Category: Trusting

  • It's that time again. Time to think and to thank

    Time to count up all the reasons we have to be thankful.

    Dreamstime_xs_121257669 (1)Even now. Even though. Even if our personal story is full of pain.  

    Like one young man I read about. I only have a few sentences of fact about his brief encounter with a friend, but here's how I imagine it have gone.  

    "Joel" suffered a freak accident that shattered his life in an instant. This once-strapping young man became a paraplegic for life. 

    When his best friend since childhood, "Kev," saw him for the first time he tried not to stare as he took in the finality of his buddy's situation. Joel would never walk again. 

    Then Kev heard himself blurt, "Isn't it strange how one day can color a whole life?" 

    "Yeah," Joel said and nodded. A moment later he flashed his old smile and said, "But I thank God that I still get to choose the colors."

    So do you and I. Thanks-living is a matter of the mind and heart. Our every-day attitude.

    Once we plug in that perspective it changes our view of life. And us. We stop bemoaning what's missing and start being glad for what is.  

    It helps to think about that original Thanksgiving   

    Start with The Mayflower. Forget modern ocean liners. This merchant ship measured only 64 feet long, about the distance from a baseball pitcher's mound to home plate. It traversed the Atlantic at a sizzling two miles an hour.  

    Those 102 Pilgrims were packed into the cargo hold, an area about half the size of a basketball court. Ceilings measured less than five feet high. Their group included 18 married couples and their children. Two wives were pregnant and one delivered her baby during the voyage.

    For 66 days and nights they endured limited space, little privacy, poor ventilation and scanty meals because they feared running out of food..

    At last, on November 11, 1620, the captain spotted Cape Cod and dropped anchor offshore in the New World.  

    No inns with warm rooms and cushy beds awaited them

    They had only The Mayflower to provide shelter from the endless unknown that stretched before them when they looked toward land. Fear stalked them but they dare not give in. 

    Because The Mayflower would sail back to England in spring, the men had no choice but to row to shore every day, whatever the weather. There they worked together to build basic shelter for their group, as well as for the chickens and pigs they brought with them.   

    They dug graves, too. Lots of them. By that first Thanksgiving only 50 of the 102 Pilgrims who left England remained alive. Only three of the 18 married couples still had both spouses.  

    Let that sink in. Imagine their heavy hearts as the survivors gathered to  celebrated their first harvest. They resolved to set aside their grief and together, thank God, the Giver. 

    He gives strength to the weary, and to him who lacks might, He increases power.  Isaiah 40:29

    Do we have what it takes to do the same?

    Not one of us has or will have a perfect life. You and I, too, survive because God enables us to keep breathing and gives strength for each day.

    Let's be on the alert for the good in life and be ready to acknowledge it. In people. In family members. It's always there, even in hard times. 

    In every situation we still get to choose our outlook and to speak the good word. No eloquence required, just the doing.

    Therefore, encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing.  1 Thessalonians 5:11  

    Let's share our lessons learned

    Some of us never speak of our mistakes, as if we've skated along through life with never a rough spot. This may protect our egos, but it cheats our children and grandchildren.

    We can bless them by gently telling stories about our ups and downs and lessons learned–and how God brought us through. Were there times we "feasted" on Spam because we couldn't afford turkey? Pass on such tales, if only to show it's possible to rejoice and to laugh, even when life's not perfect.  

    Most importantly, as we share our stories, let's point to the Giver. 

    Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever!   Psalm 107:1

    When we thank God it reminds us we're not alone–and we never were

    Neither were the Pilgrims. Like us, they anguished over their pain and their losses, but they didn't camp there. They chose instead to focus on God's faithfulness through it all. 

    Can't we do the same?

    Start with "ordinary" things like the myriad colors in trees and plants and flowers. We take all that for granted, but what if our Creator had colored all of Nature in shades of grey?

    For each of us, if we truly take in what we see around us we'll understand why we can be thankful and can praise God.

