Sunday, March 29, 2020

Birthday Surprise


I can imagine how my mother must have felt when she visited with her mother for the first time after my family moved from her hometown in Massachusetts to North Carolina.  I can imagine that neither Mom nor Grandma could hold back the tears of joy when they embraced after that first extended absence from each other.  Though their worlds had changed with the addition of much space between them, Grandma felt overwhelming joy in reuniting with her child and Mom felt overwhelming joy in reuniting with her mother.

I felt that overwhelming joy when my own parents came Friday to deliver a cake and a birthday present to me before the state-wide shelter-in-place order was to begin later that evening.  I was having a particularly tough time trying to telework as it was the last day of the pay period and I’m the timekeeper for my office.  I was trying to help Noah and Samuel with their schoolwork while I tried working remotely for the first time since the pandemic started.  Eventually, all hell broke loose when I found out that we needed to record our telework hours and I got overwhelmed.  Then, just as I walked away from my computer, I saw my parents’ car pull up and I grabbed the kids to bring them outside.  I thought my parents may just be driving by to wave, so I didn’t want them to go before we all got to see them.  They stopped, though, and gave me some birthday stuff and gave the kids some treats.  I was overwhelmed with joy.

I’ve had more positive times over the past few days, like the feeling of joy when my parents made their surprise visit.  The weekend was especially nice and I’ve tried to remain focused on God.  I’m still experiencing some crippling anxiety, especially at night.  When I’m optimistic, I feel like my Heavenly Father is looking out for me and will provide for my needs.  Why can’t I always believe that, though?  Maybe that’s what God is working on inside of me.

My dad whittled, sanded and stained this clinging cross for me.


Monday, March 23, 2020

Slow Weekend


It’s a good thing that no one was in a hurry to do anything this weekend because I was seemingly worthless.  With literally nowhere to go all weekend, I wasn’t even been able to find the energy to fold the laundry for the week.  Laundry is a task I’d normally have to squeeze in at the last-minute Sunday evening because we’ve had so much to do during the weekend.  I’ve often fantasized about having extra time, or sometimes, just to have enough time.  Now, I’ve got nothing but time for the foreseeable future and I already miss the hustle and bustle.  I feel lost without it.  I’m looking hard for the silver lining in this pandemic.  I thought at least I’d enjoy the extra time.

I want to use the extra time to grow in my faith.  I’ve spent a lot of time reading and praying.  Last weekend, I believe I got a message from God letting me know that He’s here.  Since then, I’ve been trying hard to get another message from God.  Maybe too hard.  In a time of instant gratification, I want another message from God.  I want the message that everything is going to be OK.  What I have learned is that Jesus dealt with anxiety just like me.  In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus prayed to the Father three times requesting that He take Jesus’s burden.  Sorry my message is not very uplifting, but God knows my trouble.  He knows it and He’s conquered it.

Lord Jesus, I pray that you show me how to accept the peace that you give.

Tim

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

God’s Tools – Possibly You

It’s funny to me how God uses unexpected people to get through to me sometimes.  If you read my post yesterday, I referenced a short sermon by Max Lucado.  According to Wikipedia, Max Lucado has written nearly 100 Christian books, so he’s a popular guy in Christian bookstores.  I guess because Lucado had authored a children’s book I once picked up, I’ve always thought of him as not very deep, though.  I had nothing against him, but I simply identified him as an author of Christian children’s books.  Then God led me to his sermon just as I needed to hear it and my view of Mr. Lucado changed instantly to that of the authoritative Christian figure that many others have seen him as for years.

There is another sermon called Max Lucado – Anxious For Nothing on YouTube that I’ve watched twice in the last two days.  It’s a great teaching on anxiety based on Philippians 4:4-9 with a couple of corny jokes sprinkled in.  I love it when he tells the audience to not meditate on the mess, but to set your gaze on God.  He poses these questions to help us focus on God:

Is God greater than your problem?  Has God ever faced this problem before?  Does God have solutions you’ve not thought of?  Has God got you through these types of things before?  Does God have a good track record?  Is God strong?  Is God sovereign?  Is God still on the thrown? Is He over all?

Two days ago, a gentleman from my work prayed for me when I asked him how he would pray about the coronavirus fallout.  It was definitely a “God thing” that this coworker showed up in my doorway when he did and a “God thing” that he said what he said in prayer.  Like Max Lucado’s question above, my coworker also posed the question while praying that maybe God had solutions that we hadn’t thought of.  I believe my time with this coworker turned out to be another case of God using someone unexpected to get through to me and let me know that He’s here with me.

