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He Restores My Soul

3 / 9 / 17
“He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul.” Psalm 23:2-3

I find myself yearning for quiet places. Some say I am hiding. Some say I am grieving. Some say I am hibernating during this dark season. Some say I am antisocial. Some say I am different. I don’t know who is right. Perhaps they all are correct. The quiet places have become my refuge–my safe space.

I wanted these quiet spaces after I lost Ella. I took them for the first few weeks after I lost her. I needed them just as I needed air to breathe. Quickly I began to feel pushed back into “normal” life. I struggled with what “normal” life looked like when I felt anything but “normal” anymore.

Finding your path while grieving is tricky. There is a lot of advice and preconceptions out there about what your grief should look like. I struggled with my own preconceptions, let alone trying to balance the “shoulds” of others.

There were many ways I tried to do grief the “right way.” After doing that grieving thing for several weeks, I started to completely break down. Emotionally, mentally, and physically, I was losing control.

Blake and I were driving in the car when the song “Just Be Held” came on by Casting Crowns. I sat there for a few moments and said, “That song is what I am trying to say.” He waited, giving me time to digest and process, or maybe he was trying to just choose his words carefully. We were on shaky ground. He could see me falling apart. And I could see the fear and hopelessness in his eyes because he knew that he couldn’t fix it. He finally said, “Tell me what you heard in that song.”

That song was my AH-HA moment, maybe the most important AH-HA moment of my life. It took me back to the mission field the first week we arrived. We were at a retreat. We were listening to a series on Law and Gospel. I remembered an important distinction that was made about Law and Gospel: Law is what we do, and Gospel is what God does. Our presenter went on to say that in every moment when you encounter someone, you have to carefully discern whether to give that person Law or Gospel. Is this a moment where they need to do something, or do they need to hear what God has done, is doing, and will continue to do?

I realized while listening to the lyrics:

“You’re not alone, stop holding on and just be held… I’m on the throne, stop holding on and just be held.”

People kept giving me Law (including myself) and what I needed was Gospel. My broken heart could not be fixed by anything that I could do. This was the time to turn everything to God. It was time for Him to work. It was time for me to be still. I needed to be held.

I have come to understand that most people (my former self included) do not know what to say to broken, hurting people. Even the really good sounding things to say end up being wrong, and a lot of people don’t say anything at all. Week after week I heard great advice like: “Trust in Jesus,” “Cling to His Word,” “Remember the gifts He has given you.” The list went on. I struggled with this advice. It was hard to hear, and it took me a really long time to understand why. I came to realize that when other people would usher in a response of “encouraging words,” it made me feel as if they were uncomfortable sitting with me in my grief– like they were trying to rush me through the moment. I treasured the friends who would sit with me and just be sad in the moment, often times without words at all. I also realized that while I was given a great list of Biblical advice, It was all law. It was all a list of what I should do–all verbs requiring my action.

These action verbs were so hard to hear because I knew that I was totally and completely inadequate to heal my broken self. There was no amount of trust, clinging, or prayer that could come out of my heart to put myself back together. When I tried to do any of those actions, they didn’t heal me; they left me more broken. I was at the point of collapse…until I heard the words, “just be held.”

I wasn’t supposed to do anything at all. I needed to stop trying. I needed to let it all go. I needed to be held, and I needed to hide in His arms. I stopped feeling guilty for finding alone time. I stopped trying to DO grieving. I hid in His Word. I sat with my Bible open alone. Sometimes I would read. Sometimes I would just sit. Sometimes I would letter out verses or lyrics. Sometimes I would find peace and understanding. Sometimes I would process through emotions. I began to notice that when a few days would pass without me intentionally hiding in His Word, I would start to fall apart.

Not long after I lost Ella, I scribbled a verse on the cover of my Bible, “You are my hiding place” Psalm 32:7. Funny how I didn’t truly understand that this was the path I should have taken right away in my grieving. Maybe I needed to stare at it time and time again until it finally sank in.

There was a verse I remember learning as a child that I never understood. It was also a popular worship song from the 80s that would likely get stuck in your head. This verse used to drive me crazy… Oh how grief opens your eyes… Often when I read passages now they take on a completely new meaning.

