Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Meet My Friend Connie


Life brings its share of storms. Recently, we have watched the billowing waves of hurricane Sandy hit the mid-Atlantic shore and have seen the destruction left in its wake. As Christians, God is our watchman guiding our path to safe harbor as the billows of life crash in on us. Meet my friend Connie. She is an example of one who has trusted God when waves have come crashing.

 Some days just shake the very foundation of our being. Though distant now, the memories of that day still linger in my mind. It was the day my son left to join the army. It was a time our country was involved in war. Inevitability loomed!

As my children were growing up I frequently prayed that the Lord would grow them into godly men and women. Whatever it takes, I would say! This?? It was not what I had in mind, but it was to be God’s chosen path for Josh.

Trust!!!!! Why is one word so difficult to comprehend? Could I honestly say that Josh was safer at home than where he was to be? After all, the God of the universe was with him.

God moves in ways that sometimes are a mystery to us. Having a son go to war was not part of my plan. I am the mother! Why was I not consulted? Pause!!!! It’s God’s design, not mine! He had something different in mind! Could I trust God when things don’t look like I think they should?  I was beginning to see - not only was God working in Josh’s life, He was working in my heart. He was answering the cry of a mother to grow her son’s heart Godward. Trust!!!!

I am thankful that the responsibility of my son’s life will never rest on my shoulders. I am so grateful I don’t have to carry this burden. Although many days were tearful I was learning not to be fearful. The same God who was watching over my son was watching over me. God added such peace to my days. What could be better than that?  I was learning to trust that one way or another Josh would be coming ‘home’- either into my arms or into the arms of Jesus. 

Sometimes life’s best lessons are learned in the school of hard knocks. If you could have asked Josh, he would have said, "I am glad God brought me to this place, because He is teaching me things here that I would not have learned elsewhere." Josh reminded me of the truth found in Psalms 37:23, "The steps of a man are established by the Lord; and he delights in his way." 

Retrospective, perspective!!!!!! Looking back I see so many positive things this experience has produced. Growth in character, maturity, and responsibility has been priceless. These years were not wasted; they were growing years, not only for my son, but also for his mother. Though God’s ways do not always parallel mine, I have learned to trust Him. He has proven Himself.  He has intimately ministered to my heart so I could withstand a situation that was just too hard for any mother to deal with alone.  This is where peace is found (Isaiah 26:3-4).

I remember the first time I saw Josh. He wasn’t my little boy anymore. He was wearing the uniform of the U.S. Army. Now, he was their man. But his greatest call will always be a soldier of the Lord. After all, he’s already in His army. Now that’s perspective!!



Wednesday, October 17, 2012

A Playlist Must Have

Music has an uncanny way of reaching deep into our souls. It can have a powerful sway over the mind and gives reason for choosing it wisely. In ancient times the Psalms, by their poetic style were set to song as a way to help people remember who God is, what He is doing and how much He cares, provides, and protects. 

One song that will reach into your soul in a way that brings refreshment and helps remember God's love and grace is "Will you Hide Me," (Healing Streams) by Kelly Minter. It is a playlist must have! 


WILL YOU HIDE ME (HEALING STREAMS)

WILL You Hide me in Your shelter
Will You shade me with Your wings 

When the heat of day consumes me 

Let me drink from healing streams 

Drink from healing streams 



Will You lift my heavy burdens 

Will You pave my path with peace 

And when the road is steep and stony 

Let me bathe in healing streams 

Bathe in healing streams 



When the joy of morning tarries 

When the waves of darkness roll 

Will You shine Your light of faithfulness 

Giving courage to my soul 

Courage to my soul 


Will You lead me to repentance 

Will You make temptations flee 

When I'm filled with condemnation 

Will You show Your scars to me 

Show Your scars to me 



And in the place where trouble waits 

Lord I shall not fear 

The Comforter the Counsellor 

The Saviour is here 



Will You hide me in Your shelter 

Will You shade me with Your wings 

When the heat of day consumes me 

Let me drink from healing streams 

Drink from healing streams 



John Hartley, Stuart Townend & Kelly Minter 
Copyright © 2007
Thankyou Music

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Hope on a Hairpin Turn

When I have had one of those stumbling, lose perspective kind of weeks I really need a jolt. I need to REMEMBER, God is nearest when it seems like He is the farthest away. Trust!! In the valley, I must choose to trust that God's grace is sufficient and that in my weakest moments He is my strength. He knows my fears, He comforts! He keeps my tears in a bottle, He hears my cries! He feels my pain, He knows my frame!

