked up the exact scripture and learned that my friend’s statement was scripturally unfounded, but served as a good reminder to not presume Christians are quoting or interpreting scripture accurately. The actual verse comes from 2 Corinthians 1:20, which states, “For no matter how many promises God has made, they are ‘Yes’ in Christ. And so through him the ‘Amen’ is spoken by us to the glory of God.”

 

Obviously God does not answer “Yes” to everything we ask of Him, regardless of how much faith we have. If that were not so, I would have won the lottery ten times over!  Of course, it  is right and proper for us to bring our requests before our God, especially for healing. This particular scripture, however, is talking about the promises of God, and not about our requests. It is true that God cannot renege on a promise. But it is equally untrue that by having enough faith God will always answer “yes and amen.” The next verse states, “Now it is God who makes both us and you stand firm in Christ.”  As a suffering person, I read this to say that I need to trust God to carry me and keep me firm through my painful journey. It also reminded me of particular promises God had made to me. I know that God cannot go back on His promises. This is shown throughout scripture, and it logically follows that if God is perfect, He would not be able to break His promises. To illustrate this, let’s consider the Israelites. By the time the scripture in Joshua declared that “Not one of the Lord’s good promise to Israel failed; every one was fulfilled,” I count five major promises that had been fulfilled. You may even be able to count more:

·      God promised Noah that He would never again destroy with Earth with a flood.- Genesis 9:8-11 NIV

·      God made a covenant to Abraham to greatly increase his numbers, make him the father of many nations, and to provide him and his descendants the land of Caanan- Genesis 17:1-8 NIV.

·      God promised Sarah she would give birth to Isaac in her old age.- Genesis 18:9-13 NIV.

·      God revealed to Joseph in a dream that his family would bow down to him. At time in Joseph’s life this appeared impossible, but God’s promise came to fulfillment and culminated in a beautiful story of forgiveness where Joseph told his brothers, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.” Genesis 37, 39-50 

·      God brought his people out of Egypt (Exodus) and into the Promised land. (Joshua 1-24).

 

If you or a loved one is fighting cancer undergoing any other form of life threatening illness, I encourage you to reflect on the promises He has made to you.  There are promises He makes to all of us: “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” Hebrews 13:5 NIV. If God has made promises to you (and He has), He will not fail you in those promises.

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

1.     Think of a promise God has made to you.  How has God fulfilled that promise?  If you are still waiting for the promise to be fulfilled, does the promise give you hope?  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Above, I referenced promises made to Abraham and the Israelites in the earlier Old Testament books. What other promises does God make throughout scripture?  How have we seen these promises fulfilled? 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.     How does God’s gift of salvation through Christ fulfill a promise, or promises?

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Devotional #3: The Beautiful Promise of Hope

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Devotional #3: The Beautiful Promise of Hope

Devotional #3: The Beautiful Promise of Hope

 

“And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”- I Corinthians 13:13.

 

As I mentioned in Devotional #2, one comment that always seemed to upset me when I was battling cancer was when people told me of people who died from the same cancer I had.  Of all painful statements or comments this was the most common.  While not necessarily scripturally unfounded, the effect was. These statements hurt…deeply. Instead of instilling faith, hope and love, these statements instilled doubt, fear and despair.  As Paul reminds us when everything else is lost,  “And now these three remain: faith, hope and love.” (I Corinthians 13:13 NIV). For people who already feel the rug has been pulled out underneath them, and are searching for those small reminders of hope, a statement like this can cause them more pain, and worse yet can lead to them running away from Christ.  The story of Michael that is referenced in Devotional  #1 is a good example of this.

 

Going deeper still, I have come to believe that the most damaging result of commenting on people who have died from cancer is that it destroys hope.  I now understand that Faith, Hope and Love work together.  Faith brings us to God. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith” Ephesians 2:8 NIV. Love provides the path by which we can be with God in eternity. “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16. Hope give us the strength to persevere in this  earthly world until we are united with God in eternity.  Hope also brings joy and the Lord delights in those who Hope.