“Where shall I go from Your Spirit?
Or where shall I flee from Your presence?
If I ascend to heaven, You are there!
If I make my bed in Sheol, You are there!
If I take the wings of the morning
and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
even there Your hand shall lead me,
and Your right hand shall hold me.
If I say, surely the darkness shall cover me,
and the light about me be night,”
even the darkness is not dark to You;
the night is bright as the day
for darkness is as light with You.”
Psalm 139:7-12

My former self did not understand. The author isn’t trying to run from God. The “where shall I go from your Spirit?” isn’t looking for a place away from God, it’s a reminder that God will be with you when you want or need to hide from the world. When your life comes crashing down and when you find it hard to breathe, God is there. When you have nowhere to go and need to find a safe place, God will lead you there. When your world is dark and you are walking through the valley of the shadow of death… God sees light in your darkness. He sees the hope in your future even when you can’t. This was written by someone who needed comfort, who needed to escape the trials of this broken world, who needed to find a safe space, who needed to hide. The author isn’t trying to run from God but reminding himself that God will be there always when he runs from the weight of the sinful and broken world.

Right now I need to take the wings of the morning to hide from the broken world. Oh the irony. It is beautiful the way God writes our stories. As I sit here reading these verses, I know it is by His poetic design that I live on an island in the Caribbean Sea. He knew I would be needing to take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea. Never before in my life did dwelling in the uttermost parts of the sea sound so comforting. But it does now, and I am already here. God led me here because He knew this is what I would need.

I need to run. But I need to know that no matter how far I run, it won’t be too far for God. He will be there. He will not only find me, but He will lead me to my hiding place. I need to hide, and His right hand will hold me as I hide. This is where I believe He will heal me. And I need to believe that He sees the light in my darkness. He sees the hope when I cannot. He sees past the broken me. He knows the plans that He has for me. He sees the future. I do not. I don’t need to. I just need to be held. Because I know that He will restore my soul–in the middle of the sea–in the safety of His right hand.

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Twelve Months: Reflections of a Missionary Mom

2 / 8 / 17

 

 

 

We have been in the Dominican Republic for a year!  That is a big deal.  Now because nothing about our (missionary) lives has been simple or according to plan, it has not been a consecutive twelve months.  But as a family, we have lived here, in our Dominican Republic house, for twelve months all the same.  So we decided to celebrate – even if we don’t have the one-year Facebook timehop to commemorate this special day.

We celebrated the best way we know how:  discovering a new adventure on this island we call home.  We also got to experience this adventure with great friends.  So we took a boat and went to see the whales.  Samana is known for being near the breeding waters of humpback whales in the winter months.  Samana is also one of the most beautiful spots on the island.  Whale-watching  was everything we had hoped it would be and so much more.  We spotted five different humpback whales, listened to a male singing, and learned so much from our knowledgeable crew.   We enjoyed a great day with some of our favorite friends.

After living here for twelve months, I would like to reflect on what mission life in the Dominican Republic has turned out to be for our family–how it has lived up to my expectations and how it has differed from my expectations.

So after twelve months I have concluded:

Not having a dishwasher  –  not that big of a deal

Not having a dryer  –  not that big of a deal

Not having a microwave  –  not that big of a deal

Having to put your toilet paper in the trash  –  still a big deal

Biggest surprise:  I thought for sure by now one of us would have come down with dengue.  That has not happened.  While among the four of us we have sported hundreds and maybe even thousands of bites, none of them has brought on anything more than bothersome itching.  No tropical diseases as of yet.

Most expected challenge:  I anticipated learning Spanish to be hard, but I had no idea how hard it truly is to learn a new language.  I feel like I was doing ok before I was sent back to the states, but then I lost most of what I did learn. Then I experienced the trauma of losing a baby, and ultimately, my brain broke.  I have no better way to describe it, but there are a lot of things I am relearning in English, and while I want to be able to speak Spanish, my brain just isn’t at the point where I can start tackling that challenge again.  Blake, however, can communicate quite well for us.  Even he says he would like to dedicate more time to continue to study the language.  This is one area all four of us could still use your prayers.

Most unexpected challenge:  driving – I never anticipated the anxiety I would have at the thought of driving down here.  I have driven within the neighborhood and if there was an emergency, I could get us to the hospital or the airport or the grocery store.  But the cultural differences in driving were far greater than I anticipated.  I have not mastered the day-to-day driving.  I simply wait until Blake is available to drive us to the store or wherever else we need to go.  Maybe this is something I will conquer in the future, but for the time being, I have released myself from the pressure to drive.