    Even when life disappoints us and sadness won't lift. Even when time drags on and we can't see an end to the waiting. Even then. 

    For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.  John 3:16

    Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.  Colossians 2:6-7 

    Every day, let's hone in on the joy of what is, rather than to waste time yearning for "perfect."

    And let's remember that you and I "choose the colors" of our lives, too, every single day.

    Thanking God for you, dear unseen friend!

    Lenore

  • When a large part of our inner sense of security crumbles–as it did after 9/11, what are we to do? 

    Or when a family or relationship problem shakes our personal world to the core?

    How do Blog. 9.11. imagesCAC10WPDwe cope? What do we tell our kids?

    We may feel a gaping emptiness inside and long for comfort for ourselves, but feel we have nowhere to turn.    

    Even in the day-to-day of life we may have people we care about who regularly (and more so in a crisis) look to us for reassurance and for clues on how to deal with life. 

    All the while we may be thinking, I have nothing left to give.  

    That's when we do what moms and wives–and dads and husbands–have done since the beginning of time. We give anyway. 

    We take our thoughts off what was lost and focus on what is left.

    Although we feel drained dry, still we can speak the hope that comes from beyond ourselves. Hope that's based on more than what we see and think and feel. Based on faith in God and the deep-down conviction that when we trust in Jesus as our Savior, "hope" becomes 100 percent guaranteed certainty.

    That's because it rests in the One who promised to be with us, no matter what, no matter where and to be our strength, even when we have none left within ourselves.

    How do we protect our children in this scary world?

    We can't, not really. We can hold their hands so tightly it cuts off their circulation and follow them around like bird dogs, but there's no way to absolutely ensure they will never hurt, never be disappointed.

    We watch over them, of course. We hug them and comfort them and speak the love we feel because nobody ever gets too much love and encouragement.

    Through it all, good times or not-so-good, every day we commit our loved ones to God's protection, asking Him to watch over them.

    How do we model living in faith?

    I used to think at some point I would arrive at a more, um, exalted state of being. That I would somehow "graduate," that is, to be always at peace.  

    Perhaps you've wished and prayed for that, too. Let's face the (humbling) truth: We are human beings living with never-ending announcements of yet another reason to feel shaky. That's the world we live in, yet we need not cringe in fear. 

    My help comes from the LORD, who made the heavens and the earth! He will not let you stumble and fall; the one who watches over you will not sleep.  Psalm 121:2-3  NLT

    For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.   Jeremiah 29:11

    Come to think of it, isn't that more than enough?

    Always, there is help available and it's as close as our nearest Bible.

    I've found when I'm running on "empty," the best way to recharge and refuel is to spend time in the Word and in prayer.

    Sounds good, but where do I start?

    Answers may vary–and that's okay, because each of us is an individual. Like many others, I find it helpful to mark Bible verses so I can find them more easily. 

    Verses like these, which I've had marked in my Bible for years:

    God is my refuge and strength, an ever present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the sea . . . The LORD Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress.      Psalm 46:1, 11

    The LORD gives strength to his people; the LORD blesses his people with peace.   Psalm 29:11

    The LORD is a refuge for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble. Those who know your name will trust in you, for you, LORD, have never forsaken those who seek you.    Psalm 9:9-10

    Living in the world

    You and I can't stop the evil in the world–and yes, there is evil in the world. Every year the 9/11 remembrances proves the point.  

    It didn't stop with 9/11–and it won't. Ever since Eden, the power of Satan–evil–is with us. 

    Evil will always keep trying, but it will never win. In Jesus, the battle is already won. 

    Our best strategy for survival–for enduring–is to stay planted in the Lord and keep filling our minds with truths from God's written Word. 

    Then when our loved ones turn to us, we'll be ready with love and with strength that comes from the Lord, who will never turn away from us.

    My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.   Psalm 121:2  

    Whatever the disaster, little or large, in Jesus Christ we find the strength and stability to not only make it through, but also to speak peace and hope to those around us.

