Monday, December 21, 2015

A Christmas Meditation - reposted from my blog "A Family House of Prayer" (Christmas 2013)

Bringing it to the top again (because it moves me to tears every year)

A Christmas Meditation - Into the Eyes of the Christ Child

As soft Christmas carol instrumentals played in the background, I asked the Lord, "Will you take me back into the time of Jesus' birth?  Can I be there with Mary and Joseph?"  As I prayed and set my eyes on Jesus, He transported me in the spirit, until I was standing in the stable with Mary and Joseph.  They were aware of my presence, but in an accepting way, not startled at all.  Amazed, I slowly moved closer to Mary, so that I could see Jesus more clearly.  Mary smiled at me and held the carefully wrapped infant out to me as if to say, “Would you like to hold him?”  

My heart melted within me.  "Me?  Hold him?” I stammered  

But Mary smiled with an expression that said, “Why not?” 

"Why, yes.  Of course!"

I was cradling the baby Jesus in my arms, close to my chest, just like I would hold any other baby.. except that my insides felt like they were melting into one giant pool of emotion.  

When the baby Jesus opened his eyes, I was mesmerized.  Deep, beautiful, and calm, his eyes were a color I'd never seen before.  Transfixed, I stared into those deeply wondrous eyes, my gaze filled with the longing to know Him more.




As I continued to gaze, I was drawn into those eyes, as if my entire being were being drawn through them and beyond them - far beyond them.  Suddenly I could see so far beyond - far back in time. Time before time.  Here Jesus was not an infant at all.  Instead I saw Him as "the craftsman at the Father’s side" during creation (Prov 8:30).  I was there, watching as He brought stars into existence.  In a time-lapsed fashion with startling clarity and color, similar to the images from the Hubbell space telescope, I watched the birth of stars and galaxies.  I knew I was light years away and yet at the same time it seemed like I had a front row seat, watching brilliant, multi-faceted lights swirling and flashing.  

Overcome, I took a deep breath, and again my eyes were captivated by this tiny baby, whose eyes held galaxies.  How could it be that these beautiful baby eyes were in essence the same eyes that gazed upon the very beginnings of creation of an entire Universe! This baby at one time spoke and galaxies were birthed at His very word!


I handed baby Jesus back to Mary, and immediately I was back in my own home, sitting on my brown couch with my two daugh ters by my side.  They were completely unaware that I’d been gone at all, though they wondered at the tears I wiped away.

Like Mary, I ponder these things in my heart.

For more meditation:

Proverbs 8: 22 -31 (New Living Translation)
 "The LORD brought me forth as the first of his works, before his deeds of old; 23 I was appointed from eternity, from the beginning, before the world began. 24 When there were no oceans, I was given birth, when there were no springs abounding with water; 25 before the mountains were settled in place, before the hills, I was given birth, 26 before he made the earth or its fields or any of the dust of the world. 27 I was there when he set the heavens in place,when he marked out the horizon on the face of the deep, 28 when he established the clouds above and fixed securely the fountains of the deep, 29 when he gave the sea its boundary so the waters would not overstep his command, and when he marked out the foundations of the earth.30 Then I was the craftsman at his side. I was filled with delight day after day, rejoicing always in his presence, 31 rejoicing in his whole world and delighting in mankind. 
                                                                                                                                                           Proverbs 8:25-35 (Complete Jewish Bible).   25 I was brought forth before the hills, before the mountains had settled in place; 26 he had not yet made the earth, the fields, or even the earth's first grains of dust. 27 When he established the heavens, I was there. When he drew the horizon's circle on the deep, 28 when he set the skies above in place, when the fountains of the deep poured forth, 29 when he prescribed boundaries for the sea, so that its water would not transgress his command, when he marked out the foundations of the earth, 30 I was with him as someone he could trust. For me, every day was pure delight, as I played in his presence all the time,. 31 playing everywhere on his earth, and delighting to be with humankind. 32 "Therefore, children, listen to me: happy are those who keep my ways. 33 Hear instruction, and grow wise; do not refuse it. 34 How happy the person who listens to me, who watches daily at my gates and waits outside my doors. 35 For he who finds me finds life and obtains the favor of ADONAI.

LINK TO COMMENTARIES:  http://biblehub.com/proverbs/8-22.htm

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Outshining the Diamonds (a poem)

The enormity of the beauty of this moment in time called now
Is engulfing me with wonder
Overwhelming my mind

And words seem to flee to the far corners of my mind
Intimidated by the role
I want them to play
To somehow capture it all

A ring on a finger, sparkling with exquisite grandeur
Yet somehow failing to capture the depths
Of the love it represents

While lights twinkle from a Christmas tree
Reminding us all of a greater love
That came to give true life.