Biggest perk of our new location:  the beach.   We live about an hour away from the beach.  We try to get away once a month and enjoy the beauty God has placed near us.  We have experienced beautiful beach sunsets, great sand play, wonderful beach food, and relaxing times with friends.  This mountain girl is now singing a different tune when it comes to living near the beach.

Biggest perk of mission life:  this is a family job.  Yes, Blake is the one officially working, but we are all missionaries.  We have learned, this last year especially, that it takes all four of us to be successful down here.  This mission life only works if all four of us are committed and present in this mission life.  With this being a family job, our family is also included in mission responsibilities and activities.  What an honor and privilege to serve God and the church here in the mission field.  This also means we get a whole lot more of Blake in our daily lives than we ever used to in the states.  That is a huge perk of mission life.

Scariest moment:  We recently took our oldest daughter to the hospital because she had been throwing up for over 24 hours and became severely dehydrated.  She was eventually admitted to the hospital to run extra tests and replenish her fluids.  While the conditions of the hospital and the friendliness of the staff exceeded our expectations, the experience itself was still terrifying.  An overnight hospital stay with your child would be scary even in your hometown and in your native language.  Navigating those cultural differences and language challenges only multiplies a  parent’s concerns and anxieties.  It took quite a few days for our family to process and recover from the stress of that experience.

Favorite memory:  The first couple weeks we were here in the country, Blake and I slept on an air mattress.  We did not have air conditioning, and it was in the middle of August – the hottest and most humid month of the year.  We did not have a TV or internet.  We were still living out of many, many suitcases.  We didn’t even have chairs so when we wanted to sit, we sat on the hard, tile floor.  I remember vividly being scared to sleep, imagining all the creepy crawly things that would climb through our open windows (which did not have screens) and right onto my toes that inevitably hung off the end of the air mattress.  I also remember…they never came.  The best part of that first two weeks:  we had nothing to do when we put the girls to bed.  We either talked or we played cards–because we found the deck of cards and the cribbage board even if we hadn’t found the silverware yet.  As difficult as those first two weeks were, we experienced them together, as a couple and as a family, and we are stronger for it.

 

Funniest moment:  The Caribbean is hot and humid.  We had some very cool 80-degree weather in December and January, but every other month of the year we feel as if we are melting.  So pretty much every day you will find me in a tank top or sleeveless shirt.  This is also the attire of most women you find in the neighborhood or the stores.  Well, this past year I learned while it is quite common to see women wearing tank tops, it is considered inappropriate for official business.  Unfortunately, I learned this when I was trying to get my picture taken to get my Dominican residence card.  I was wearing a tank top blouse.  They would not take my picture unless I put on a more appropriate shirt.  So thankfully for me, Blake keeps a spare shirt in the car.  Too bad it was his orange whiffle-ball shirt.  But hey, I got to take my picture, and I have a Dominican residence card. The icing on the cake of this great story is my sweet husband instagrammed the moment.  If I can’t laugh at days like this, I wouldn’t be able to survive mission life.   

Biggest annoyance:  The bugs.  While the creepy crawly creatures haven’t found their way onto my toes while I am sleeping (Praise the Lord!), they have been able to drive me crazy.  Many missionaries here keep food like chips, cereal, uncooked pasta, flour, oreos, and much more in their fridge because the ants and other tiny insects find their way into sealed packages.  The ants also like to hang out in your house even if you don’t have food laying around.  For some reason the ants hang out in my laptop.  Many times my girls have heard me scream in frustration when the ants climb through my keyboard.  This has brought them much amusement and entertainment.  We often deal with slugs across the floor and the lovely trail they leave behind. If the bugs aren’t going after your food or in your bed, you usually just let them be.  There just isn’t a way to completely rid your house of all the bugs.

