Wanderers, Captives, the Sick and Storm-Tossed

At any time in your life, or perhaps even now, could you place yourself in one of these categories?

Perhaps you’ve felt like a wanderer in the desert, miles and miles away from the tiniest glimpse of the promised land.

Or chained in captivity, like a prisoner. Addiction or shame is the iron shackled to your wrists and ankles.

Maybe you’ve battled illness or maybe you feel like a storm-tossed sailor, even though your feet stand on dry ground.

Let’s park our weary souls in Psalm 107 and soak in an ocean of grace.

The wanderer in the wilderness, hungry and thirsty, cries out in trouble…

“Lord, help!”

And he rescued them from their distress.

For he satisfies the thirsty and fills the hungry with good things. (v. 4-9)

Friends, if you’re feeling hungry and thirsty for something deeper and bigger than food and drink, do you know where to go?

Jesus is living water and the bread of life.

Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” ~John 4:13-14

The captive sitting in darkness and deepest gloom, imprisoned in chains of misery, cries out in trouble…

“Lord, help!”

And he saved them from their distress.

He led them from the darkness and deepest gloom. He snapped their chains….He broke down their prison gates of bronze; he cut apart their bars of iron. (v. 10-16)

Friends, if you find yourself in bondage, yearning for freedom from a cycle of self-destruction, do you know where to go?

 Jesus is our escape.

In my distress I prayed to the Lord and the Lord answered me and set me free. ~Psalm 118:5

The one afflicted with illness, knocking on death’s door, cries out in trouble…

“Lord, help!”

And he saved them from their distress.

He sent out his word and healed them, snatching them from the door of death. (v 18-22)

Friends, if you are sick and afflicted, desperate for new life, do you know where to go?

Jesus is resurrection and life.

Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die.” ~John 11:25

The one tossed about in the raging storms of life cries out in trouble…

“Lord, help!”

And he saved them from their distress.

He calmed the storm to a whisper and stilled the waves as he brought them safely into harbor. (v. 23-32)

Friends, if you are stuck in a storm too big to navigate through, do you know where to go?

Jesus is refuge and strength.

Don’t be afraid, for I am with you. Don’t be discouraged, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you. I will hold you up with my victorious right hand. ~Isaiah 50:15

There is hope in Him.

He’s with you in the desert and He’s with you when you cross the Jordan.

He’s with you in captivity and He’s with you in freedom.

He’s with you in sickness and He’s with you in health.

He’s with you when the seas are raging and He’s with you when they are calm.

He is with you.

And there is hope.

Let’s Talk: Which of these four can you relate to the most?

Join me over at A Road to Here: Encouragement for Adoptive Moms as I talk about the concept of being blessed.

How do you Grieve? A Lesson about Anguish

Several months ago, a friend said, “I read the Bible to get to know the author.”

And it was like this huge light bulb went off in my head.

That may be the biggest DUH-epiphany I’ve ever shared on this blog, but stick with me for a moment.

I am a selfish person.

Let’s get that right out there in the open.

I have a tendency to think in terms of me.

Which means I’ve always read the Bible with the mindset of, “How does this apply to me?”

Don’t get me wrong. That question isn’t bad. In fact, it’s a good one to ask.

I just think it was time for me to step back and approach the Bible a little differently.

Since then, every morning when I dig into Scripture, I do so with the mindset of, “What can I learn about God?”

There’s rarely a dull moment.

Especially when I read things like Psalm 88.

Can we take a minute and talk about Psalm 88? Can I encourage you, if you have a Bible handy, to open it up and give that puppy a read?

Cheery, isn’t it?

This is one of the few psalms that offers no expression of hope. The psalmist, most likely a dude called Heman (for all you fellow children of the 80’s, I dare you to tell me that isn’t cool), is in complete, full-throttle anguish.

He’s basically crying out to God, “Why are these bad things happening? Why am I in such agony? Why haven’t you showed up yet?”

Only unlike other anguish-soaked psalms, this one does not end in a revelation of God’s greatness or goodness.

Heman declares, “Darkness is my closest friend.”

And the curtains close. Cue the music. Show is over.