    All this comes not because of who we are or because of our great internal spiritual resources, but always, only because of the One who lives within us.

    Trusting, too,

    Lenore

  • Maybe you've noticed this phrase here and there on gift shop plaques and posters and wondered where it came from.   

    Blog. Keep calm and carry on. 3.23It traces back to a motivational poster printed by the Government of the United Kingdom in 1939 as Hitler's troops were rapidly advancing through Europe and it seemed inevitable that Great Britain would be invaded.

    Some months later the Nazi Blitz actually began. A woman I knew was in her twenties at the time and worked in London office. She told of her experiences. "Night after night the Nazis rained bombs on London and other vital towns and seaports and mortars boomed. Every night we headed for the safest place to be, which was in a bomb shelter or in a subway (Tube) tunnel. Truth is, hardly anyone really slept.    

    "Our lives settled into a dreary, endless routine. When mornings finally came we dragged ourselves up to the streets and picked our way through the rubble, determined to carry on with our work as best we could."  

    Strangely, Hitler never invaded the British Isles. Even the keenest military experts never could explain why he didn't seize his advantage and put his troops on this island nation.

    Brits who believed in God proclaimed with confidence, "It is purely by grace, God's grace." 

    If we have eyes to see we'll know that explanation also fits our lives 

    As we comb through our personal history we find times when things "worked out," although we couldn't explain how or why.

    At some later point we may discern a sort of pattern we couldn't make sense of at the time. Perhaps we finally spot a connection in what had appeared to be haphazard occurrences. "Ah, coincidences," we say. 

    My friend, with our loving God and his people there are no "coincidences."

    Our bottom line is the same as Christians in all times have found to be true: It is by God's grace. Remember Romans 8:28?

    And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.  

    Did you catch that? ALL things 

    The goods. The bads. The boring hours that tick by too slowly.

    The growing and exciting times. The times we waited for a diagnosis and prayed for a miracle.  

    The will-this-never-end periods. The how-did-it-all-go-by-so-fast years. 

    ALL of it.

    You and I never will understand everything that comes into our lives. We cannot because only Almighty God is all-knowing. Only He knows the end before the beginning.

    As Christians we can be sure of this: Our gracious Lord loves us. HE will work all things together for our good. In His time. In His way.

    This is true even if it seems that right now, nothing in our life makes sense.

    All He asks of us is that we keep putting one foot in front of the other, keep trusting him and live our days in faith.

    Handholds for our hearts

    Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me.–John 14:1  (ESV)

    But he said to me, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness."  –2 Corinthians 12:9a ESV

    Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.                              –Philippians 4:6-7  ESV

    Whatever is going on in our lives, in every moment of every day we have all we need.

    God still holds the world–and us–safe in the palm of His loving hand. This means you and I truly can Keep Calm and Carry On through whatever comes.

    Living it out, too, 

    Lenore

     

  • After all, it dates back over centuries. How could the Bible still be relevant today?

    Blog. Woman. Thoughtful. 10.22This may sound like a logical question to many. I got a lesson in the "how" of it when my husband got a job promotion that kept the man I loved smiling from morning to night. Why wouldn't he? For years he had studied and taken extra training to move him toward that goal.  

    I rejoiced for him, truly I did, but I loved the place we were living. The place where I had established an identity and enjoyed interacting with other writers in the area.  

    We talked but managed to skirt around this touchy subject. I asked myself what would it accomplish to complain and rob him of his joy? I knew the answer: Nothing good.

    Somehow, some way I would learn to love this new place.

    Once we moved into our new digs my husband settled into his position as if it were tailored just for him. Morning to evening he was engrossed and energized.  

    Each day I watched his car fade from sight, then asked myself, Now what?

    No answers came, but I clung to what I knew: Our loving God would not bless my husband and leave me, his wife, abandoned. I would wait. 