Please continue to communicate with others during these turbulent times and share positive things that you and others can use to drive out anxiety.  As Lucado said in his sermon I referred to above, “anxiety and gratitude cannot share the same heart.”  You never know when you’ll be the tool God uses to get through to someone else or who God may be using to get through to you.

Lord God, thanks for showing us some sun yesterday.

Tim

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

God’s There

Just before Noah received his heart transplant at two months of age, there was a day that I thought he might not survive.  I wrote the following about it on April 3, 2007 in a post called “Hope” on this blog that I used to keep to let people know how we were doing amidst the treatment of Noah’s heart defect:

His skin was grey and I feared that if I touched him, I’d find it cold. His eyes were open about a quarter of the way, but completely unresponsive from what I could tell.

I went on to write that I didn’t have much hope:

I didn’t know what to do so I stood a little behind Maria and rubbed her back. I had come all that way to give her encouragement, but as I stood there, I felt that I had nothing to give. The little flicker of hope inside of me seemed to be gone.

I don’t remember exactly what happened as I drove home late that night, but I recall being worried that our family, especially Maria, would be scarred for life if Noah didn’t make it.  I wept.  I don’t know how I made it back home because I wept uncontrollably.  I was comforted at some point during my weeping, though, which caused me to cry more.  It was as if God himself had told me that everything would be OK.  I felt confident enough from that point on to be able to support my family again through Noah’s heart transplant.

I now look back and see the comfort I felt as a message from God affirming that everything would be OK.  God’s message delivered straight to me! Unfortunately, back then my faith wasn’t as strong as it is now.  Even though the experience I had in the car was emotionally powerful, it wasn’t something to boast about, so I kept it to my skeptical self.  It’s a shame to me now that I didn’t wholly recognize how blessed I was that God gave me that direct message.  Of all the people in the world, God gave me a message!

Fast forward seven years, or so.  I’ve grown in faith now, and I’m hearing from my church pastor about a mission trip to Haiti that he is planning.  Yes, I’ve grown in faith, but I’m not the guy that can drop it all and go on a mission trip.  I’m in my mid 30’s with three kids, now.  Maybe I can help sponsor someone else to go?  A sponsor certainly seemed like a more realistic calling for me, but God gave me another message.  Again, I don’t recall exactly how it came to me but God said “Go!”  Unwillingly, I went.  God gave me another direct message and that week-long mission trip I took more than five years ago is still transforming me.

Presently, I have literally been sick with anxiety over the fallout from the coronavirus epidemic for the past week.  I barely got over the flu at the beginning of last week and by the end of last week, the kids’ sports seasons had been cut off, stores were empty, and schools and churches were closed indefinitely.  It is a lot of change coming at us really fast and it scares me.

Monday night, I started re-reading Richard J. Foster’s book Celebration of Discipline.  Foster ended the introduction of the 20th anniversary copy I have with the Latin phrase Soli Deo Gloria (Glory to God alone).  When I looked up the phrase on my phone to translate it, I saw videos and I clicked on one of a song called Soli Deo Gloria.  It was a nice song, but I didn’t listen to the whole thing.  What caught my eye was the video under it, “Max Lucado – Why are you Afraid ?”, which was a 12-minute sermon by Max Lucado on Jesus and his disciples in the stormy sea.  Being afraid of the world’s trajectory, I watched the Max Lucado video and it helped.  I sent a link to the video to Maria and said:

Bizarre, I was reading and looked up the translation of a Latin phrase and this short sermon on fear popped up.  Maybe God, maybe Google, or maybe God works at Google…

After viewing the sermon, I wondered if it was indeed God giving me another message.  I got down on my knees at the end of my bed and thanked God for being there for me and then I said I didn’t know what else to ask for and I began to sob.  I was just a blubbering idiot for the next 10 minutes. When I calmed down, I wanted to resume reading but I couldn’t understand why I was crying. I Google searched “hear from God and weep” which led me to a post on TalkJesus.com where someone had posed a question of why we cry when deep in worship.  One of the respondents said “Maybe it has something to do with Romans 8:26+27.”

26 In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. 27 And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God. (Romans 8:26-27, NIV)

I was blown away when I read that because I had just told God that I didn’t know what to ask for and sobbed uncontrollably for several minutes.  Had my weeping really been the Spirit himself interceding for me?  By now, I’m sure that the whole event was orchestrated by God to give me the message that He was there.  He had steered me to the sermon I needed to hear and He had let me know that the Holy Spirit had been there pleading for my needs.

I got our big Bible out to read the rest of Romans 8.  I read Romans 8:26-27 again and read into Romans 8:28 where I was awestruck once again. I realized that Romans 8:28 was the verse I had sent in a random text message to my sister the previous day to which she replied “Amen!”

28 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)

It was God’s icing on the cake.  God was there!  God is here!

Tim