When We Think God Isn't Listening

 

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A dear friend passed away this week from that terrible, nonsensical, and random jackal called Covid.  It could have been from anything – cancer, an accident, any diagnosis one can think of.  It doesn’t matter what it was.  The bottom line is that this dear, good, kind-hearted and anointed man of God is gone.  He had so much left to do.

 

We believe that God can do absolutely anything.  We know He can.  And yet He chose to call our friend back to be with Him and not with us.  And I have to say, it hurts.  

 

We have all been here.  We wait on God.  We expect a miracle.  With everything in us we pray, we believe that it will happen.  Sometimes, it seems that He’s not listening. 

 

From around the world, people were praying, fasting, decreeing and declaring that a miracle would come, and he would be healed.  The truth is, miracles did come.  They were amazing, and not insignificant things that happened throughout his time of being ill.  They gave his family, and his many friends, hope that everything was turning around.  That he would fine.  That there would be an added testimony to his already extraordinary life. 

 

But it wasn’t to be.

 

How do we reconcile the gap between what we expect of God, and what we must accept as being His will?

 

It doesn’t matter what you are believing for.  It could be anything.  It could be a present need, or an old war wound that you got in the Battle of Life a long time ago.  It is always on your heart, always in your prayers, and you expect to witness God move and make it right.

 

He gives us so much that is beautiful, so much that is wonderful and enduring – all that makes life worth living.  But in everything, like roses, there are also thorns.  No life is perfect. We all have blessings and challenges mixed together.  We see our faith manifested in countless ways, but in these are also disappointments and hurts.

 

There is mystery in the Miraculous.  We don’t have the ability to predict how God is going to work things out.  We can only believe that He will.  

 

And He does.  It’s just not always in the way we want.

 

I was reminded recently how our babies are born to us, so fresh from Heaven, and their personalities are already evident.   You can look into a baby’s eyes and already know so much about their capacity to love and be kind.  God created them this way.  We can’t know or understand how God does it, but babies come to us already anointed in His gifts and purpose to fulfill in this life.

 

And so, when God takes back to Himself someone that we love, isn’t the mystery the same?  We are grieving but He is celebrating that our loved one is back with Him and no longer limited by their body.  Just as He sent them to us, they go Home the same way.  We just can’t fully understand it, but there’s a place for all of us to live out our purpose in Eternity too.

 

All the foolish, needless things we get bent out of shape about.  All the things we do that we think will somehow make our lives better, more exciting, more fun – we burn bridges and get offended and hurt other people because we think we are justified to do whatever our egos tell us we can do.  

 

We have it backwards. 

 

It really is a matter of life and death.  There is a purpose on both sides of the equation.  What matters is that we take the million or so moments that we have on this earth to love, to forgive, to honor and appreciate each other, and to reflect Him in all that we do. 

 

We think God can’t see us, that He’s not listening… But He always is.

 

I don’t really believe that we are intended to rest in peace when we go back to God.  I think that our real work is not ending but beginning.  We are not meant to understand the how and why.  But when we return to Him, I believe He’ll let us know.

 

Make the most of every day.  He is always with you. 

 

You are loved even when things happen that we prayed would turn out differently.

 

Keep the faith and carry on.   

I Thought You Knew...

 

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Have you ever been surprised to learn something that everyone else considered common knowledge but you?  It’s an odd “just fell off the turnip truck” kind of feeling that makes you wonder what else you are in the dark about.  It feels lousy.  

Another similar experience is when you think you know how you stand with someone, but they just can’t seem to meet you in the middle and tell you how they feel.  They dance around issues and subjects to the point of frustration.  Things never feel resolved, and some really important statements never get said.

 

My dad was a classic example of a man who could say a lot of words, speak to the most obscure subjects, and yet never express what he felt, what he needed, who he loved.  This left those of us who knew him well, feel as though we knew him not at all.  And more than this, we felt as though he didn’t care enough to know us either.  Bless him… He’s in heaven now. And though he was troubled for many reasons not his own, he was still a good man. 

 

Perhaps it’s because of my dad, of growing up with a version of someone who lacked the ability to express himself, that I have taken the opposite route.  In fact, the reason I am even writing this should be illustration enough that I have a hard time not expressing what goes on inside my heart and head.  

 

I’m not a blabber mouth. I don’t necessarily share my personal story with just anyone.  Yes, I write and make connections with many whom I likely will never have the privilege to meet.  But what I am speaking of here, are of those whom God has blessed me with in life and deserve to know my heart because it’s the substance of what keeps us tied to each other.  

 

I tell my kids, my family, my friends that I am close to, that I love them.  I want for them to know that I am here to listen if they need an ear, that I’m in their corner, that I believe in them.  I never want it said of me that I didn’t encourage or affirm them in every way I could.  I will always be honest. To me, it’s as imperative as breathing. 

 

At any moment, something could happen and all the things I wish that I could say will go with me.  I couldn’t bear it to know that I didn’t apologize when I needed to, or that I kept to myself what I needed to say out loud that could have made a difference… To not offer forgiveness and grace, when it would mean so much to someone who needs to receive it, would be for me a sin. 