 

Consider these scriptures:

 

“but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.”  Isaiah 40:31 NIV

 

“But the Lord takes pleasure in those who fear him, in those who hope in his steadfast love.” Psalm 147:11

 

“The hope of the righteous brings joy, but the expectation of the wicked will perish.” Proverbs 10:28

 

According to Psychology Today,  society today is facing “an epidemic of hopelessness.” This epidemic is resulting in increased deaths from suicide and drug/alcohol overdoses.  From 1999-2014, the annual U.S. suicide rate increase a shocking 24%! The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention reported that suicide was the 10th leading cause  of death in 2016. What is more, the suicide rate for persons with cancer is over 200% of that of the suicide rate for the general population.

Truly, hope is a beautiful gift that gives cancer patients, like me, the strength to carry on when all seems lost.  Next to the message of God’s gift of salvation through Christ, hope is perhaps the best gift someone can give to a cancer patient.  But, how can this gift be provided?  I suggest through scripture and positive affirmation.  Instead of telling a cancer patient about people who have died, try affirming their strength and God’s love for them.  This can be done simply by saying, “I am so sorry for what you are facing, but I know you are very strong.  With our Lord’s help you will pull through this,” or remind him/her of some scriptures that instill hope:

 

“Jesus replied, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.” Luke 18:27 NIV.

 

“God has said, ‘Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.’” Hebrews 13:5 NIV.

 

“no weapon forged against you will prevail,  and you will refute every tongue that accuses you. This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord,  and this is their vindication from me, declares the Lord.” Isaiah 54:17 NIV.

 

“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.” 2 Timothy 1:7 NKJV.

 

“The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still." Exodus 14:14  

NIV.

 

For those fighting cancer who are subjected to stories of people who have lost their lives to cancer, remind yourself that your story is different than anyone else’s and only God can dictate you story, and there is always hope in our Savior, Jesus Christ.  There are miracles upon miracles that people can share about how Christ has healed them—He still heals today.

           

So, how do we cancer patients respond to stories of death?  Often I just remain silent and walk away.  But, sometimes speaking the truth in love is necessary.  The day after my maternal grandmother died in 2019, I was scheduled to teach a workshop at a Legal Summit in Virginia Beach. The organization running the Summit graciously accommodated me. The President of the sponsoring organization took over my workshop so that I could leave for the funeral.  I arrived at the hotel the day before to deliver my Power Point to the President,  and to take advantage of a free hotel room to relax. 

To the general public, I stand out because I wear a cancer treatment device on my head that often draws attention to my condition.  At the hotel registration desk, a Catholic Priest proceeded to tell me about his cousin, a nun, who died from brain cancer.  Emotionally raw and sleep deprived, I took a big breath and said, “I’m sorry that happened to you, but such stories are not helpful to me.” He apologized and we went on our separate ways.  I felt this response was appropriate.  As someone representing the Catholic Church it was all the important for him to know how such statements can hurt more than help.

 

Finally, if your skin is tough enough that you are not bugged by stories of death, I’m glad for you. But, please keep in mind that many people are emotionally raw when battling cancer, and the gift of hope can be damaged by words. 

 

 

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

1.     Can you remember a time when you felt hopeless?  What help your hope to be restored?

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Read the story of Christ healing Lazarus. John 11:38-44.  Consider the hopelessness of Mary and Martha.  What does this story teach us about keeping hope in Christ, especially when we face illness?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.     Can you recall a time when someone said something that destroyed or lessened your hope?  How did you respond? Was your response appropriate, Why or why not?

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Devotional #2: Unwholesome Talk

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Devotional #2: Unwholesome Talk

Devotional 2: Unwholesome talk

 

“Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.” (Ephesians 4:29)

 

The most common complaint I hear from people undergoing tribulations, challenges, and pain is that others often tend to say incredibly insensitive things. Frequently, these people are Christians. Even worse, Christians sometimes say platitudes or statements about God that are not scripturally founded. I encountered this numerous times during my battle against Grade 4 brain cancer.  Among the ones I heard were (and yes, people really did say these things to me):

 

·      “Let me tell you the story of my mom, dad, friend, cousin, sibling…(fill-in the blank) who died from the cancer you have.”