    "Be still and know that I am God …"  Psalm 46:10  NIV

    Finding my place

    A month or two later I learned of the local chapter of the same Bible study a friend "back home" had often praised. Because I always wished I had her excitement about the Bible I decided to give it a try.  

    The next week I went to orientation and signed up. The teaching leader addressed the large audience of class members and us newbies, explaining the day's lesson based on Exodus, including Chapters 13 to 16.

    She began with how God delivered the children of Israel from slavery

    He parted the Red Sea and brought them across on dry land, a miracle for sure. Freedom! Yet soon they grumbled and complained against God's provision for them as they wandered in the wilderness.

    Then she looked out at us and it seemed she looked directly at me. "Are you wandering around in a dry, dusty wilderness of your own making?"

    At once I knew that I was! I was! 

    Then she moved on to how the children of Israel yearned for the abundant meats and fresh produce back in Egypt–where they had been slaves. Our merciful God provided fresh, bountiful supplies of Manna and quail for each day, yet in no time they started griping about being tired of the same old, same old.

    With her next question once again it seemed the leader fixed her gaze on me. "Are you murmuring against God's provision for you because it doesn't live up to your specifications?"

    My heart started pounding. Immediately I knew the Holy Spirit had just spoken truth to my heart and mind through that stranger. I saw clearly that God moved us to that place for my husband, yes, but also for me. 

    Don't ask me how I knew. I just did.

    I drove home asking God to forgive me for my weeks of self-centeredness. When my husband came home I asked his forgiveness, too, but that darling man shushed me and folded me into his love. Finally, he had his wife back.

    From then on I read the Bible with new eyes

    Now I knew firsthand the truth of Hebrews 4:12: "The word of God is living and active …" God's living Word spoke to me and changed me. For life.

    Since then whenever I read the Bible I look for:

    • What do these verses say? What do they say to me?
    • What can I learn from this account, from these individuals, on ways to live–or not live?
    • What principles can I use in my life? Right now?
    • What's my takeaway?

    Often these truths pop out at me. Other times I need to be quiet and ponder awhile, waiting for what comes to mind.

    Or I think I know what a verse means and then find some new facet that's useful for my life. 

    One thing is sure. I never come away empty. God's Holy Spirit makes sure of that.

    Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words.   Romans 8:26  ESV 

    No worries about "doing it right"

    It's no more complicated than this: Relax and be still.

    All it takes is that we make the time and ask God the Holy Spirit to give us teachable hearts, to open the Word to our understanding and to reveal his Truth. Take a few notes–or don't. Then chew on what you've read throughout the day.

    As for being in a Bible study group what's good is that we all learn from each other as we share how the Lord works in our lives. It can be the setting for sharing prayer needs and growing friendships, as well. 

    All Scripture is inspired by God is and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives.   2 Timothy 3:16  NLT

    Always, always, always, it helps to remind ourselves that as God's children through faith in Jesus, HE is with us and guiding us.

    The surprise at the end 

    God did have a purpose for me in that move. I stayed in the Bible study and became a group leader, where I found new meaning and made friends. Two and one-half years later my husband received another promotion. Once again I knew it fit him exactly right and once again, I regretted leaving behind what I had grown to love.  

    This time I knew from experience that whatever God provided for my husband would also turn out to be right for me. 

    God is faithful, by whom you were called into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.   1 Corinthians 1:9  ESV

    Still learning,

    Lenore 

  • Here's a quote that's familiar to most of us:

    "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of incredulity, … "

                                                                             –A Tale of Two Cities – Charles Dickens 

    That sounds a lot like our time, don't you think? 

    Add Blog. Troubled woman. 10.14in daily reports of hatred, killings and accusations. 

    Overseas. In cities all across the land. In our state. Our city.

    Maybe even next door.

    We worry over our lives, too. There's that funny-looking mole. The cough that won't go away. Dizzy spells that hit out of nowhere. Rumors of cutbacks at work. The ongoing problems of one of our children. 

    Small wonder we're jolted out of sleep with hearts pounding and a trembling case of the "What ifs."