 

Being this way does not make me better or perfect.   It simply frees me from the burden of carrying around all that bitterness that gets heavier with time and ages us in ways we can’t comprehend. 

 

Thankfully, we have a Father in Heaven that can do for us what our earthly fathers may not have done so well.  He listens to us, loves us unconditionally, forgives us when we lose our way.  He doesn’t care how many times we make the same mistake.  I know that I mean something to Him because He doesn’t withhold His compassion and mercy from me even when the night is long, and the journey is difficult.  

 

There are things that I wish my dad had found the courage to say in this life.  And someday, when I see him again, it would be just like him to tell me what too many others do when we question if they care about us – “I thought you knew that I did.” 

 

We don’t need a greeting card, a holiday, a special occasion to say the words that are burning in our hearts to say.   We are not weak, or emotional, or flighty just because we say we’re sorry for something that we might not even bear any responsibility for doing but may have hurt or harmed another in some way.  The opposite is true – we are so much stronger, wiser, and authentic when we do.  The impact can be life changing. 

 

God commands for us to love each other deeply.   By word or deed, express yourself today.  Share the love He has given to us.  Don’t be stingy with your thoughts or affirmations with others who need desperately to receive it.  It’s simple, really.

 

What goes around, comes around.  Always. 

 

May your heart spill over in joy, and peace, and glad tidings in abundance.  Say it.  Do it.  Embrace it.

 

And, in case you didn’t already know, I love you.

 

Epilogues

 

Like most people, I love a good story… Lately, I have been listening to a lot of historical novels.  I can’t help but get drawn into the characters, living as if along-side them through whatever harrowing tale is being spun.  A really good plot, the talent of a good narration, and I’m hooked to the point I hate knowing the story must come to an end.  But of course, they always do.

Kind of like life.  We have just so much time to live it well.  To say and do the things we need to.  To fix what’s broken.  To forgive and be forgiven. To make our mark and have it matter that we lived at all. 

 

I can’t help but think of my own life story.  If there is a prologue, it would be in the women of my family who came before me, who blazed a trail of sorts by their grace, their commitment to doing what was right, the way they loved each other, and were steadfast and determined in the face of difficult times.  They taught me and molded me by their example; their faith is stamped in my DNA.  To me, they are everything I aspire to be.

 

The middle parts of my story, would be about the people I have loved, the children I bore and raised, my disappointments and redemptions, the hopes and dreams that we all know and yearn to have said of us – that we made a difference, we did our best, that our endurance and kindnesses hopefully outnumbered the times we fell short.   I pray that my kids will say someday of me that I have walked my talk.

 

I am standing in a time where things are coming full circle.  My first baby, is about to have her first baby.  And though I can barely anticipate how this will change my life as a first time Gigi, I surely know very well how it will change hers.  Oh, the love… There are simply no other words.  This is when we get to see the fruit of our work come back to us, and the branches of our family grow and flourish with new expectation. 

 

The thing that I know about God, is that He is the Author of Life.  Like a good novel, there are bound to be conflicts, a hero or heroine, a villain or two, some good times and bad, and a yearning that draws us through to keep us turning the pages and believing that the ending will be good.   There are unexpected things that happen along the way, for sure.  But if we keep on trusting Him, He will guide us and give us the strength to keep putting one foot in front of the other.   

 

I’ve lived long enough now to understand that the same things beat all our hearts. We want to be loved.  We want our faith in each other and in God to not be let down or discouraged.  We want to know that miracles happen and that Good will always triumph over evil.   We want to witness His hand moving in our situations, no matter how simple or complex they are.  And we want to pass this on to those we love. 

 

God wants us to trust Him for just these very things.

 

If you’ve ever read a good story that has an epilogue, it tells you what happens to the characters down the road from where the story seems to end.  It ties it all up, and keeps you thinking about the lives and parallels we all draw to our own reality.  Sometimes, these are surprising or just a natural conclusion to what we would like to believe would happen.

 

For me, living in faith is like writing our own epilogue.  We walk in the hope and knowledge that God has us and is working all things together for our good.  No matter what it looks like in the present, we will find strength and grace and peace.  We can trust that our stories will go on for eternity.

 

When we live solely for ourselves, we trade our happy endings for the predictable, shallow, and empty existence that has us never reaching our full purpose:  to give and receive love well.   We dwell instead in a life of unfulfilled expectations and regrets.  And when the full-circle moments come, we fail to realize that faith is the glue that holds us together when the world wants to pull us apart.  

 

That’s when we have to surrender to Him and be made whole. 

 

I pray that every day you recognize God’s faithfulness, His love and Mercy, and the blessings He has given you.  I pray that though times may be difficult, you can sense Him holding you up and working in your circumstances.  Your story is still being written… And it is beautiful.

 

Every little thing we do, matters.  Everything.  Our lives are made up of moments, little and big.  Make them count.

 

You are loved.