I cannot stop the tears that flow more readily than words
Spilling forth in joy unspeakable
Yet yearning for something more.

It’s as if this taste of beauty stirs an ancient memory within
When the purest love in the universe
Spoke the word and I became.

Longing unleashed deep within me cries glory
As the sun rises arrayed in splendor
And footsteps upstairs remind me
That no matter the depths I experience here in this moment
Solitude is fleeting and the day will unfold
Just like every other day

Except for the dazzling sparkle of the diamonds
and the sparkle dancing in her eyes
as she imagines all that’s coming;

Except for the deep, eternal stirring tugging within me
Reminding me that the Love I live for
Outshines even the beauty of now.

(Beauty of 12-19-2015)

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

A Prayer from Colossians – Ch 1 -3

Lord, fill me and strengthen me.
9Lord, I pray, asking and believing, that You will fill me with the knowledge of Your will with all spiritual wisdom and understanding.
10 Lord, fill me, so that I may walk in a manner worthy of you, and that I may be fully pleasing to You, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of You, my Lord and my God.
 Lord, I pray, asking and believing, that you will strengthen me with all power, according to your glorious might, so that I may have great endurance and patience with joy.
(Repeat above, believing this for yourself, personally.)
Thank You for bringing me into Your Light.
I thank you, Father, for you have qualified me to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. 13 Thank you for delivering me from the domain of darkness and transferring me into the kingdom of your beloved Son, 14 in whom I have redemption and the forgiveness of sins.
15 I rejoice in You, Jesus, knowing that you are just like your Father, the invisible and eternal God, and that you were the firstborn of all creation.
Confession of Faith in Jesus and Who He Is.
 16 I believe in You, Christ Jesus, that by You all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through You and by You. 17 You are before all things, and in You, Lord Jesus, all things hold together. 18 You are the head of the body, the church. You are the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, and in everything You are preeminent [above all]. 19 For in You, Jesus, all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, 20 and I believe that You are reconciling all things to yourself, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood that you shed on the cross.
21 Although I was once alienated and hostile in mind, doing evil not good, YOU have now reconciled me - in your body of flesh by your death - in order to present ME holy and blameless and above reproach before You.   23 Be merciful to me that I may continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that I have heard, which has been proclaimed in all creation[g] under heaven.
Rejoicing, working, proclaiming: Christ in me the hope of glory.
24 May I rejoice even when I am suffering.  Thank you for calling me to minister and proclaim the Gospel, according to the unique stewardship that you give to me.  May I work to make your Word fully known. 26   Lord, I pray that you will allow me to be part of revealing the mystery that was hidden for ages and generations but revealed to us in Christ.  Make known again in my generation the riches of the glory of this mystery, which is YOU, Christ Jesus, dwelling in ME and in each of us. You are the Hope of Glory – You are in me! 28 May I proclaim YOU, admonishing and teaching everyone whom you’ve given me, with all wisdom, that they may mature in Christ. 29 May this be something I work hard for using your strength -  struggling with all Your energy that You powerfully work within me.

Ch 2

I pray that You will encourage our hearts, Lord, and knit us together in love, so that we may reach all the riches of full assurance of understanding.  I want to live in this reality: the knowledge of God's mystery, which is You, Christ Jesus.  In YOU are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. 
May I know the mysteries of hidden treasure – wisdom and knowledge that are found in You, alone!
I pray that no one may delude me with plausible arguments. I pray that I will retain the firmness of my faith in You, Christ Jesus.
Therefore, just as I have received you, Christ Jesus, as my Lord, may I walk in You, rooted, grounded, and built up in YOU and established in my faith and may I live a life that is overflowing with thanksgiving.
I will see to it that no one takes me captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ. 
Confession of Faith
9 I confess that in Christ Jesus dwells the whole fullness of the Godhead in bodily form, 10 and I confess the reality that at the same time, I have been (and therefore I am) filled with Christ, who is the head of all rule and authority. 1In Christ I have also had my heart circumcised through Christ, by putting off the body of the flesh, 12 having been buried with him in baptism.  And I also confess that I have been raised with Christ through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised Christ Jesus from the dead. 
13 Although without Christ I was dead in my trespasses and flesh, You, the gracious God, have made me alive together with Christ, and you have forgiven me all my trespasses, 14 by canceling the record of debt that stood against me with its legal demands. You set it all aside, nailing it to the cross. 15 And I rejoice that YOU have disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in Christ!
Rejecting Religious Pride
16 Because I know that Christ is alive in me, I will let no one pass judgment on me in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. 17 I recognize that these were and are simply a shadow of the things to come.  The substance – the eternal reality - belongs to Christ. 18 For these reasons I will pay no mind to those who would try to disqualify me, by insisting on asceticism and worship of angels, going on in detail about visions,[d] puffed up with spiritual pride. 
19 I will not turn from the TRUTH; instead I will hold fast to the Head (you Christ Jesus), from whom the whole body, nourished and knit together through its joints and ligaments, grows with a growth that is from God.
20 With Christ I have died to the elemental spirits of the world.  Therefore I am not still alive to the ways of this world.  I will not allow myself to be duped into submitting to religion’s regulations— 21 “Do not handle, Do not taste, Do not touch” 22 (referring to things that all perish as they are used)—according to human precepts and teachings. 23  I acknowledge that although these have indeed an appearance of wisdom in promoting self-made religion and asceticism and severity to the body,  they are actually of no value in stopping the indulgence of the flesh.

