Sunday, August 26, 2012

God And The Elephant

Although I've made reference to God in some of my previous posts, I thought it might be time to be really honest about where I am with Him right now.  I can't imagine that any death occurs without questions about and for God from those left behind.  I think we like to ignore our mortality to some extent, but death is the elephant in the room that tramples us into the awareness that we don't live forever.  I also think it's nice to feel like we have God all figured out and it's unsettling to realize we don't necessarily know Him as completely as we thought we did - even more unsettling (especially for us Type A types) when we realize we can never understand Him fully in this life.  It has a way of exposing the deepest recesses of our souls to bare what we truly believe and sheds light on inconsistencies in what we say we believe vs. what we believe when our world seems to be falling apart.  Sorry...I'm not trying to get all philosophical on you...I'll let you have your own questions (or not have any) and I'll just stick to where I am.  I have to start by saying that I don't believe that God has changed or moved away from me or punished me in any way in all of this.  I believe that God is good, all the time.  I still believe God is in control.  I still believe He loves me and my kids and has a plan for us.  I believe that because I am human and fallible that I can't be good enough on my own to have a relationship with God, but that Christ made that possible when He died on the cross in my place and for my sin - that's God's grace.  I believe that God can and will use this for our good.  I believe God sees, feels and understands my heartache in losing Dan and that He holds every tear I have cried and continues to hold me.  I believe that God's ways and thoughts are higher (way, WAY higher) than mine and that although I don't understand why He allowed Dan to die when and how He did, He can be trusted.  God illustrated this for me recently with a memory of one of my children from several years ago.  One of my twin boys was pretty sickly at birth.  They came about 6 weeks early and this little guy only weighed 2 lbs., 8 oz.  Feeding was a major challenge for him and he could not seem to gain weight despite Herculean efforts.  This struggle continued his first two years of life (which seemed like an eternity!) to the point where he was considered malnourished and needed some pretty drastic intervention.  It was then decided that he would have surgery to place a device called a g-button in his belly so that we could tube feed him and not depend on his ability or willingness to eat for his growth and health.  Although this basically saved his life, it was a painful ordeal for him and a challenge for all of us.  I won't go into detail here, but suffice it to say that kid went through so much - he's a fighter.  He had that feeding tube in for  t-w-o  l-o-n-g  y-e-a-r-s.  God brought the memory of all of this to my mind recently to illustrate, for my limited brain, the inability I have to fully understand all of the WHYs.  My child experienced a lot of pain which, ultimately, made him healthier - probably saved his life - it was for his good.  During all of it, his perspective was not what mine was.  I could have tried to make him grasp the big picture until I was blue in the face, but he was only two years old and although he trusted us to take care of him, he would not, with his limited perspective, have chosen that path for himself.  I might as well be a two year old when it comes to understanding why God let Dan die.  It hurts and I don't like it or understand it.  But I believe that His love for me is immense and that He can see the big picture.  Let me be very clear that I struggle often, even though I trust Him.  For weeks and even months after Dan died I felt so hurt by God and confused by what He was doing.  I didn't even pray.  Not because I was mad at God, but I had no idea what to say to Him. I felt like what was done was done and what could I say at that point? I was in spiritual shock.  I never stopped believing in God or that He was sovereign, but I felt so hurt.  I still struggle with prayer sometimes - understanding what God wants from me in prayer and what He does when I pray.  One thing I know is that I am supposed to pray.  Period.  So I do pray and I will keep on praying and searching for answers and for as much of God as I can comprehend while He has me here.  I want to have it all figured out because I am a prideful, imperfect perfectionist, but that's not how it works.  I will resign myself to being a child, striving to be childlike in my faith and obedience...childish and immature at times, but still a child. His child.

5 comments:

  1. Wow, Linda. You never cease to amaze me with how well you express yourself. You make this discussion of God crystal clear. I love you and am praying for you.

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  2. Lovely and touching. Thanks.

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  3. I love you friend. Thank you for having the courage to share your heart honestly and encourage so many along the way. His grace is so evident in you.

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