 

·      “You need more faith. God’s answers are always ‘Yes and Amen.’”

 

·      “God is telling me that you have sin in your life that is keeping you from being healed.”

 

·      And my favorite, “God will never give you more than you can handle.”

 

For the sake of keeping today’s devotional at a reasonable length, in later devotionals, I will take each one of these comments individually to demonstrate the ways in which they are not scripturally sound and/or unhelpful to those who are undergoing crisis. I do this not to condemn those who have spoken such things, but rather to educate others on how their well-meaning attempts to sympathize often serve to cause more pain.

 

In Ephesians 4:29, the Lords instructs us, “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.”  While not necessarily unwholesome, certainly these statements did not benefit me nor did they build me up and were often misinterpretations of scripture.  I have come to understand that these statements were often ignorant and misguided attempts to sympathize with me in some way.

 

As I write this, I am reminded of a talk I heard from Ravi Zacharias, who recently went to heaven, about just months before the tumor was discovered in my brain. In recounting the story of Job and the statements of his friends, Ravi stated, “Sometimes you are better off remaining silent and shedding your tears with that individual than saying something that is going to hurt even more.”

 

Ravi went on to tell a story he experienced following his second back surgery.  He was not allowed to move for four days, except for a few minutes when he could request orderlies to turn him on his side.  On evening, Ravi desperately felt the need to turn. He called a nurse who insisted on turning him by herself. After explaining that earlier it took two strong men to turn him properly, the nurse insisted that she could do it.  When the nurse rammed her hands under his back, Ravi screamed.  The nurse responded, “You’ve had back surgery? I thought you had come for a hip replacement.”  Ravi relayed this lesson to the audience:  “You touch a healing wound in a wrong way, you will do greater damage [despite] any intent you may have had.”

 

I believe this talk is beneficial for everyone—those hurting and those seeking comfort—regardless of faith. It can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6Gl4ao8IzA

 

I hope this writing will help you as you seek to comfort others under the love and direction of Christ. If you have made such comments in the past, please know that Christ forgives and does not count it against you if you have accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior. “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit who gives life has set you free from the law of sin and death” (Romans 8:1-2 NIV).

 

For me, it took loosing my nephew, divorce and brain cancer to fully understand just how wrong I was to make insensitive comments to suffering people in the past.  I have learned in these years to simply say, “I am heartbroken for you, I love you, and I’m praying for you. If you, like me, have made past mistakes, I encourage you to seek forgiveness from our Lord, and consider what you might say, or not say, to suffering people in the future.

 

If you are on the receiving end of such comments, I encourage you to respond with grace, as hard as that might be and as hurt as you may feel.  As scripture says, “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” (Colossians 4:9 NIV).  I personally believe an appropriate response is to say nothing at all and simply walk away and give it to the Lord.

 

Additionally, it is scripturally appropriate to respond by speaking “truth in love.” As Paul wrote to the church in Ephesus: “Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head, that is, Christ.” (Ephesians 4:15 NIV).  It is perfectly appropriate to say “Thank You for your concern, but I do not receive you statement/story because God has healed me; because I have a different story; because you don’t know enough about my situation to pass judgment on me.” In Devotional 3, you will hear a story of how this happened to me and a truth in love response I gave to a priest.

 

 

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

1.     Do you remember a time of extreme suffering in your life? What comments or actions were the most helpful?

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Read Psalm 139: 7-12. What does this say to the person suffering? What does this say to the person who has said something hurtful to a suffering person? 

 

 

 

 

 

3.     What do you consider an appropriate response to someone suffering should be? Have you ever said something inappropriate to a suffering person? If so, what would you say in the future.

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Devotional #1: Running Toward Christ

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Devotional #1: Running Toward Christ

Devotional 1: Running Toward Christ

 

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? - Romans 8:28 (NIV)

 

Throughout my life, I have observed that when Christians face trouble, trial and tribulations, they tend to react in one of two ways—running toward Christ or running away from Him. Early on in my life, I determined that I would cling to Christ in times of trouble, rather than running away from him.

