Begin Again

But we have to risk believing the perfectly wise and loving God is writing a better story. The resurrection says it is so.

“What I’m doing you don’t understand now, but afterwards you will know.” John 13:7

Happy New Year, friends! I guess from the perspective of dates on a calendar, the new year is a fresh start. If only it were a clean slate of emotional and mental pain. The affliction of loss, grief, injustice and brokenness is what I would love wiped out of my life on New Year’s Day. 

How many of us would rewind, rewrite and relive a different story?

Unfortunately, I woke up on January 1st carrying heavy emotional weight again this year. The same deep wounds staring back at me. Maybe you’re like me. Our sorrow didn’t disappear when the calendar flipped. The turn of the year was another first without the life we dreamed we’d have. We opened our eyes with the same nagging ache to the painful reality that our loved one is not here, the diagnosis has not changed, or our child still struggles with the same infirmities. The mounting bills are still due. Meanwhile, a global pandemic is not only continuing, but surging forward powerfully. We cry out, “What in the world are you doing Lord?” (Like, literally…what are you doing in the world?!)

It can feel impossible to begin again (or at the very least far-fetched). Begin again? Start over? How? Why?? I’m sick and tired of the disappointment of hope deferred. Why begin again when I will  get the same results? We wrestle with questions about why things are the way they are. The incomprehensible pain on those of us who have lost children, spouses, or those dear to our hearts leaves us wondering, “Why?” If we’re honest, there is likely no explanation or answer that would be acceptable for lives cut short or having to bear the crushing weights we carry. I know I would not want to hear it. The loss is too painful. The grief is too vast. I would MUCH rather change the story than begin again.

In the midst of it all, I still hear God’s Spirit inviting me into a new beginning. Begin what, exactly? For starters, begin believing again. Begin trusting again instead of trying to make sense of what might never make sense in my finite mind. Choose to risk believing what God says in His word about life, death, loss, and grief. 

To begin believing again means courageously listening to what He says and accepting His Word as truthful. I must choose to trust that His ways are good and kind, which is even more difficult to comprehend in the midst of daunting circumstances. Especially when questions remain unanswered. After all, His ways are higher than mine (Isaiah 55:8-9). This believing…this trust to which I refer…is the life of walking by faith and not sight. (2 Corinthians 5:7) And what a devastating walk it can be. This is the life Jesus called His followers to in John 14:1 when He said, “Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me.” When I cannot yet see it, can I believe it? Yes, we have experienced devastation, but disruption does not snatch us from the divine power of God.

Believing these things doesn’t mean we pretend our difficult realities don’t exist. Yes, we cry about them, scream about them, find healthy ways to process them, and pray about them. By faith, we carry them, believing that one day, the burden will be lifted. Believing without seeing is required, but it’s not easy. In fact it can be quite difficult.

In Chapter 13 of John, the “disciple Jesus loved” gave  an eyewitness account of a conversation Jesus had with Peter. The Passover feast was  coming and Jesus was sitting with His friends to share the Passover meal. Jesus knew what was ahead. He was fully aware of what His companions would come up against watching Him suffer and die. He knew He would soon be on the cross crying out to the Father who orchestrated it all. He was fully aware of the coming mental and emotional toil. The disciples would come to experience paralyzing fear. What Jesus does and says in the days leading up to His crucifixion fascinates me. I turn to these words and stories when I am in mental and emotional turmoil. They have been a healing balm to my aching soul. 

In one of His last acts, Jesus washed the disciples’ feet. Peter, one of His closest companions, was confused and refused to allow it. 

Peter asked, “Lord, are You going to wash my feet?” Jesus answered, “What I’m doing, you don’t understand now, but afterwards you will know.” “You will never wash my feet-ever!” Peter said. Jesus replied, “If I don’t wash you, you have no part with Me.” Simon Peter said to Him, “Lord, not only my feet, but also my hands and my head.” 

I can only imagine how Peter felt as the teacher he loved approached him and moved toward him to perform a less than dignified service reserved for servants at the time.

In his confusion and misunderstanding, Peter refused. I imagine his thoughts.  “I do not understand what you are doing. I should be washing your feet. You are the teacher. I am a student. You are Christ. I am your servant. This doesn’t make sense. But, Why?”  What strikes me most is that Jesus doesn’t answer Peter’s question directly. 