What I have gained:  I have gained a new perspective.  It is invaluable, and I am grateful for this new perspective.   I have dubbed myself the queen of trivial complaints.  I complain and sometimes even whine about the tiniest, most insignificant problems that bother me.  I complain about the ants, losing power, the humidity, the dirt, and the list goes on.   This is not a new title for me.  In my former life, I used to complain about my Starbucks drink not being correct, my take-out order not being perfect, wanting a pedicure, and not wanting to load my dishes in the dishwasher…  ALL complaints from former me and current me are equally trivial.  The difference is that now I understand the insignificance of these trivial complaints.  The truth is: I have a lot to be thankful for in this life.  I have many luxuries that I still take for granted, but even more importantly, I live each day by the grace of God.  This I understand on a whole new level down here.  Every time I catch myself complaining now, I also remember to thank God for the many gifts I have in my life.

What I have lost:  What I have lost:  I lost friendships.  This one hurts.  People warned me it would happen.  It stung when I heard the warnings, perhaps because I knew it would be true.  It isn’t really anyone’s fault either.  It is hard to keep a friendship when you are miles and oceans apart.  It takes time, and it takes effort.  Life is busy – especially the lives of moms.  So I get it.  I get that writing takes time that most of my friends do not have because I often don’t have the time either. While I miss so many friendships that used to be more present in my life, this also makes me appreciate the friends (so much more than I could ever express) who do find the time to write and send me care packages.  I am beyond thankful for the friendships that have survived this transition into mission life.

What do I miss: I miss the things you probably wouldn’t think about.  I miss watching the news in English.  I miss going to Target.  I miss the convenience of everything.  It is hard to explain but life just takes longer and more effort here in the DR.  I miss worshipping in English on Sundays.  I miss feeling like I belong.  I miss playgrounds and libraries.  I miss Starbucks and In-and-Out burgers.  I miss the hugs from the family and friends. Being able to talk over Facetime is great, but there isn’t technology available to replace the hugs.

What am I most thankful for about this missionary life:  I am thankful we serve on the regional team and live among other missionary families.  We get to see missionaries before they deploy to their fields and form friendships with all of them (I won’t mention the hard goodbyes).  We get to do missionary life with other families, and I know this is not the case for all missionary families in the field. I am very thankful for the missionary friends I have within my neighborhood.

I am also beyond thankful each time we get to personally witness God at work here in the Dominican Republic.  Every confirmation, baptism, and new member attending a church service is the amazing work of God.  Witnessing the work of the Holy Spirit in the Dominican Republic and across the region is nothing short of a beautiful gift.

Above all, I am thankful that God chose us.  He chose us for this missionary life.  Even though we are terrible at it so much of the time,  God chose to use us to do His work: sharing with others the beautiful and unfailing love that He has for each of us–a love that runs so deep that God sacrificed His Son so that we might have eternal life with Him.  Not because we are worthy but because He is good.  “This is not of our own doing so that no one may boast…” Ephesians 2:9  And He has chosen us to share this good news alongside so many brilliant men and women.  We have learned so much.  We have gained so much.  We are so thankful that we have survived the past twelve months and that God has given us this incredible life.  

 

Ephesians 2:8-9

 

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Lift Your Drooping Hands

1 / 22 / 171 / 22 / 17

There are so many rewards that come from serving God in the mission field.  However, we are not always privileged to know the fruit of our labor while living our lives here on earth.  This is especially true for missionary wives.  When we serve God from our homes, we are often confronted by life’s little challenges much more frequently than its successes.

 

“Strength and dignity are her clothing,

and she laughs at the time to come.

She opens her mouth with wisdom,

and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue.  

She looks well to the ways of her household

and does not eat the bread of idleness.”

Proverbs 31:25-27

Proverbs gives us the description of an “excellent wife.”  We so often fall short.  It is easy to let Satan take a foothold within our minds, and we find ourselves complaining far too often.  We face challenges we never expected – some are frustrating, some are annoying, and some are even just plain amusing.

We are reminded throughout Hebrews 12 that while we may be weary, we have a job to do here.

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.”  Hebrews 12:1-2

 

We may often feel as if we are constantly beaten down by life’s mundane and difficult tasks.  We may feel unappreciated.  We may feel unimportant.  We may feel weary.

