Friday, May 13, 2022

More Blessed

The ding from my phone forced my eyes to open. The incoming message announced that my job assignment that morning had been cancelled. Good, I mumbled as I turned on the bed, ready to pull the covers back over my head and drift off for as long as I could get away with.

 

For weeks, I had been battling feelings of sadness and utter lethargy. A recent visit to my country of origin had reopened the deep wound left by my mom’s passing the year before. Even though the loss of the assignment meant a loss in income, I’d welcomed the chance to stay in bed to try to avoid the pain.

 

But then I remembered the other message, the one I’d received the day before, and I groaned. It was an invitation to all church members to gather this morning to pray for our senior pastor’s premature baby. Little Adrianna had been born almost 3 months early, and – at 1.5 lbs. – the doctors were amazed she hadn’t been lost right after birth. She needed all the prayer she could get so I couldn’t justify the overwhelming temptation to stay home instead.

 

I rolled out of bed, got ready and drove to church feeling as if a heavy, dark cloud hovered around my head. I didn’t think I’d be able to offer much during the prayer meeting but knew I had to show up – at least. I had lost a baby myself and couldn’t’ fathom seeing my pastor and his wife go throw the same agony I had experienced all those years ago.

 

The meeting had already started when I walked into the church building. I was glad I didn’t have to greet anyone and field their caring how-do-you-dos. Looking at the beloved faces of fellow church members and hearing their earnest prayers for our pastor’s child did little to dissipate the darkness that hung all around me and the burning ache in my chest. Unable to match their passionate pleas, I sat down and silently agreed with them. That was all I could give.

 

People began to read portions of Scripture aloud and to sing song of praise to a God of miracles and compassion. My plan going in had been to stay only for a short while, so I could go back home and to my bed as soon as possible. But as I began to join in prayer and song, time and the all-consuming grief that had tormented me for weeks began to fade away, being replaced by a heartfelt need to intercede for that precious baby’s life and wellbeing.

 

Next thing I knew, the meeting was over. Two and a half hours had passed since I had stepped into the building. I couldn’t believe it! But the greatest surprise was realizing that the pain in my heart and the heaviness I’d carried were gone and that a deep sense of peace and comfort had taken their place.

 

I had attended the meeting intending to pray for a miracle in my pastor’s baby and I was given one in return. It reminded of the verse in Acts 20:35, where the Apostle Paul quotes the Lord Jesus saying that it is more blessed to give than to receive. How true those words had proven to be in my case.

 

A month after her birth, Baby Adrianna is making strides in her growth and recovery. Our church family rejoices, knowing our prayers for her are being answered. To me, the miracle of life emerging before our very eyes is significantly special. It reminds me of the power and goodness of God to those who are willing to give of themselves, however little, to see a positive change in people’s lives, unaware that theirs will be changed in the process as well. 

Like mine had been on that blessed morning.

Friday, May 6, 2022

Distractions

A good friend once told me that if the devil doesn’t get you with sin, he’ll get you distracted.

Her words played back in my mind as I read Hebrews 12:1b which says, Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us.

This is a well-known passage; however, I had never noticed the first part that calls us to lay aside “every weight”. How these words spoke to my heart at that moment!

For years, I had struggled with a relation that used to drag me down.  Because I cared deeply, my efforts to "rescue" this person and our relationship consumed a great deal of my energy and attention.  The pain at my failed attempts was so deep, the weight of this burden so heavy, there were times I felt like I couldn’t go on.

Have you ever felt like that?

That passage in Hebrews helped me understand that the very unhealthy role I had assumed on my own pulled me down like a weight tied around my neck. I was able to see the hand of the enemy in this situation and how he’d used it to hinder my walk with Christ. How could I serve the Lord and seek to fulfill His plans for me when so much of my emotional energy and focus laid elsewhere. 

Though it felt as if I was failing my loved one and giving up on our relationship, I knew I needed to let go. I made a conscious decision to put this life – so precious and dear to me – and any future relationship between us in God’s hands, trusting He'd be more than able to care for my dear one. I was done carrying such heavy a burden; done getting distracted. I had a race to run!

How about you, dear friend?  How does Satan distract you? How does he keep you away from God’s path and His amazing plan for your life?  Does he ensnare you with greed, jealousy, or addiction? Does he consume you with fear, shame, or regret?  Or does he overwhelm you with a toxic relationship you can never fix?

As much as I hate to admit it, the devil is good at what he does.  He knows exactly how to get us distracted. But God is able to help us get back on the right track.

May He open our eyes to recognize evil traps and give us the grace to avert them so that we may be free and able to effectively run the race of life He has set before us, without any ensnares or distractions.