 

The reality of people either clinging to, or running away from, Christ in times of trouble became dramatically apparent to me during a chance encounter I had with a man named Michael on a flight from Washington, D.C. to Texas a few years after the passing of my nephew Elijah.  I had arrived at Dulles airport for an early evening Friday flight, clad in a business suit having just finished the workweek. Then divorced and not wearing a wedding ring, more than one man attempted to converse with me; however, I was not in a talkative mood.  I had several unpleasant flight experiences with men wanting to “hook up” upon arrival—and many of them were married. When I boarded my flight, I was relieved to find the seat next to me empty.  As the time for departure approached, the seat was still vacant!  Could I be so lucky to have the only vacant seat in this large airplane next to me?

 

Just at the last minute, Michael boarded the plane and took the seat next to me. This was back in the days were you could not use your cell phone during take off or landing.  So, when Michael introduced himself, I decided to plunge into a conversation because I did not want to be rude.  Michael actually was a polite, respectful, and friendly man. When he asked what I did for a living, I told him that I worked for a pro-life Christian ministry that assisted women and families facing unplanned pregnancies.  Usually that response would end the questioning, but not for Michael.  We proceeded to discuss our views on abortion and Christ.  This ultimately led me to learn that Michael was a cancer survivor.  He also unabashedly told me that he “used to be a Christian,” and explained that he had led people to Christ and knew that it takes, in his words, “as much faith to be an atheist as it does to be a Christian.”  I asked him to tell me more because I thought most people who survive cancer grow closer to God. Instead of elaborating about himself, Michael asked me to tell him about my journey with Christ. 

 

I proceeded to tell Michael about how I had lost a nephew Elijah and how only the love of Christ got me through the pain, which was still very real.  At some point, Michael turned his head away from me. When I briefly looked over at Michael, I saw streams of tears running down his face.  I felt compelled to apologize.  Michael told me, “No. You don’t understand. Years ago, I lost my son in almost the exact same way. That is why I stopped being a Christian.” Michael was one of the many who run away from Christ in times of trouble. Of course, this was understandable given the excruciating and relentless grief that comes when one looses a child.

 

We proceeded to talk the remainder of the flight about the thoughtless and painful remarks Christians made to us during our experiences in loosing a child. Upon landing, Michael said, “I think God may have sat us together today.” I responded, “I think He did Michael, I think He did.”  I don’t know what happened to Michael after that, but I have often wondered.  I hope and pray he returned to Christ. Maybe he will read this someday and remember.

 

What makes Michael’s story so beautiful is that even though Michael ran away from Christ, Christ did not run away from Michael. Hebrews 13:5 reminds us that that God has said, “I will never leave you nor will I forsake you.” Psalm 139:7-10 reveals that we are not able to hide from God, even if we make our “bed in the depths.”

          

                    “Where can I go from your Spirit?

                                           Where can I flee from your presence?

If I go up to the heavens, you are there;

                                           If I make my bed in the depths, you are there.

If I rise on the wings of the dawn,

                                            If I settle on the far side of the sea,

Even there your hand will guide me,

                                            Your right hand will hold me fast.”

 

If your reaction to pain has been to run away from God, it is never too late to run back.  God will joyfully welcome you with His open arms.

 

For Additional Study & Discussion

 

1.     Are you someone who clings to Christ in trouble, or runs away from Christ?

 

 

 

 

 

2.     Read the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32).  How is this an analogy of God’s faithfulness to us, even when we turn away?

 

 

 

 

 

3.     Can you think of a time when a child or loved one clinged to you when they were hurting or afraid? How did that make you feel?  How did you respond to him/her? How can that be an analogy as to how God feels when we cling to Him?

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Preface: My Story

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Preface: My Story

Preface: My Story

 

This is a story about suffering. It is also story about miracles. It’s a story about anger, love, sorrow, joy, stumbling, and faith.  Ultimately, it is a story of victory.  This is my story—one I share with many others.  If you are reading this, it may be similar to your story too—at least parts of it. From the beginning, I must say that I do not presume you and I have the exact same story, but I am acutely aware that we may have walked a similar path. Of course, part of being human is to suffer and undergo tribulation at points in our life.  I fail to think of a single individual who has escaped this reality. How do we, as humans, get through the hard, even excoriating, events of life? The death of a child…divorce…broken relationships…terminal cancer…fill-in-your-blank.