Why then, do I wallow in the mire? Once again, I have forgotten the power of the cross. I have lost sight of the power of the Word. I have lost perspective...

But whatever gain I had, I counted as loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith— that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained this or am already perfect, but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead,  I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Philippians 3:7-14.

Connect that with:

 Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content.  I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need.  I can do all things through him who strengthens me. Philippians 4:11-13.

Dear Reader, whenever you hit bumps in the road or face hairpin turns, remember the hope you have in Christ. He gives grace and does so in great abundance. As you face trials and hardships press into Jesus and find joy in your journey! Remember, when He seems the farthest away He is right beside ready to take your hand and walk the road with you! In fact, he walked it before you!!!!!!!!

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Remember Sara and Don? They Have a Story to Finish!

There are occasions in our lives when sitting in the waiting room of life can seem as if time is wasted. Though, at times, we do not see or understand the purpose in waiting it is a time to be reminded that God is working, moving and plotting for our good. Joy comes in the morning.

Don and Sara have known the waiting room well. It has been a deep valley for them and a rich experience as they have watched and waited with patience for God to mold shape and give greater form to their family. Beyond their wildest dreams God gave them exactly what they had hoped and prayed for - TWINS. He needed to have them wait for their boys to become their boys.

Dear reading friends, you learned about Don and Sara in January. It was only part of the story. Now, you get to finish the story. To God be the GLORY!!!!!!

We got our referral in November 2011.  We had hoped for a court date within three months, which was our estimated time-frame. Continuing with our previous theme of delays and setbacks, our court date wasn’t issued until 6 months after we had received our referral. We were just taking the first of two required trips right around the time that we had hoped that we would have our sons home. There was a period of time during this delay that we actually feared that something was going to happen to cause the adoption to fall through. The Ethiopian courts weren’t issuing us a court date and no one seemed to understand why.

We did finally receive a court date for May 5, 2012. The week we spent in Ethiopia for court was unforgettable and one of the happiest weeks of our lives. We passed court right away, which meant that our sons were officially “our” sons, and we got to spend the rest of the week enjoying them. We loved them instantly and God used our time with them to bond our hearts to them in a very special way.

Adopting from Ethiopia requires two trips, which meant that after our week with our sons, we had to return home and wait for the remaining paperwork to be completed before we could legally and officially take them home with us for good. It was approximately 2.5 months before we returned to Ethiopia and much of that time was spent praying and fasting for our sons. They were our sons; we had held and kissed them, fed them, changed them, and rocked them to sleep, and now we were again separated by thousands of miles. The Lord was teaching us during this time to continue to entrust them to his care; he reminded us that he was the one caring for them all of those months while we waited and he would continue to do so.

At the end of July, we decided we had waited long enough and we booked one-way tickets to Ethiopia in order to spend the remainder of our wait with the boys. We had no idea how long we would have to wait while in Ethiopia, but we hoped and prayed that it wouldn’t be more than two weeks. We ended up spending 10 days together in a hotel room before receiving the boys’ visas and being cleared to take them home.
We arrived home on the 2nd of August to a crowd of family and friends cheering for us at the airport. We had traveled over 24 hours and missed two nights of sleep, but that couldn’t squelch the utter joy and relief of finally being home. I’ll never forget putting the boys in their car seats for the first time and thinking, “They’re really here. They’re home.” It was one of the sweetest moments to watch their tired, sleepy heads rest against their car seats as we left the airport and turned onto the interstate.