Ch3

Since I have been raised with Christ, I will seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. 
I will set my mind on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For I have died, and my life is hidden with Christ in God. And I know that when Christ who is my life appears, then I also will appear with him in glory.
I choose to put to death what is earthly and base within me:[b] sexual immorality, impure passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry.  I recognize that on account of these the wrath of God is coming.[c] Although at one time I walked in these paths, now I choose to put all these behind me: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and unwholesome talk.  I won’t put others down.  Instead, I choose to tell the truth, build others up, and not lie; I will put off the old self[d] with its practices. 
10 I will put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.11 Here there is not Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, [Catholic or Protestant; religious or free; or any other categories that divide us]; but Christ is all, and in all.
12 As one of God's chosen ones, holy and beloved, I put on a compassionate heart that is full of kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.13 I choose to bear with others in love, forgiving others, as the Lord has forgiven me.  14 And above all these I choose to put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. 15 And I choose to let the peace of Christ rule in my heart.;
I choose to be thankful. 16 and to let the Word of Christ dwell in me richly.  I ask that you will help me, Lord, to teach and admonish others in all wisdom. 
I choose a life of singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in my heart to You, my Lord and my God. I will sing in the Spirit, pray in the Spirit, and live in the Spirit.
I choose to 17do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to the Father through him.
Prayer for Help in Family Life:
18 Help me, Lord, to submit to my husband, as is fitting in the Lord. 19 Help my husband, to love me, and to not be harsh with me. 20 Help my children to obey their parents in everything, wanting to please you, Lord. 21 May my husband not provoke our children, lest they become discouraged. 
May I Obey You as Your Bondservant
22 As your bondservant,[f] Christ Jesus, may I obey You in everything with sincerity of heart, fearing the Lord. 23 In whatever I am called to do, may I work heartily, as for You, Lord, and not for men, 24 knowing that I will receive an inheritance from YOU as my reward. 25 May I not concern myself with those who do me wrong, knowing that the wrongdoer will be paid back for the wrong he has done, for You are just.
I trust you, Lord, to be my great defender and my great reward.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Why Pray? God can do it without my help!

The other night as I was praying and starting to fall asleep, I was pondering, “Why do I really need to pray for others?  Wouldn’t it make more sense to just fall asleep and let God do what he intends to do anyway?”  It is that age-old question, “Why wouldn’t God just act according to his good will and his all-loving, all-knowing, and all-powerful nature?  Why should we have to pray for Him to work?” 

Unexpectedly, the Lord answered me quickly.  He reminded me that in the visible, natural realm we humans are almost always called upon to take action.  When someone needs help with a flat tire, a twisted ankle, or a lost wallet, we naturally come to that person’s aid – and we don’t question why God doesn’t step in on his own. In stepping in to help others, we are blessed with the opportunity to do God’s good work on earth.

If this is true in the traditional physical realm, why would I think that it should be different in the spiritual and quantum physical realm where prayer operates? 

Yes, God obviously could bypass us in meeting the needs of others.  Not only is He more than capable of meeting every need personally, He also has legions of angels at His disposal.  His choice to allow us to be His agents of mercy, compassion, help, and counsel, is His gift to us.  It is in the place of acting in accordance with God’s love, wisdom, and strength that we come to know Him more.  It is through co-laboring with Him that we become increasingly bonded to His heart.   Just as a father invites his young son to wash the car with him, knowing that the son is gaining far more from the experience than simply learning how to wash a car, so our Father invites us to partner with Him in helping others for much higher purposes than simply getting the help to the right place.

Helping others practically and physically (without prayer), though extremely valuable, has a weaker potential to bond us to God’s heart than prayer does.  When we engage in practically helping others, we may easily be tempted to think we are working in our own capacity only.  For instance, I can help my neighbor pack and move boxes without once thinking of the act as “co-laboring with God” (although if I am mindful of being God’s hands, feet, and incarnate love I will probably have a much more fulfilling day – and may naturally include prayer as part of the mission).  When it comes to prayer, however, it is practically impossible to think that I am a solo agent.  Prayer is a humble act of co-laboring in which I can know for sure that God’s power is essential to the equation.  When I  take the time to meditate on the act of prayer as joining my heart to God’s heart, tapping into his unlimited resources to bring positive change (healing, provision, even salvation), then I naturally become increasingly aware of the value of prayer as co-laboring with God.