 

As I write this, I am a women in my 30s who has experienced all the above.  When I was 24, I lost an infant nephew to a undetected heart conduction; around that same time, I was rejected by certain family members that I loved dearly; I was divorced at age 28; suffered through my parents’ divorce at age 30, and soon after I turned 36, I was diagnosed with Grade 4 Glioblastoma Multiforme, a terminal cancer. I have buried a beloved child, fought to forgive, felt the devastating disaster of divorce (mine and my parents), and courageously conquered terminal cancer.

 

I write this not to complain, and not even to understand, but to share in hopes that  it may provide comfort and hope to others—and there is comfort and hope. I know there are people who have gone through much worse; I have met many of those people. Again, I seek not to compare nor to provide explanation, but to sympathize. I hope you will keep reading as I tell you my story.

 

I was 19 years old and at home from my freshman year in college for a long weekend. I had been talked into attending a Christian spiritual retreat called “Walk to Emmaus.” I didn’t want to be there. My four-day weekend home was limited and already cut short by the two days required of me to travel to my college in Fulton, Missouri. I had followed Christ since being a very young girl, having accepted Jesus as my personal Lord and Savior at a Baptist Church in Ada, Oklahoma. I didn’t see much purpose in me attending a spiritual retreat.

 

After the mid-1980’s oil bust, my family moved from Ada to Amarillo, TX. I was five years old, and conveniently in between preschool and kindergarten. My dad had accepted a position as a sales representative for company that has now been bought and sold many times. My dad remained with them through each transition for over 35 years. My mother quickly found her perfect niche as the Executive Director of a small pregnancy center ministry that would soon grow, under her leadership, to one of the most successful pregnancy ministry operations in the region, the Care Net Pregnancy Centers of Amarillo. She would eventually be recruited by the National Leadership of Care Net, which would move my parents to the Washington, D.C. area in the early 2000s.

 

Amarillo, population 120,000 back then, was a dusty conservative city, with a small-town feel, in the middle of the Texas Panhandle. I would describe Amarillo as being, literally in the middle of nowhere. Lubbock, the closest city of comparable size, was a decent two-hour drive away. Oklahoma City was four hours in another direction. Further still, you could be in Colorado Springs, two states away, in 6 hours, which ironically was about the same amount time to drive to the Dallas metroplex within our own state. 

 

As for Amarillo’s social climate, envision a Western-motley mixture of cowboys (“kickers”), zealous “religious-righters,” apathetic “new money,” the upper-middle class families that resembled a western version of the Northern Virginia suburbia I would experience later in my life, “old money”—decedents of the oil barons and cattle ranchers who had settled the panhandle in the early 1900s.  On the fringes were the punks, grunges, and rockers. While I had friends, or at least close acquaintances, in most of the social groups, I had a unique problem growing up in Amarillo. I didn’t seem to fully fit squarely into any single group. Looking back, I find this to have been more positive than negative. It forced me to develop a firm yet independent self-identity.

 

Everyone in Amarillo had one thing in common. Regardless of your background, social status or cultural preferences, everyone found themselves in church on Sunday morning. The churches were plentiful and of wide variety—large, small; traditional, unconventional; Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Non-denominational, Catholic, Pentecostal, Charismatic and everything in between. Even those “Cowboy Kickers” had a church devoted to them called “Cowboy Church,” as was prominently displayed on its sign.  Of course, with any decent sized city, Amarillo was rounded out with a Synagogue and a Mosque.  Amarillo was full of churches of such shapes and sizes that anyone could find one suitable to his/her religious, cultural and social preference.