    What do we do with our fears?

    Whatever our temperament, there's only antidote that works. One that lasts.

    It's remembering Whose we are. If we believe in Jesus as our Savior, it means we are the beloved children of the Everlasting God. 

    But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he (Jesus) gave the right to become children of God. John 1:12  ESV

    Children of the same God who said in Isaiah 41:10:

    So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.  NIV

    So we give our fears to the Lord and simply trust. 

    Again.

    And again.

    As often as necessary.  

    That's what Dr. Kent Brantly did when stricken with Ebola during the outbreak in Africa several years ago

    Brantly served with Samaritan's Purse in Liberia. It might seem a person who gives their life to serve God and people in hard circumstances might have the right to scream, "But I'm serving you, Lord! This is not fair!"

    Not Brantly. He was flown to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, treated and recovered. Upon his release, Dr. Brantly described how he felt after being diagnosed: 

    "As I lay in my bed in Liberia for the following nine days, getting sicker and weaker each day, I prayed that God would help me to be faithful even in my illness, and I prayed that in my life or in my death, He would be glorified . . . "

    Clearly, Kent Brantly never doubted God's love for him.

    Neither did David, who wrote most of the Psalms. He often faced dangers on all sides, yet he wrote: 

    In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, O LORD, make me dwell in safety.    Psalm 4:8  NIV

    Let faith drive out fear 

    Kent Brantly and the psalmist David were heroes of faith, but also human beings who knew the taste of fear. So do you and I.

    I've learned there is no better ammunition for fighting fear than talking to our Heavenly Father and reading The Bible.

    This is the time to underline verses that speak to your heart and reassure you. Say them aloud and pray to understand what they mean. Make notes in the margins of your Bible or write the date you realized particular verses "fit" you. 

    Don't let it stop there. Speak them to yourself whenever fears bedevil you.  Or in the middle of the night when you can't get back to sleep. 

    When we fasten our attention on Scripture God's peace will displace fear.  

    Here are a few of my favorite verses: 

    The LORD is my light and my salvation–whom shall I fear? The LORD is the stronghold of my life–of whom shall I be afraid?  Psalm 27:1  NIV

    He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the LORD, "He is my refuge and my fortress, my God in whom I trust.–Psalm 91:1-2 (NIV)

    (Jesus said) "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. –John 14:27 (NIV)

     For God did not give us a spirit of fear, but a spirit of power, of love and of self-discipline. 2 Timothy 1:7 (NIV)

    By the way, this isn't something reserved for 3 a.m. jitters. Trust me, these verses can soothe our spirits any hour of the day.

    All it takes is not LETTING our hearts be troubled, because we know Who's really in charge and we know Whose we are.  

    Still learning and growing, too,

    Lenore

     

  • Some of us ran out of hope a long time ago.

    Maybe that's where you are right now, or you know someone who is. This one's for you. It will lift your heart. 

    First, some background. As Scott Lohman neared his goal, life was good. After years of seminary classes and an internship at Immanuel Lutheran Church, Downers Grove, IL, he was almost ready. In a few weeks he would be ordained as a Lutheran pastor.

    Blog. Emergency room sign. 6.12Then came what looked like the end of everything.

    But God had other plans. 

    ______________

    (Chris James, a pastor at Immanuel, told Scott's story for the February, 2012, edition of their church newsletter. He graciously gave permission to reprint his article, slightly edited.) 

    THE HAND OF GOD  

    On Monday, November 28, 2011, at 3:30 pm, Vicar Scott Lohman suffered an aortic dissection. Into the middle of this horrific tragedy, the Hand of God reached down to intervene.

    Scott should have been in his garage by himself that afternoon, but his wife, Gina, called to report a harmless car accident, so he headed to Interstate-55 –that was the Hand of God.

    Soon after he arrived at the accident scene, Scott passed out. An ambulance which police routinely summoned for accidents, waited, ready to take him to the hospital —that was the Hand of God.