When praying, the first and most important part is aligning my heart with God’s heart!  Much wiser souls than I have said, “Prayer isn’t about changing God’s mind.”  I am realizing more and more how important it is to remember this when we pray!  I must never put myself in a position of working against the plans and intentions of God, for His wisdom and his ways are vastly superior to mine.  (Isa 55:9). Like me, you have probably seen various models of prayer that seem to be geared toward getting God to change His mind about something, rather than working in accordance with (in agreement with) God’s heart.  When we are tempted to view prayer in this way, we must remember who God truly is – Creator, King, and Lord!  Then we will see that we must purposefully turn from the perspective of changing God’s mind and instead mindfully align our hearts (and our thoughts) with God’s heart from the very beginning.  

Through aligning our hearts with God, we come to know His heart!  And this is the highest call – to know Him!  (Php. 3:8-11).  In prayer, I commune with God.  And it is through prayer – calling upon Him - that I come to know Him like in no other place, for prayer operates in the same dimension in which the Spirit operates.  In prayer, I am saying, “God, show me your heart for this person; show me your will in this situation; show me what you want.”  Then I am taking the next step and saying, “Yes, Lord!  Your will be done in this person, in this way; your kingdom of healing and wisdom and power come, right here in this place just like in heaven.”  Prayer transports me into the place of union with the very heart of God.  It is much like me sitting on the Father’s lap, listening to the cry of his heart, and then saying, “Oh, yes, Father!  Yes!  May it be so!” 

If God acted without involving us, through prayer, we would miss out on the opportunity to co-labor with Him and know him.  Thus, it makes sense that prayer should be integral to the accomplishment of God’s purposes on earth, just as the actions of our hands and our feet are integral to the accomplishment of His purposes on earth.

In prayer, I must trust God’s Word and obey the call to pray.  I am just beginning (barely beginning) to understand how (in a quantum physical sense) prayer operates to take the love and power of God and transform it into healing, life-changing power that intersects the lives of others.  But I do not need to know HOW in order to trust that it works any more than I need to understand the internal workings of an automobile to get in one and drive.  So, I refuse to allow my lack of understanding to keep me from obeying the call to pray.  Faith is all that is required.

I must believe the truth that God has commanded me to pray.  I must believe that God's Word promises me that my prayers are “powerful and effective.”  I must embrace the reality that God planned from the very beginning that my prayers would be an integral part of fulfilling His plans.  My obedience is precious to the Lord, and even more so when I do not fully understand how it all works.  My faith and trust are firmly established in the hope that He who has called me is faithful and true; he cannot lie; and he who began a good work will be faithful to complete it.  The only question then is this:  Will I be faithful to obey the call? 

My Prayer:  Father, forgive me for doubting even for a moment this truth: that prayer is the highest call!  Remind me that the place of prayer is where I come to know you more than in any other place.  Remind me of the glory of participating in bringing your will to pass on the earth. Help me to continue to develop an understanding that prayer is powerful and effective.  Remind me that I don’t pray to change you, and I don’t pray simply to change me, either.  I pray to fulfill my role in the kingdom to bring true change and true healing power.  Just as you spoke everything in the universe into existence by the power of your words, so you have called me to call into existence the answers to prayer that you have placed on our hearts.

I have such a limited understanding, and yet I trust you Lord, that you hear the cry of my heart.  You hear and answer, and while you listen and I listen, we are communing in a way that is truly bonding our hearts together as one.  I will obey the call to pray without ceasing, more and more, each day, because I know that prayer is pure devotion, pure pursuit of You and Your Kingdom, and a powerful and effective force beyond my comprehension!  

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Christ in Me the Hope of Glory

Now these three remain – faith hope and love.  Faith expressing itself in love.  Christ in me the hope of glory.  Where then is my hope?  My hope is in him who loves me and gave himself for me.  My hope is in YOU alone, Lord!  You are the author and finisher of my faith.  I abide in your love because you have prayed and the father has answered, that the love that is in the Father for the Son may also be in us.  I am living and breathing all day long an atmosphere of faith, hope and love.   Together this faith hope and love is grace to me, is goodness to me, and provides all that I need, beyond what I can ask or imagine.  May I walk today and every day in this atmosphere of faith hope and love.