In His mercy, He reminds Peter that he may not understand this outward reversal of “roles”, nor why they had to take place, but after…  at some unspecified point in the future, Peter would KNOW. I imagine Peter knowing when The Lord came to him after His resurrection. (John 21)

Much like Peter, we long to know. We tell ourselves, if I knew He was faithful. If I knew it got better. If I knew the details. If I knew… I could begin again.

This is what God teaches me through this encounter:

  1. There are answers we will not get in this life. Jesus did not always give detailed explanations to His followers when He walked the earth. In fact, He left out details, forcing those involved to make a choice to believe or not.  When we ask “how, when, where, or why?” He lovingly responds with WHO…I AM WHO I AM (Exodus 3:14, Job 38:1, John 6:35) 
  2. We will KNOW. God promises that we will fully know and be known. (1 Corinthians 13:12) We must walk by faith until then, believing what He says, even when we don’t see it.
  3. We often will not understand what God is doing. Some circumstances will just never make perfect sense. When we walk with God, He will reveal His will, often little-by-little, as we continue to follow where He leads. While my finite mind longs for understanding, God tells me to trust. (Proverbs 3:5-6) His ways will never be ours. He is conforming our ways to His. There is so much friction here because we cannot see the whole story. We have to trust in the One who can.
  4. Jesus cares about our emotional and mental distress. He cares about our losses and our grief. How do I know? He came down from heaven and made a way for us to be eternally free from them. He has gone before us. He is a man of sorrows, very familiar with suffering. In fact, Hebrews 4 says He was even tempted in every way, and yet He never sinned. Isaiah 53 tells us He was unjustly treated and yet never opened His mouth. Lazarus died. Jesus wept. His disciples deserted Him. The Father turned His face from Him on the Cross. Yes, He knows grief, He knows loss, and He knows suffering. He is with us in it and has provided eternal relief from it at the right time.

My dear sister, I wish our pain wasn’t so. I wish the loss could disappear as quickly as it unpredictably came…that we could rewind, rewrite, and relive a different reality. I have no pretty bow to wrap our losses up in. But we have to risk believing the perfectly wise and loving God is writing a better story. The resurrection says it is so. The suffering is producing something we won’t altogether understand until we altogether understand God Himself, unhindered by sin. This is our eternal reality that changes the way we live today. For now, we must walk with our grief compassionately, reminding ourselves of these truths. There is no hope without them.

Jesus overcame death to make a way for us to believe again and again. God doesn’t need a clean slate because He is making something marvelous of our difficult reality. The hope of the gospel is exactly this. Out of the darkest night, the brightest light shines. God Himself, made weak, released the greatest power ever known. What will He write? I wish I could tell you the specifics. What I can tell you is that it’s better than anything you and I could ever write. Trust the God who knows my sweet sister. Be confident in the promise that we will know. With Him we can begin again.

Always Cheering you on,

Hope Anchors

Can I have your permission to throw it back even though it’s not Thursday? I didn’t think you’d mind. “Hope Floats” was a popular movie starring Sandra Bullock that was out when I was young (er).:-) In it, a woman finds herself struggling to recover after a devastating and embarrassing divorce.

She reflects on her life a lot when she heads to mamas house to find herself again. Hard times and unpredictable circumstances can cause us to lose ourselves a bit, can’t they? They certainly cause us to wish we didn’t have to live through them.

Reflection is a normal part of our search.

How did I get here? Did I take a wrong turn? Why me? Why Him? How could this happen? You get the search.

Sometimes we find answers and sometimes we don’t. We would be completely destitute if our hope was in answers.

In painful circumstances we have a unique opportunity to trust God more deeply. Unique because we see Him showing Himself in unique ways to those suffering throughout the scriptures. Our enemy would have us stay “beefed” with our Savior because of the “unfairness” of it all. He would love us to turn away and run, as if God will not meet us wherever we run. Our Savior calls us to trust.

He longs for our trust. He longs for our single mindedness. Our single heartedness. (Matthew 22:37) He never promised understanding, He promised grace (2 Corinthians 12:9) and wisdom (James 1:5)

Many times, we have to trust God with the answers we may never get. When I stop chasing understanding, there is space for transformation. Believing, not understanding is our Father’s heart for us. Who can understand the super natural? When I believe Him, I’m able to breath again.

I’m able to get up again.

I’m able to take one step forward again.

Believing what God says in the darkest hour marks a life of REAL HOPE. True hope is found in in Him ALONE.

I know deeply that all of this does not always feel true.