    The closest hospital was St. Joseph's in Joliet, nationally recognized for both stroke and heart care –that was the Hand of God. 

    Emergency Room physicians planned to wait until morning to follow up on Scott's tests. Then Gina's cousin, Andy, an off-duty St. Joseph's physician, stopped by. He said, "He's had a stroke; he needs help." —that was the Hand of God.

    A dozen nurses, six doctors and multiple test results surrounded the patient. Only Nikita, an ICU nurse, noticed Scott had two different pulses in his wrists, which signaled a heart problem —that was the Hand of God. 

    The heart surgeon told waiting family and friends what happened alongside busy Route I-55  that afternoon. Scott suffered an aortic dissection, which caused his stroke, then traveled to both arms and legs, as well as his brain. Scott most likely would not survive the surgery. Yet five and a half hours later he emerged. He lived – that was the Hand of God.  

    The surgeon warned he could only repair the valve to Scott's heart. Yet during the surgery, he was able to repair Scott's ascending aorta, too, and restore blood flow back to his brain — that was the Hand of God.   

    Vascular damage to Scott's left arm was irreversible and he would lose it, said the surgeon. Yet the next day Scott had a pulse in his left wrist –that was the Hand of God. 

    No one promised Scott would wake up from his coma, and if he did, whether he would recognize anyone or ever move again. He did, he does, and oh, how he moves! —that was the hand of God. 

    Because Scott's kidneys were wrecked he requred daily dialysis. His only hope would be a kidney transplant. And then, his kidneys were healed — that was the Hand of God. 

    Scott could not breathe without the ventilator. No one knew if he ever would. Now the vent is gone and he is back to his old, chatty self –that was the hand of God.  

    That dark November night Gina said good-bye to her husband. By the Hand of God she and the kids have received him back home, where they are all looking forward to a new chapter.

    Praise the Lord all my soul; all my inmost being, praise His Holy Name. Praise the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits–who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases. Who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle's.  –Psalm 103:1-5

     ________________________

    An upadate: On July 1 Scott Lohman will be ordained as an assistant pastor at Immanuel. With Immanuel's sponsorship, Scott will concentrate on planting and pastoring a new church in nearby Minooka, where the Lohmans have lived for several years.

    _____________________

    Every one of us can recall times we prayed with all our hearts and saw no evidence God heard us. No Scott Lohman outcome for us. 

    But God does hear us. Even when life makes no sense, we can trust His love for us because of Jesus (John 3:16.) We who believe can know that  God's hand is on our lives just as surely as on Scott's. In every circumstance, He promises us strength for each day (Psalm 46:1.)

    That makes it safe to give up fretting, even in hard times, and trust. Let God be God. 

    That's not fatalism. That's peace, the peace that passes all human understanding.

    May you know that peace, my friends,

    Lenore

  • Are you troubled, convinced the world is a mess and there is no hope, no beauty?

    Feast your eyes on God's handiwork one recent spring in a California canyon somewhere near San Luis Obispo. 

    Blog. Wildflowers by Bakersfield. 5.11   user207289_pic6271_1218133796

    (Sorry, photographer unknown.)

    I've loved this photo since I first saw it. I can't imagine a better visual for what Jesus said in Luke 12, starting at verse 22.

    "Therefore, I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat; or about your body, what you will wear. Life is more than food, and the body more than clothes . . . Consider how the lilies grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you, not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these."

    Maybe you suffer from the same malady as I. Worry. Oh, I can call it something nicer, but really, it's worry.

    When I look at wildflowers, as in this photo, I feel the tightness in my shoulders ease up. The One who splashes these remote hills with extravagant beauty tenderly cares for all His creation.

    That includes you and me.

    Whatever we are dealing with today, we are not alone. The weight of the world does not rest on our shoulders. Count on it. His mercies are new every morning. (Lamentations 3:21-16)

    Every day mercies and blessings surround us. 

    Are we looking for them?

    Here's to having eyes to see,

    Lenore