May I walk more deeply in faith, cling more tightly to hope, and embody more completely your love.  Everything that comes against my faith, or tries to attack my hope, or tempts me to not love is of the evil one.  I will remain in love, remain in hope, remain in faith.  Faith that moves mountains.  Hope that never dies. Love that fills and heals even the deepest of wounds.  Give me your heart, Lord.

For what is prayer if it is not the joining of my heart to yours?  What is life worth if it is not lived in your presence and from your presence?  There should never be anything that I desire that is not consistent with placing all my hope in you and walking out a life of love and of faith in you. 

Help me to unlearn every unhelpful idea of prayer that I have heard and practiced.

I enter into your heart by faith now, coming boldly before your mercy seat and your throne of grace, and I ask that you will forgive me for every idle word, every unloving thought, and fill me instead with a holy fire of your love for all whom I would encounter.  Let my heart be vulnerable to the mercy that you want to pour through me.  Let me be a humble servant that is solely motivated by your heart of compassion, not being moved by perceived need, but rather moved by the real power and love that can come only through you, laying aside the flesh and embracing spirit as life.

I boldly confess and declare this truth:  I respond to each new thing with expectancy and hope!  I do not fear!  I am bathed in perfect love and therefore all fear must flee!  I am a conduit of God’s love, mercy, hope, power and wisdom.  And everywhere I go I bring God’s “more than enough” to those who are thirsty, hungry, discouraged, and broken.  I bring HOPE because Christ in me is HOPE, and he is power and love and wisdom.  And everywhere I go, I bring Him.  Christ in Me is not just my hope of glory.  Christ in me is HOPE to the world, to every single person.  May I walk with great assurance and confidence!  I expect great things, because the one who is IN ME  is greater than any fear, any doubt, any pain.  HE is HOPE.  HE is LOVE.  HE is all I need and all that is needed in this world.


Words from the Lord are in italics below:
Love casts out fear of man, because if you really love the person before you, you will want everything good I have for them, and you will not worry about how they react to you.  To be rejected is not something to fear.  Your reward comes from your obedience, not results.  Sure, results are fun and good, too!  But when you turn your ears and eyes to me and determine to obey all that I say, then you cannot lose.  Every prayer, every kind word of encouragement – even those that are rebuffed – are building an eternal glory. 
To love me is to obey me.  Obedience comes from trust.  Trust comes from knowing who I am and what I am is good and loving and powerful.  Those who are called will have eyes/ears opened.  Whoever is called today is ready.  And those who are called and open have their hearts ready, just waiting, though they may not always realize it.  Out of a 100 people in a store on any given day, there may be one who is open and ready to receive a touch of my spirit on her life … but consider this - there are many more who might be open to a friendly and encouraging word, and it is never wrong to show my love!  Do not be discouraged.  Just love.  Just smile.  Just ask for the right word at the right time, and I will give it to you.  Do not let the naysayers get you down.  Do not listen to lies.  There is one liar with many tongues, but a lie is still from the Liar.  Do not listen to lies!
The truth will set you free – free from fear, free from a sense of inadequacy, and free from people-pleasing.  Embrace the truth that Christ in you is the hope of glory.  And so as you walk around today, remember that you are filled with a GLORY and a HOPE that the world craves.  You are walking HOPE.  You are walking Glory.  You are walking around with the Hope of Glory inside you.  Let that sink in.
I confess and declare:  I am walking HOPE.  I am walking GLORY. 
Daughter, you must discard the old view of yourself – the “Who am I to do anything special?”  That is a lie, a false self, and one that keeps you from love and compassion and power!  
Who are you?  [you ask, and I answer] - You are a walking fountain of Holy Spirit love, joy and peace!  
You are filled with CHRIST and, therefore, you are filled with Christ’s HOPE and Christ’s GLORY!   
What will it take for you to see yourself rightly?! 
That is what these [teachers and preachers, the ones] who “get it” are trying to tell you – to tell the rest of my bride.  This is what Todd White and Reinhard Bonnke and Corey Russell are trying to get across – There is no reason to walk around in timidity, because the ONE who walked on water and raised the dead and set the captives free – HE is in YOU!  I AM in you!
 If you will accept and acknowledge and grab hold of this Truth, then this Truth will indeed set you free to live the life you are called to live – with boldness and love and power!
Lord, take me from here and move me to there!  Give me divine wisdom and understanding that will open my eyes to see you as you really are and to see me as filled with you.  I believe that you are filling and indwelling me.  Show me how to walk in this reality today!  Without fear!
The enemy would like me to believe a lie that there is reason to fear – that I will somehow screw it up.  Help me Lord to close my ears to this lie!!!
I cannot screw it up if I am filled with your love.  Help me to walk the walk of love today and every day, looking at everyone with fresh eyes – eyes that see each person as a uniquely created person who is loved by You, LORD

Unlearning [the lies, and patterns of habitual thought] takes time and focus.  Keep coming back to the TRUTH.  The TRUTH will set you free to be WHO you are called to be in ME!