 

As an adolescent and young adult, I was very much a work hard, play hard, and nap hard person. Anxious to take advantage of every opportunity, I engrossed myself in so many extra-curricular activities that a college recruiter who called one evening remarked that she was shocked to find me at home. She wasn’t too far off. I was an A student with multiple honors classes under my belt, played Trombone in the marching band for two years (always in second or first chair), a member of the National Honor Society, the Treasurer of Amarillo High School’s computer club, winner of an art competition, and I even unsuccessfully attempted to persuade the theater director to cast me as the Plant in our high school production of “Little Shop of Horrors.”  On community affairs, I was no slouch either. I advocated before the City Counsel against imposing an unconstitutional curfew on Amarillo teenagers, participated annually in the local March for Life, volunteered at my mom’s pregnancy center, and hobnobbed beyond my years with Congressmen, local religious leaders, businessmen and the like.

 

All these activities paled in comparison to the joy and success I experienced in Speech and Debate. I spent weekends upon weekends at competitions. During weeknights, I poured over research and read the works of philosophers to perfect my arguments.  My efforts did not fail me. I quickly developed a reputation of being one of the best Lincoln-Douglas debaters in Texas. My sophomore year, I placed in the top 16 Lincoln-Douglas debaters in Texas. My junior year, I placed 11th in the nation for Student Congress. My senior year I placed fifth in Texas in Extemporaneous Speaking, and represented my region at the national tournament in both Extemporaneous Speaking and Lincoln-Douglas debate.  And, being a dutiful Christian, I seldom missed Wednesday night youth group or a Sunday morning church service. 

 

Notably absent from my laundry list of activities was anything sports related. This seemed unusual given my pedigree. My dad, a towering 6 foot 5 inch strong man, had played basketball and football for Wichita State University on a full-ride scholarship. My Achilles heel was my health. Since age six I had suffered from debilitating migraine headaches. These were not just headaches. The migraines caused me to loose my vision, vomit and suffer in excruciating pain. It would often take days for me to recover.  Migraines would continue to plague my younger adulthood, in varying degrees of severity, until I underwent surgery for a Grade 4 Glioblastoma Multiforme brain tumor at age 36.

 

At age 8, I was diagnosed with mononucleosis, only to be diagnosed again at age 11. My doctor explained that, despite conventional understanding, a person could get the disease twice so long as it was two different strains. All in all, these ailments wiped out my immunities and I seemed to catch every virus, cold, and flu imaginable.  As much as I tried, I simply could not make it to class everyday. The spirit was willing but the body was not. Nonetheless, I always kept up with my activities and grades, all while dealing with multiple doctor visits, and unsympathetic and sometime cruel teachers and classmates.

 

I was bullied frequently by students who would mock me saying things like, “Why did you miss school yesterday; did you stub your toe?” followed by barrels of laughs by the other students.  Little did they care to know that the day before my head had been pounding, and I could not stand without vomiting.  Teachers were often on-lookers and just as bad.  More than once I was publicly ridiculed in front of class by teachers for missing class. Even a letter from my infectious disease doctor did not seem to lessen the harassment. One time I was even called before both the principal and vice-principal of my Middle School and questioned about my personal health issues without my parents’ presence, knowledge or consent. I had often fanaticized that they could step into my body for just a small period of time to experience just how bad I truly felt. As for emotions, I tended to be a “stuffer.” Instead of sharing, I stuffed my troubles inside, and I rarely complained. I came to learn later that being a “stuffer” is one of the worst things for your health and may have contributed to my health issues later in life.

 

I didn’t know it then, but my health would continue to haunt me into my adulthood. Shortly before starting college, I was diagnosed with a tachycardia condition. A cardiologist even recommended I travel to Dallas for a heart surgery. I declined, and I would eventually grow out of the tachycardia. Still, among my books, clothes and other belongings, I left for Westminster College in 1998 with a bottle of heart medication I was to take everyday.

 

College was a much better experience for me.  The Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri had awarded me the “Winston Churchill Scholarship,” named after the lager-then-life leader who had guided his island-nation through World War II and later warned of the impending spread of Totalitarian Communism in his 1946 “Iron Curtain” speech, delivered on the small Missouri campus of my Alma Mater.  The Churchill Scholarship covered my tuition for four years. I had received other scholarships, which helped cover my room and board. All in all, I believe my family spent $3,000 on expenses during my four years at Westminster.