In fact, when I watch my son’s seizures begin while I am praying over him for healing or suffer through an uncontrolled coughing spell on an almost daily basis, I want to quit. Nothing on this side of heaven infuriates this mama more. My faith has never been so challenged as it is in my pain; in my son’s pain. Can you relate?

Fighting-and it is truly a feud for the centuries-to believe the truth when our circumstances seem to contradict it is a wrestling match well worth having. In these battles, truth always wins and anchors our hope.

Here are a couple of helpful definitions for us as we wade through all this “hope” talk.

First, faith. Faith is resting confidence in a promise. Kind of like sitting and resting completely on the object you are now. (your chair, couch, etc) Your full weight is in it. You believe it will hold you up. That’s why you sat in it. Although you have not yet seen the complete promise fulfilled, (you haven’t gotten up from the place of rest yet, so you won’t know until you do) you are resting in it.

Hope is confident expectation of the fulfillment of a promise.

Faith believes the promise.

Hope confidently expects the fulfillment of the promise.

Our hope is only as good as the promise to which it is tied.

What is the promise to which our hope is tied?

The promise of eternal salvation through Jesus Christ (and TONS of other amazing promises God lays out for His children in His word-the Bible). (John 3:16)

From the mouth of God, we have a promise (eh-hem, many promises) that we can confidently expect.

No. Matter. What. Sucker. Punches. Knock. The. Breath. Out. Of. Us. (see how I tried to get you to slow down there…:-))

Hope breaths. Hope moves. Hope lives. Hope anchors.

Not based on some ever changing, unpredictable circumstance, but Based on the promise of God.

Our hope does not float. THANK GOD. There is a lot more in store for us at the end of our movie than a slow dance with a cowboy!

“We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure.” Hebrews 6:19

When hope is REAL…

I live a life full of it.

Cheering you on,

#whenhopeisreal #neverwithouthope

Reflect with me for a few minutes. Are there things in this life, other than Jesus that I have put my hope in? Good things? Bad things? Is my hope in my comfortable circumstances? (great journal writing to do here or you can share in the comments if you’re brave! ;-))

Don’t Move

The best words to begin 2020!

“Stand still. Don’t. Move.”

It’s something I’ve said to my children over the years in several different situations. Whether it be swatting a stinging bug off of their head or keeping them from carelessly jumping into a busy street.

When I say it, I mean it and it’s for their protection.

In John 15:9, we read Jesus saying these words to His kids. “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love.”

Remain in my love.

Jesus is being blatantly clear on where we should abide as His children.

Don’t. Move.

Why? Because as he says a few verses before, “Apart from me, you can do nothing.” Obviously, we can still do things, but Jesus, as He always is speaks here of things of eternal value.

We read the results of remaining a bit further down in the text.

>>> We will have joy. (John 15:11)

>>> We will love others as He loves us. (John 15:12)

>>>We will have a friendship with the one true King. (John 15:14)

>>>We will bear fruit that will last. (John 15:16)

Confession: Sometimes I feel like God doesn’t love me because of my circumstances. Pain, loss, and disappointment can all tempt us to RUN from His love, not REMAIN in it. In fact, those very words have come out of my mouth from deep places of pain in my heart.

Who wants to remain in a love that can hurt so deeply? A love that doesn’t guarantee circumstances that I’m uncomfortable with?

A love that sent this same Jesus to a bloody cross…

...and a glorious resurrection.

I’ll tell you who. Someone who knows the lover.

As we get to know His intentions and believe He is who He says He is in His word, we will begin to shutter at the thought of NOT remaining in His love. We know it is our only TRUE place of safety and rest. Every other place we try to create only leaves us epically disappointed.

We aren’t good at remaining, being still and abiding in one place for a long period of time. So, what might it look like to remain in Jesus’ love? As His children, it’s important that we know.

There are a few things I’m intentional about practicing to “remain in His love.”

I force myself to be completely honest with Him about what is going on and how I’m feeling. I stop hiding from Him. He already knows anyway.

I make time to read His word. It’s there if I look for it. I stop avoiding His presence.

Then I believe what He says in it. I stop rejecting truth.

The choice is clear for me today. Will I be a “runner” or a “remainer?” (totally made that word up just for you… you’re welcome ;-))

Let today, the first day of 2020, be the day you’re a child who trusts their parent’s command…

Remain in His love. It’s for our best. There are no better words to begin 2020 with.

Cheering you on Always,

Kendra

#whenhopeisreal #neverwithouthope