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Wrong assumptions and wrong questions; The question "why?"

We recently watched a movie in which a 10-year-old boy dies suddenly from an allergic reaction to bee stings.  At the funeral, the pastor addresses the bereaved parents, family, and friends, saying, “God must have wanted him for a very special purpose in heaven.”   The parents and other families nod sadly, as if somehow this thought brings some comfort. 

But does anyone honestly believe that God needs to take people from earth to accomplish something in heaven?  

It all comes back to the age-old question:  "Why?"   "Why do bad things happen?"  "Who's to blame?"

It seems that lately, I have been hearing more and more Christian teachers explain disease, death, and “bad things” this way: “God doesn’t bring death and disease.  Satan does.”  They say that knowing this fact will make people feel better.  For instance, a small boy is told that God took his mother to heaven.  He decides he hates God.  Then, when he is grown, he is finally told, “God did not take your mother away; Satan did it.  When he hears this, he is no longer mad at God.  He has someone to blame – the enemy.  

We know that it is the enemy's intent to steal, kill, and destroy.

Having recently heard these sermons - the ones that decry this attribution of death to our God in heaven taking people from their loved ones -- I thought about whether I should debrief with my 12-14 year old daughters who watched the movie with us.  I could tell them, “God doesn’t take people from their families.  Satan is the one who kills, steals, and destroys.”   But immediately I wondered what kind of peace that could possibly bring them.   If satan is able to come in and kill and steal a 10 year old boy (and get away with it!), then doesn’t that also mean that God either could not or would not stop satan from doing so?  And if that is true, then who can feel safe?   I didn’t want to create another door to fear, so I decided to wait and get more revelation before addressing this question with my daughters.

I am currently reading another book, with a different focus.  It postulates that neither God nor satan are to blame for the bad stuff on the earth.  With great insight into scripture, this author explains that Satan does not have the power to kill – though he can work through people who give him authority in their lives.  And on earth God has power, but He has delegated all his authority to humans; therefore, He does not have the authority to act -- unless people give him that authority.  So, according to this reasoning, everything is in the hands of us humans.  We make choices.  We can cede authority to the devil or to God.   Under this scenario, if we attempt to answer the question “Why do good people die untimely deaths?” we get a different answer.  We can’t blame satan or God.  Somebody (a person or more than one person) opened up the door to evil in that person’s life.  And other somebodies failed to act in a way to counter that evil.  This actually seems to make sense at one level.  

However, when this theory is applied in actual life circumstances, I wonder if it leaves us with more questions than answers!  For instance, a woman who was full of faith, love, and life recently died of cancer, even though hundreds of strong believers were praying for her healing.  We are left with these questions:  What did she do wrong, if anything?   Perhaps we didn’t pray enough, or believe enough, or act in faith enough?  Perhaps there was something we all should have done that we didn’t do?  What type of answers could these questions possibly bring --  except answers that would fill us with regret, blame, guilt, shame, and remorse?  Clearly shame, guilt, and blame are contrary to what God would want us thinking about her and about ourselves!

My conclusion: When we choose to question "why," none of the answers satisfy.  Could it be that we are pounding on the wrong door?

Today the Lord reminded me that all of this frustration and asking “why?” over and over is simply us asking the wrong question.  But why do we keep on asking the wrong question? 

Maybe our wrong question comes from our incorrect assumptions. 

For starters, our first assumption seems to be that we each should have a life that is relatively pain free.  This is how life is “supposed to be.”   The logic goes somewhat like this.  Comfort/freedom from pain = "Good."  Good is from God, who is a good Father.   Therefore, Father God will obviously want us to be comfortable/relatively pain free.  Things that make us uncomfortable (disease, injury, losing loved ones) are the opposite of “good.”  The opposite of good is evil.  And if they are evil, they must be contrary to God’s will and be “from the devil.”  

But given the realities of this life, Paul's letters from prison, Christian history replete with martyrs, and the promised glory of the next life, which is eternal, perhaps we need to reconsider this assumption that all things that make us sad and uncomfortable are contrary to God's will for us in this life.

Our next assumption is that God, who is all loving and loves all, would (or at least should) want to create all people approximately equal in potential.  Therefore, everyone should be born with about the same health and strength and ability to learn, and we should all have long, healthy, reasonably comfortable lives in which we get at least a good portion of what we desire.   If we adhere to this assumption, then whenever we encounter someone who was not born “healthy and normal,” we have to have an explanation.  Did God make a mistake?  No.  He can’t make mistakes.  So, the devil must have done it, right?  Well, no, not exactly.  The devil can't create anything.  Then this must be due to “sin,” right?  (No, this is an error that Jesus addressed in John 9:3).  So, we must again consider that our assumption itself is wrong.