 

Ultimately, I would be just as successful at Westminster as I had been in high school. I graduated with a perfect straight ‘A’ average and a slue of extra-curricular activities, including a semester abroad at the University of Sunderland in the United Kingdom.  My grades, activities, combined with an impressive LSAT score landed me acceptance into Harvard Law School. Much to the chagrin of some of my professors, I turned down Harvard in favor of a $30,000 a year scholarship to Boston University School of Law, although not Ivy League, still a Tier 1 law school. 

 

When I was back home for a weekend break my Freshman year, I felt confident in my relationship with Christ and secure in my future.  I didn’t see why I should be wasting my precious time at this event called “Walk to Emmaus.” I was plotting my escape. I had determined that I would fake an illness and have my parents return me to the familiarity of my house and family. But, my efforts were futile.  The Emmaus people had an ample supply of over the counter medication. Besides, they were nice, the food was good, and I wasn’t a quitter.  I stuck it out.  During certain times in the event, a person would stand up and give a testimony of some great work God had done in their lives, always following something horrible they had experienced—abuse, broken relationships, death of a loved one, illness, the list went on and on. It seemed one by one the attendees, who were all young women around my age, were connecting with someone who had a similar life experience. I could not relate. My health issues aside, the most pain event in my life had been losing my dog Misha to old age when I was 15. I had a loving family, successful life, good friends, and blessings upon blessings; even all four of my grandparents were still alive. Toward the end of the retreat, the woman who led worship announced that she had loved Christ since her childhood and had never had anything tragic happen to her—that was the person I could relate to, that was the testimony I wanted. 

 

Today, I still believe it’s a beautiful testimony and one I want for my nieces and nephews. But for me it wasn’t meant to be. Starting with the tragic death of my baby nephew Elijah when I was 24, I have experienced broken relationships, divorce, my parents’ divorce, difficult co-workers, and multiple health issues culminating the diagnosis of a deadly form of brain cancer at age 36, a cancer that leaves so few survivors that statistics are hard to come by.

 

About a month following my graduation from Westminster, I married by college sweetheart. For the sake of anonymity, I shall refer to him as “Matt.” Matt had already taken up residence in Boston attending another law school. I was madly in love with Matt and annoyed many friends and colleagues with my constant talking about him.  Matt graduated after my first year of law school and found work as a prosecutor in New Hampshire (where his parents lived).  I accepted a position as a “summer associate” in a large law firm in Manchester, New Hampshire during the summer following my second year.

 

The previous Christmas, my brother and his wife had surprised our family during our Christmas Eve dinner in Washington, D.C. with the news that they were pregnant!  For a family that had dedicated its whole life to saving women and unborn children from the destruction of abortion, this was quite exciting news.  I remember seeing Elijah’s sweet sonogram picture that Christmas Eve. When I went to pick up Matt from the airport that night, I purchased a stuffed Winnie-the-Pooh Bear to put under the Christmas tree for Christmas morning, simply saying “To Elijah, From Santa.” After all, Elijah was already part of our family. I spend a good deal of the time from then on dreaming of future Christmas mornings and the excitement of having a small child in our family once again.  I was determined to be the best aunt I could be.

 

In early July, I received the long awaited phone call from my brother.  Elijah Sun Dixon had arrived. I could hear my nephew’s cries in the background. I told my brother to send pictures as soon as he was able. About half an hour later, I received another phone call. Before, I could start with conversation, my mother said, “Jeanneane, something’s wrong.” When I inquired more, the response was “just pray.” It was late into the evening but I stayed up, called on my friends to pray and remained on my knees until early the next morning. At 5:00am, my father called and simply said, “We lost him.” Those three words irreversibly changed my life. I would later learn Elijah had been the victim of a congenital heart defect.  While the condition was operable, little Elijah was not well enough to make the helicopter ride to the Children’s Hospital in Dallas. Fifteen years later, I still grieve.