“For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.  Therefore lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak knees, and make straight paths for your feet, so that what is lame may not be put out of joint but rather be healed.”  Hebrews 12:12-13

Therefore, in the spirit of lifting our weary, drooping hands, we would like to invite you to “laugh with us at the time to come.” Proverbs 31:25  When the hardships of life throw us off balance and we come to a point when we want to cry or laugh, let us choose to laugh together.  We put our trust in God and smile as we work hard each in our own vocation. So with the help of my dear missionary-mom friends scattered across the region, I bring you:

You know you are a missionary mom who lives in Latin America (or at least the DR) when…

  •      you go to a friend’s house and compliment them on their water pressure
  •      your kids use ice chests as mini pools on hot days
  •      you have survived explosions, floods, and fires… all in your own house
  •      you are constantly nagging your kids to eat their breakfast when they are too busy looking for Belize and other tiny countries on the map because they have friends scattered around the world
  •      you can make chicken a hundred different ways for dinner
  •      your kids think popsicles are frozen grapes
  •      you don’t need snow for winter fun… sand angels, sand men, and cardboard sleds are just as fun
  •      your kids have “taxi shoes” or shoes that will not easily fall off into the gutter while getting into a taxi
  •      you have had some pretty humbling moments while learning a new language… like that one time you were getting a physical and you were pretty sure they told you to take your clothes off… but then again… what if that’s not what they said at all.
  •      your kids yell to each other in excitement “you can put toilet paper in the potty!!!!” once they arrive in a US airport (honestly, that is exciting)
  •      you take your load of laundry to the one friend you know has a DRYER to dry your clothes and consider it the BEST birthday treat…EVER
  •      your dream vacation includes a visit to Target to slowly browse every aisle (and if you can be drinking a Starbucks while browsing, you can’t think of anything better)
  •      you kill bugs like a BOSS (maybe…)
  •      you leave Christmas cards up all year because, hey, they didn’t arrive until April and real mail comes so infrequently that those cards and pictures mean so much more  to you now than they used to when you were in the states.
  •      you spend more time trying to figure out how to watch your favorite TV shows than actually watching them
  •      your husband brings home a machete… because he needed to cut down the weeds
  •      your children don’t understand why they don’t hug EVERYONE in the States during passing of the peace
  •      you have a love/hate relationship with skype.  You love seeing your family’s faces but hate the frequent bad connection
  •      you compliment your friends when their power works every day
  •      there are so many times you are thankful that no one around you can understand your kids’ embarrassing comments–you know, the ones where they make a big deal about the unfamiliar smells and tastes in a new culture
  •      you start playing Christmas music in October because everyone else around you is doing it
  •      you have to climb the neighbor’s wall to retrieve your sheets that took sail in the wind when it was drying on your line and you have the scrapes and bruises to prove it
  •      your kids’ thankful list includes their basic needs like water, food, and power
  •      you get really excited when you go a whole month without having to fix something major in your house
  •      your happy dance is on point when you find your favorite US product brands in the grocery store (like Cherry coke, Coffeemate vanilla creamer, Prego spaghetti sauce, or Wheat Thins)
  •      you have to buy your baking soda in a suspicious unmarked bag from the pharmacy
  •      your three-year old loudly sings “God Bless America” on your first flight back to the states and you think to yourself “yes, sing it girl!” (but seriously – when did she even learn that song?)

So as I run the race down our street… in the pouring rain… while barefoot… to chase down the trash truck so the kind gentleman will reverse back to our home and  come collect our trash, I will remember that this is the race set before me.   Just as the woman in Proverbs 31 does not know her future and can laugh because she has trust in Jesus, I will find the humor and the joy within the “ways of my household.”

While we each battle our own setbacks, discouragements, homesickness, frustrations, loneliness, and so much more, we also fervently pray that we are able to continue to “run this race set before us.”   We pray that the root of bitterness does not spring up, that we do not grow weary or fainthearted.   We pray that we can day after day lift our drooping hands, strengthen our weak knees, and “laugh at the time to come.”

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He Came to Give Us Hope

12 / 21 / 1612 / 21 / 16
“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”  Romans 15:13

I wanted to write about Christmas.  I wanted to write about struggling through this season.  I wanted to write about hope at Christmastime.  I wanted to confess what I used to think hope was and what I believe it to be no.  So I went to a verse about being filled with hope.  I went to Romans.  I went to Romans 15:13.  It’s filled with hope, and as a bonus, we get joy and peace, too.   A good verse, right?  So I did what I usually do when I read my Bible and I try to dig deeper.  I want to understand more.

While digging deeper, I came across a study note that sent me to Romans 5:2-5.

“Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God. More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.”