Our first two assumptions -  (1) that those things that make us sad and uncomfortagle are contrary to God's will for our lives and (2) that God intends all people to have healthy, strong, lives of essentially the same amount of opportunity - seem to be obviously faulty.  There is one more assumption to consider..

We hold to the assumption that every life that God creates He intends to last a really long time here on earth – but minimally past age 70, 75, or fill in your own preferred age.  With this assumption in place, we need explanations for every “untimely” death.   We demand to have an explanation, even for those in Christ for whom death is just a passing from earth into the presence of God where they will live forever.  "Why?!" we cry, and then despair when none of the explanations make any sense.

If we are honest with ourselves, we will realize that we all hold something close to these three assumptions - despite the fact that our life experience do not support them!  And certainly history does not support them.  In addition, there are plenty of examples in scripture that do not support them.  If they are not supported by observation, history, or scripture, then where do they come from?

People are born and live only one year, or 10 years, or 20 years, though many now live into their 90s.  Some are born blind and remain blind.  Some are healed.  Some have no legs, or only one arm, and some have little strength throughout their lives. It has been true throughout history.  Why do we keep asking why?   Indeed, often the people whom we admire the most (and write books and make movies about) are those who have been born with the greatest disadvantages and somehow overcome them!  Locally, a young woman died of cancer at age 19 or 20, and her life was celebrated because she used her last few years to make a huge difference in the lives of others while holding onto the hope of eternal life when she passed.  She inspired many!  (Dare we say she did more in 20 years than most do with 80?)   

History, retold repeatedly through books and movies, applauds and exalts the martyrs and celebrates those who make a huge contributions before dying young.  Are those lives any less valuable then someone who lives to 90? (And, to ask an honest question, are the longest lives the most desirable?) 

Our assumptions, then, may indeed be the main problem.  

What if we looked at the whole thing completely differently?  What if our primary purpose was not to figure out “why” and “who’s to blame”?  What if instead our primary focus was on rejoicing in God’s good and perfect gifts - even when they aren’t what we expected?  And even when they don’t last as long as we expected? Wouldn’t that change everything?

Perhaps we misunderstand and get frustrated because we aren’t looking at life from a heavenly, eternal perspective.  Can we accept the truth of scripture: that these light and momentary trials are preparing for us an eternal weight of glory?  Jesus said, “Blessed are those who mourn, those who are poor, those who are poor in spirit.”  His words carry a deep, deep truth.  But is it truth we are willing to accept?  Or perhaps we have heard the words so many times that they no longer carry any meaning for us?

Is it possible to mourn and rejoice at the same time?  According to the Word, those who mourn are blessed and we are to rejoice in the Lord always.  But can we truly embrace mourning and rejoicing simultaneously?

Jesus told us, “In this world you will have trouble.  But take heart; I have overcome the world.”

Perspective -  The ability to see things rightly.  

What if our perspective on life was one of gratitude for every blessing, every day, every breath?  What if we stopped focusing on what’s wrong and chose instead to thank God in everything, like his Word commands?  What if we could rejoice and thank God for every year we had with a friend or a loved one, rather than trying to figure out why their lives weren’t longer?

What if we could accept the comforting arms of our Abba Father, allowing ourselves to be held in His love that goes deep to comfort those who mourn?  What if in allowing his comfort we find ourselves nearer to His heart than every before?

What if the pastor at the little boy’s funeral was able to help those gathered enter into a time of rejoicing, alongside the mourning?  – a time of rejoicing that was focused on recognizing God’s goodness in allowing these parents the great privilege of loving and raising this boy for 10 years?  A privilege that they did nothing to earn.

Did God take him away because he needed another helper in heaven?  No! 

Did God give him as a gift for these parents to cherish for 10 years?  Yes!  

God didn’t have to give life to a boy and place that boy in this home with these parents at all.  But God did choose to give them this gift.  Who are we to question that the gift was only 10 years long?  

Do they mourn?  Yes, of course!  Deep mourning!  But this mourning can still be laced with gratitude.  And it can be the door to a nearness to God that draws them deep into His heart.  This kind of mourning can lead to eventual acceptance and hope.  This mourning doesn't end in hating God.  Instead it ends in a life-affirming hope that can embrace others and walk through the valley of the shadow of death without fear or despair, walking with others, too.

A conclusion of sorts.

What did any of us do to deserve the love and life and gifts that we have been given?  Who are we to question how long we get to enjoy them here on earth?

What if all our assumptions and presuppositions are so wrong that they are keeping us from embracing truth?  What if these improper assumptions are blocking us from obeying scripture's admonishment to "Rejoice always," and "Give thanks in everything?"