 

The funeral weekend in Amarillo was nothing short of grueling—emotionally, mentally and physically. For a week, I lived on about 2 hours of sleep every night. My days were spent consoling my family, helping plan an infant’s funeral, driving extended family around, and removing reminders of the tragedy.  The most painful memory occurred when I accompanied my brother and sister-in-law to the funeral parlor to see the baby.  The director brought Elijah out, wrapped in a blanket and placed him in his mother’s arms, as streams of tears ran down her face. I stepped out of the room, to give them some privacy, and I could hear my brother wailing, “My son. My son.” I was a mess, but trying to “keep it together” for my family. I pledged that I would give my nephew the best funeral I could, since that would be the only thing I could ever do for him.  During the viewing, I took some time to talk with Elijah.  I told him that I wanted to do so much more for him, all I could do now is help his family, and that I was excited to be reunited with him in heaven someday.

 

It is true that Satan likes to kick you when you are down.  My dreams of giving Elijah the best funeral possible were fraught with difficulty.  Certain members of my extended family  protested every decision from who was selected to ride in the limousines to our request that only adults be allowed into the viewing. Significant misunderstandings would result in four of my extended family members missing the burial service and verbal altercations during the post-funeral reception. Regrettably, within days of returning to New Hampshire, a hostile phone call would result in me being disconnected from one side of my extended family for years.   For a 24-year-old whose worst experience at that point was loosing a pet, this was just too much for me to handle. Still, I plugged on, stuffing my emotions inside and confiding in no one.  I finished off my summer clerkship, and started my third year of law school as accomplished as ever.

 

But beneath the surface, I was struggling more than anyone knew. Eventually, I would stop going to classes where attendance was not mandatory. My grades would suffer, but by God’s grace I would still graduate cum laude with the cut off point being my exact GPA to the one hundredth place!  For the most part, Matt was supportive during this time, but he could understand why I was grieving so hard. Matt simply could not grasp the tragedy of what happened to my family. Nonetheless, our marriage seemed stable. For the next three years, we rarely fought, went to church and small group every week, had date nights, and made plans for the future.

 

Soon after graduating law school and taking the New Hampshire Bar exam, I started practicing law as an associate attorney in commercial litigation in the same law firm where I had clerked the summer before. Things seemed to be going great. I enjoyed my work (and of course getting a paycheck).  I started to make friends, had a wonderful small group, and in classic Jeanneane style, took up several volunteer positions within my church and the community. Matt and I had even purchased a house within a year and a half of my starting work. I was excited to decorate it, however frugally, and dreamed of filling it with children.

 

While things seemed rosy for me, they apparently were not for Matt.  To this day I don’t know exactly why it happened.  But, about four and a half years into our marriage, Matt returned home from a Conference and informed me that he didn’t love me anymore, that he wanted a divorce, and that he was not willing to go to counseling.  I did not see it coming. Naturally, I was devastated. Hindsight being 20/20, I can now look back and see there were definite red flags. At the time, however, I was too naïve, hopeful, and trusting to see them.

 

But, God was faithful to reset my life on a course my bringing me to serve as the General Counsel of Care Net (a non-profit national affiliation organization for pregnancy resource centers) at the young age of 28. The next several years would be fraught with joys and pain. On the pain side, I would suffer from additional heartbreaks, contact Lyme Disease, undergo a thyroidectomy, and experience my parent’s divorce. But, loving my job at Care Net, I experienced great success. I traveled, met influential people from all over the country, and started to get media coverage. I also made dear friends.

 

These privileges would be greatly extended when, after about 5 years of service, I transitioned to my position as Vice-President of External Affairs for Americans United for Life. I would have many of the same privileges as before but with more media and speaking opportunities and more management responsibilities. These were all short-lived. After only three years, my health would force me to resign, and I would find myself diagnosed with terminal brain cancer at age 36.  I now write having survived 160 days of chemotherapy, over the course of two years, 30 days of radiation, a 7-hour brain surgery, and over two years of recovery. 

 

As grim as my story appears, as I stated before, this is a story of Victory! Not my victory, but a story of how my weakness was made strong in Christ. I now invite you join me in a 40-day devotional, in which I will share more of my story of Hope and the Love of a God who wants to take our pains and trials upon himself and give us joy in our sufferings. If you are reading this, I imagine you have walked, or are walking down a path of pain, trial, or suffering.  While everyone’s circumstances and experiences are different, and I cannot possibly know what you are going through, my hope is that the following days are a blessing and encouragement to you on your own personal journey.

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