I’m going to strip down my pride with you and be completely honest.  That passage made me want to throw my Bible against the wall (…I didn’t).  That passage makes me want to scream and cry and stop digging.  Why?  Because… I am suffering.  I am facing trials, and honestly, so much of the days it feels like they are winning.  So not only is Paul telling me that my suffering will produce hope, but he adds that we should rejoice in our sufferings.  Really?  I think that may just be asking a bit too much.  My heart can’t rejoice for much of anything let alone the very reason it is shattered to pieces.


Maybe I am not there yet.  Paul’s list does seem to have an order to follow: suffering – endurance – character- hope.  Maybe I am still in the suffering phase which hasn’t produced endurance yet.  And as I sit with my Bible before me, I have two options.  I can close it and push aside the struggle, the pain, the questions.  I can ignore it and drown it out with any other means I can.  That, my friends, is the easier choice and many times that is what I choose.  My second option is harder – so much harder.  It means I face the pain, uncertainty, and questions.  It means I keep His Word open before me and keep digging.  

I press on.


Hope.  The very word I have been struggling with this season.  Suffering produces hope.  What is hope? In the spirit of complete and total honesty, my mental picture of hope used to be something like this:

Someone so confident in heaven that after a loss of a loved one, they rejoice and are thankful for the time spent with their loved one but they are “ok” and happy because their loved one is in heaven.  They continue on with their life here on earth knowing they will see their loved one again in heaven.

I cringed writing that just now – every word.  Oh I am sorry.  I am sorry for the judgments I unknowingly held against fellow brothers and sisters as they grieved.  I didn’t know.  I didn’t get it.  I didn’t get the pain.  I didn’t understand.  Please forgive me.

Here I am in the midst of my grief, trying to grasp the concept of
hope and what I used to arrogantly believe. Where does that leave me now?  There are two possibilities:

1. My mental picture was correct and I do not have hope because I am not that person I described

    or

2. My mental picture was way off.

I am leaning toward the second possibility.

 

This is my current definition of hope:

Someone so confident in heaven.

 

That is it.

There are no conditions.

 

There are no right ways to live that out.  That definition is true for me today.   I do believe in heaven.  I believe Gabriella is there.  I believe I will see her there some day.  That I have not questioned.  So this feeling of “hope” that I think I should have is perhaps just a lie.  Maybe “hope” isn’t a feeling at all.  Maybe hope doesn’t look like happiness.  Maybe hope is simply a belief.

My Bible defines hope as this:

“confident trust in what is not seen. Grounded in Christ’s resurrection, with patient expectation, believers hope in the promise of His return in glory.”

Maybe hope doesn’t look like anything at all.  Maybe hope is still in my heart even when I feel hopeless.  When the weight of the season’s greetings, the yuletide cheer, the merry and bright send me hiding under the covers, there is still hope.

So this Christmas if you don’t see me toasting eggnog, joining in carols, sporting ugly sweaters – if you don’t see me at all –  I might be collapsed at the foot of our cardboard nativity scene.  That may be all the Christmas I can handle.  And my friends,  maybe that is enough.  Maybe this year that is exactly what hope looks like.  Because when you strip down the elves, the wrapping paper, the gingerbread cookies, the hoopla, and the tradition, that is what Christmas is about.  That baby in a manger is what Christmas is about.

This suffering, this pain in my heart, this unbearable sorrow is the very reason God sent His Son to earth.  Immanuel – God with us.  He came to be with us.  He came to be with the lost.  He came to be with the weary.  He came to be with the brokenhearted.  Why?  To give us hope.  A confident trust in the promise of His glory. He will do this through my suffering and through my pain.

I may not be rejoicing in my suffering.  Maybe with time that will come.  It may take months. It may take years.

My study notes made a careful clarification, and it is a good thing I did not give up and throw the Bible across the room.  The endurance, the character, and the hope that comes from the suffering – that is by the work of the Holy Spirit.  That isn’t on me.  That isn’t something for me to do.  That is something God will do.  

That is good.  

If it was left up to me, I would never be able to get there.  That I know for sure – really, I can barely get out from under my covers.  By the grace of God, He will help me through this.  Why?  “because God’s love has been poured into our hearts…” (Romans 5:5).  Nothing says love like Christmas, like a baby in a manger, like a father sending his son to earth to die for our sins, to pay our debt, so we can live with hope.     