Many years ago in a worship service I was having a hard time singing the song, "Father of Lights" ("Every good and perfect gift comes from above ...").  I had just lost my first child to miscarriage, and I felt empty, vulnerable, and deeply sad.  The Lord challenged me, asking me: "Will you accept this gift, even though it wasn't what you expected?  Will you accept the gift of carrying this child for only a short time?"  He showed me a beautifully wrapped present.  And I sobbed and sobbed, with physical pain and emotional pain, as I realized what he wanted me to do.  He wanted me to open my hands and take this gift, to receive it, symbolically saying, "Yes, I accept what I cannot understand."  Through tears, and a tearing of my heart,  I obeyed, opening my hands to hold it.  As I did, the Lord said, "If you can accept this gift, even though it wasn't what you expected, or wanted, it will become something that you treasure rather than despise."  Opening my hands to say yes, though I could not understand it at all in the moment, was a crucial turning point in my life.  I had to accept what I didn't understand.

Over the years I have watched as others have accepted gifts that were far more difficult - their child's cancer, their child's disability - and in that acceptance those individuals have found God's faithfulness to be complete.  His faithfulness has been complete in those things that seem to be the opposite of good and perfect gifts.  But they must be - because scripture is always true... every good and perfect gift comes from the Father. 

Truth: To be born less than “healthy and normal” is to be born more dependent on God.  Can we accept this life with limitations as a gift?  Did Helen Keller accept her life as a gift?  Yes!  Did Fanny Crosby* count her blindness as a blessing in being close to God?  Yes!  These women accomplished FAR more than most people with intact physical senses ever dream.

Truth: To suffer pain – physical or emotional – can (and should) actually serve to draw us closer to Christ rather than cause us to question God’s ways.   The apostle Paul asked for sufferings(!) so that he could fellowship with Christ and know Him better.  And the Bible says that Jesus himself learned obedience from the things he suffered, (which must mean that in his sufferings he learned what it was truly like to be obedient as a human is obedient to God, since Jesus was already perfectly obedient to the Father in his identity as Son of God.

Since Jesus suffered far more than anyone will likely ever suffer, and He chose that suffering out of a heart of love, then who are we to rail against God (or satan, or ourselves) in the face of suffering?  Could we instead rejoice as we have been commanded?

“In everything give thanks.”  What if I could sit here and give thanks in everything?   - setting aside all worry, fear, regret, and everything I assumed would happen?  -- knowing that in my flesh I deserve nothing, but God in His mercy has given me life (at least 49 years’ worth so far!), and provision, and family, and relationship with Jesus, and eternal life with Him – Forever! – And eternal life for all those who believe!  And a promised reunion with all those who have gone before!   Isn’t that enough?

These are all just ponderings.  I’m sure I will have plenty of opportunities to fall into the temptation to ask the “why” questions again.  I just hope that at that time I will be able to enter into thanksgiving and praise, rejoicing for what I have (and have had) rather than what I thought I was supposed to have – what I assumed I was entitled to.

Lord, may I not fear today or tomorrow.  May I not fear the fact that I can’t see the future – trusting that every day that you have planned for me is already written down and prepared.  Every day that you have planned for each of my loved ones is already written down and prepared.  We live to enjoy the unfolding of the mystery, the opening of the gift, knowing that each day is a gift.   May I truly trust that all my days are in your hands!   Remind me that there is NO FEAR in love, for perfect love casts out all fear.  Lack of peace means I am not trusting you as I should.  Let me truly put my trust in you, not in my assumptions, knowing that your plans are perfect (and my assumptions are full of holes.).  May I have no fear of evil.  “I will fear no evil.”  For you are always with me.   

I believe these words to be true, Lord:  “He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away” (Revelation 21:4).  


So I trust that every sorrow and every disability and every loss embraced in faith for the glory of God will be redeemed in glory beyond what we can imagine now: “This light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:17–18).

Footnotes: 


Frances Jane "Fanny" Crosby (1820-1915), American hymn writer and poetess, a blind woman, who wrote over 8,000 hymns. Once a preacher sympathetically remarked, "I think it is a great pity that the Master did not give you sight when He showered so many other gifts upon you." She replied quickly, "Do you know that if at birth I had been able to make one petition, it would have been that I should be born blind?" "Why?" asked the surprised minister. "Because when I get to heaven, the first face that shall ever gladden my sight will be that of my Savior!"
http://www.wholesomewords.org/biography/biorpcrosby.html
How many hymns did Fanny Crosby write?  Francis Jane Crosby wrote more than 9,000 hymns, some of which are among the most popular in every Christian denomination. She wrote so many that she was forced to use pen names lest the hymnals be filled with her name above all others.