We’ve been home now for almost two months, and the relief and thankfulness still haven’t subsided. Almost daily, I feel a measure of surprise and relief that they are really home. For years we had prayed for children and then for months we had specifically waited and prayed for these two boys and suddenly they are home with us. There is a park near our house that my husband and I would often take prayer walks to and I spent a lot of that time praying for our sons. I would see these two little baby swings and imagine having the boys swinging and smiling side by side. Now we take the boys to the park with us and they really do smile and swing side by side. It’s their favorite thing to do at the park and it is a picture of answered prayer to me.
Looking back, it’s hard to pinpoint all that God has taught us during this process. I’m sure there are ways that the pain and the prayers and the waiting have shaped us that we aren’t even fully aware of yet, but I do know that God has used the waiting for children and a difficult adoption process to teach us to trust him, to center our lives on him, to find our joy and purpose in him, and to let go of our lives here on earth.

When I look at our sons, I am filled with joy and an intense love that I could never have imagined. I love to love them, and I marvel that God gave them to us. He planned them for us. It took over 5.5 years of infertility, close to 3 years in a mostly dark adoption tunnel, and thousands of miles of separation, but God gave them to us. He entrusted them to us. All of our delays and the pain and the prayers were leading to two little boys born in a remote village in northern Ethiopia that would one day be our sons.

There isn’t a day that goes by that we don’t thank God for them. He spared and sustained their lives throughout months of malnourishment, two different orphanages, and various caregivers, and then he brought our whole adoption process to completion so that on August 2nd, we could walk through our front door as a family of four. This is one of the great “goods” that came out of our waiting, but it isn’t the only one.

Probably more significant is the good that God has done within our hearts. We have learned, though not perfectly, to treasure God above all else. He used our waiting to turn our eyes more fully to him. We have learned to apply the gospel to our lives. The death of Christ on our behalf and the reconciliation that we have with God proves that God is for us and utterly trustworthy, no matter what we are going through. We have asked hard questions, such as: What is really important in life? What do we want to accomplish? What are our priorities? Years ago, we would have been satisfied with 2-3 little carbon copies of ourselves, a nice little house, a nice little life: the American dream. We’ve seen through that façade now and have an intensified desire to use our lives to glorify God and do good to others.
We couldn’t see the end of our story 5.5 years ago. We couldn’t see how all of the delays were working for our good. We couldn’t see how having to wait longer was going to shape our priorities, our faith, and ultimately lead us to our sons, but it did. And we wouldn’t change a thing.

We don’t know what it’s like to love a biological child, but I can tell you that loving our adopted children is amazing. On the one hand, we love them with a natural love. They are our sons and we delight in them. And in addition to that, there is this sense that God is with us and is loving them through us. He is the father to the fatherless and the bible makes it clear that he has a special love for the orphan. When we hear their laughter and see them smile, I sense the pleasure of God.

Often during our process, I read the following quote from John Piper. It gave me great encouragement when we were in the midst of our tunnel, and reading it now on the other side, it rings even more true.

“Life is a winding and troubled road. Switchback after switchback. And the point of biblical stories is to help us feel in our bones not just know in our heads, that God is for us in all of these strange turns.

The life of the godly is not a straight line to glory. It’s more like a dark and seemingly unknown trail through the mountains. There are rockslides and slippery curves, and hairpin turns that make you go backward in order to go forward.

But along this hazardous twisted road that doesn’t let you see very far ahead, and may even make you feel like you’ve been lead to the edge of the cliff, God gives us encouragement and hope that all the perplexing turns in our lives are going somewhere good.

Often when we think God is farthest from us, and has even turned against us, the truth is, that he is laying a foundation for greater happiness in our lives. God is plotting for our joy. He is plotting the course and managing the troubles with far reaching purposes for our good and for the glory of Jesus Christ."

From John Piper's book, A Sweet and Bitter Providence