 

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Choose Thankfulness

11 / 21 / 1611 / 20 / 16

The holidays are fast approaching. I have always loved the holidays. I love the family traditions. I love the Christmas music. I love the gathering of family and friends. I love the laughs and the food and the memories.

This season is different. This season has me scared. I am trying to figure out how to go about approaching this upcoming season. I would like to crawl in bed and hide under the covers until it is over. That seems like the easiest way to survive this season. I realize that hiding is not the best way to live through this season, but that may be all I can handle.

Last year we had our first holiday season in the DR. We experienced a missionary Thanksgiving filled with laughter, wine, great food, games, and hymns. I think back to what a great day that was. I was so thankful then… for everything. Wow, God was good. I praised Him for it. I thanked Him for the wonderful friends that surrounded us, the new traditions we were starting, and the celebrations we were having with my little family all there. I remember sitting back and watching my two daughters and my husband laughing with friends they had made over the past few months. Friendships that they already held so dear I knew they would last a lifetime. Now I look back on that day, and I smile because it was so good… and then I wince. I wince because there is also pain. There is pain because Thanksgiving was also the beginning of my journey with Ella, and the pain of her journey is still so fresh that even the great memories hurt deeply.

This Thanksgiving will be different. This Thanksgiving there is a hole in my heart, and it is painful. This Thanksgiving I do not feel very thankful. It is sometimes hard to look past the pain. It is hard to look past the void of a baby that should consume my night and day. The void of diapers I should be changing, cries I should be soothing, and meals I should be feeding. That void is very evident to me in every moment.  This Thanksgiving my family will not all be at the table. I will not sit back and silently watch them all have fun. I expect this to be a very painful reality on what used to be such a happy day. I feel as if I am bracing for a storm of emotions to overtake me. Maybe the storm will be fierce and leave a path of destruction behind it. Maybe the storm will not be as severe as predicted. With storms it is hard to know how strong they will be before they hit. This is what makes me want to hide in bed.

Thankful treeA  common theme in the moms’ support group I am a part of is “choose hope.” Hope is a choice. Hope is a choice because we don’t always feel hopeful. We often feel hopeless, helpless, stuck in a pit of despair. We are not. Even when it feels like we are, we are not stuck in a pit of despair. We are not helpless, and we are not hopeless. So we must choose hope – choose to recognize hope – the hope that is given to us by our loving God.

This is how I have decided to approach this Thanksgiving. I will choose thankfulness. I will choose to acknowledge my thankfulness each day. Our family began a thankful tree at the start of November. It is good to say out loud the things we are thankful for and it is good to write them down. It is good to say out loud the good in our lives so the good is not drowned out by the bad. I will choose thankfulness because I am thankful. I have a lot to be thankful for this year, and I know that. But being thankful does not take away the pain.


An attitude of thankfulness is commanded by God. It is His will for us. “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.” 1 Thessalonians 4:13. “All circumstances” includes grief. We should be thankful in the midst of our pain. Thankfulness, just like hope, takes a lot more of your energy when you are in the midst of grieving. Thankfulness is a constant choice, not an emotional reaction. Thankfulness can be draining. Some moments I succeed in choosing thankfulness. Some moments I do not.       

give thanksI am realizing that when you are grieving, you are often a mix of contradictions. Even when you have good days, it still hurts. When you make happy memories, you feel sadness because someone is still missing. When you laugh, you think back to how much you recently cried. And when you are thankful, you still deeply ache for the one who is no longer with you. I imagine this holiday season I will have struggles, and I will have triumphs. If my struggles are many and my triumphs are few, that is ok.

I will choose thankfulness. In choosing thankfulness, I am still sad. That is ok. God sees me. He knows my thoughts. He knows my pain. He is my help. He is what will get me through the tough moments this season, and He is the reason I am thankful. He will give me peace. Peace that I will not be able to comprehend. Peace that will see me through.

“Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand; do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”  Philippians 4:2.

This Thanksgiving I will not be able to look at each member of my little family and be thankful that they are all with me; they are not.  One of them is spending Thanksgiving with Jesus.  While I rejoice for her, I grieve for me.  My heart hurts this holiday, but God is still good and I will still praise Him.  Now Thank we all our God

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