I sat there, curled up on my couch, wondering, “Now how in the world did this get in there?”

What did God want to teach me about Himself from this psalm? Why was it a part of Scripture?

As I sat with those questions, a couple faces came to mind. Dear friends, who as of late, have gone through the ringer of suffering. Friends who are weary and beat-down and could easily ask, “Where are you God? Why is this happening?”

Can you relate, loved one? Do you find yourself feeling like a bag of dry bones?

Then perhaps Psalm 88 can offer some comfort after all.

Because the one clear answer that kept coming to mind from this God who doesn’t always put a stop to the pain was this:

We are allowed to grieve.

We do not have to put on that blasted happy face and tell the world we’re okay when we aren’t.

Friends, we are allowed to grieve.

But as sons and daughters of the Most High, He wants us to grieve with Him, not apart from Him.

Let’s take a page from Martha and Mary’s book.

When their brother, Lazarus, fell ill, they sent word to Jesus to come quick because his friend was dying.

Mary and Martha knew Jesus could heal Lazarus. They knew it with every fiber of their being.

But what did Jesus do?

Did he drop everything and rush to Lazarus’ bedside?

No.

He stayed where he was for two more days.

Can you imagine being Mary and Martha? Waiting with heavy, desperate hearts. Watching the door for the first sign of Jesus as their brother grew sicker and sicker and eventually….died.

These sisters grieved.

But then we read this verse:

When Martha got word that Jesus was coming, she went to meet him.

She didn’t avoid Jesus or refuse to see Him, because forget Him.

As soon as she found out He was coming, she went to Him. And she said, “Lord, if only you had been here….”

Then Mary arrives and she falls at Jesus’ feet and she cries, “Lord, if only you had been here, my brother would not have died.”

Can you hear it? The desperation?

WHERE WERE YOU, JESUS? WHY WEREN’T YOU HERE?

These sisters were troubled. But they took their troubled hearts to the man they knew as Lord.

And here comes the most beautiful part of the story. The shortest, but perhaps one of the most profound verses in the Bible.

Jesus wept.

What can psalm 88 and this story teach us about God?

He grieves with us.

Even though He knows the entire story, even though He knows the insane, off-the-hook hope in store for those who trust Him, He grieves with us in our moments.

Even though He knew that in two seconds, He would roll that stone aside and breathe life into Lazarus’ dry bones, He wept with these sisters.

And when all hope seemed lost, He shouted, “Lazarus, come out!”

And the dead man came out, his hands and feet bound in graveclothes….

And this Jesus who could heal the sick became a Jesus who could raise the dead.

Let’s Talk: Are you hurting with Jesus, or are you hurting away from Him?

If you’d like to read a story about God’s ability to breathe hope and beauty into our broken lives, check out the first three chapters of my debut novel, Wildflowers from Winter.

It’s All Extra

In church on Saturday evening, I sang these words…

Beneath the weight of all our sin
You bow to none but heavens will
No scheme of hell, no scoffer’s crown
No burden great can hold you down
In strength you reign
Forever let your church proclaim

Christ is risen from the dead
Trampling over death by death
Come awake, come awake!
Come and rise up from the grave

And the only thing I could think was that it’s all extra.

In light of the cross and His obedience and the empty tomb and the torn veil…

All the rest is like this really amazing, but unnecessary bonus.

My husband and my son. Our house. Ryan’s job. Our health and our church, family and friends and my writing career.

It’s all just extra. 

Because what Christ did on that cross? That is everything.

He defeated death.

He broke the chains and offered redemption for all that is broken and lost.

People most especially.

So often we think we need, or God forgive us, deserve something more.

Like a spouse or a child or a book deal or a promotion or a certain level of comfort and prosperity.

But man….

I know this sounds cliche and all kinds of cheesy, but the only thing we really need–the one thing we certainly don’t deserve–is Him and that empty tomb.

That is life and joy and freedom.

Everything else–every good and perfect (or perfecting) gift–is simply proof of His generosity.

Oh Lord, that You would plant this truth in our hearts. May we come awake.

Let’s Talk: Do you ever fall into the trap of thinking God is holding things back from you?