(I rarely use this forum to share glimpses from my personal life. I try
to 'keep it professional.' Many of you may not know that my wife, Karen,
and I lost a son eight years ago this June 14. If you are interested in
how that tragedy has changed us you are invited to view our blog, Embracing
Grief, at http://embracinggrief.blogspot.com/. But let me warn you, sometimes we get
pretty transparent, raw, and messy with our journey.)
I was born into and raised in one of those
“Ward & June Cleaver” homes (I guess making me a “Beaver” type of boy). I enjoyed playing in the neighborhood,
walking to and from school, starring on Little League teams, and being active
at the local First Baptist Church. My
mom worked there part time and my dad took his turns being the Deacon Chairman
and, at other times, the Sunday School director. I won my share of attendance pins and choir awards
at the church. It was truly an idyllic
upbringing.
Because of this upbringing, my love for God
and His church started early and it blossomed into a life calling into ministry
through the church. My wife, Karen, and
I left Orlando, FL for Ft. Worth, TX to attend seminary there. I sensed my
calling was being directed toward Christian education and discipleship in the
church. After receiving my training and
degrees, I started my career in serving God through the local church,
organizing and training people to become better disciples. And let me tell you,
I thought I knew it all! I knew all the
answers in helping grow a church. I led Bible studies and, on occasion, I would
preach – always with the full confidence that I knew what I was talking about. I
traveled around the country leading conferences on church growth. I was on the
career ladder of bigger churches and more complex work responsibilities.
Karen and I started our family – first a son,
Ben and then a daughter, Katie. Ben and
Katie were the typical perfect children.
Sure, they tested our parental fortitude but, on the whole, they were a
delight. But then along came Jacob, and
our world began to change. No, Jacob was
not a problem child in a way we often see. In fact, he was as delightful as his
older siblings. The challenges that
Jacob brought to us were not of his own choosing – he was born with a severe
and always fatal heart defect. We sought
out medical advice and options and were led to a cardiologist that was
pioneering a series of palliative surgeries. We followed this option and Jacob
came through each of the three open heart surgery relatively easy (emphasis on
the ‘relatively’ – nothing is really ‘easy’ when you dealing with open heart
surgeries).
Let me fast forward through this life
cavalcade in order to get to what I learned after I knew it all. Our family lived a fairly normal life … for a
minister’s family. We moved every few
years. Despite starting over in new
situations in different towns, each of our children excelled in different ways
…. all the while we spent a lot of time seeing heart specialists in order to
keep Jacob healthy.
As Jacob entered his junior year of high
school, his heart began to fail him and a heart transplant was performed. You can imagine the roller coaster of
emotions as we went through that tenuous time, but he responded well with his new heart and
went on to graduate high school and go off to college.
We were told the average life span of a donated
heart is around 10 years, but Jacob’s heart began to deteriorate after 3 short years
and, miraculously, he received a second heart transplant just in the nick of
time.
Tragically, nearly two years later, Jacob
died of cardiac arrest when his body was attempting to reject this second
transplanted heart.
Now that I’ve set the stage with this
extensive backdrop, let me quickly share some things I’ve learned about life
after I thought I knew it all
1. JUST BECAUSE YOU’VE DEVOTED YOUR LIFE TO DOING
GOD’S WORK, IT DOESN’T MEAN THAT YOU GET TO LIVE A CHARMED LIFE.
When I first learned of Jacob’s diagnosis and
prognosis, I began quite an assault on God’s door. I repeatedly beat on the door and, more or
less, yelled the question, “Why me?” I
thought (erroneously) that since I was a minister of the gospel that I would be
immune to any negative things in my life.
I kept myself clean before God. I read my Bible daily. I told others
that God loved them. So I thought I had
the ‘right’ to ask God, “Since I do all these things for You, why is this happening?”
I HAVE LEARNED THAT the verse in the Bible
where it says, “it rains on the just and the unjust” means just that. Being a Christian, or even a minister of the
Christian gospel, does not exempt you from experiencing sadness, financial
reverses, sickness, or tragedies to you or anyone you love.
2. PRAYER DOESN’T ALWAYS WORK THE WAY WE THINK IT
SHOULD.
Throughout Jacob’s life, my prayer life
morphed in a way that was different than the way I learned. I think as humans we tend to remember the
statements about prayer that we like.
Statements that we have read, heard, and even sung like:
“God will take care of you, through every
day, o’er all the way”
“God answers prayers”
“He will meet your every need.”
“Just tell God your heart’s desire, and He
will be faithful to answer.”
“God loves to answer the prayers of His
children.”
I HAVE LEARNED
THAT in a
sense these statements contain truth but we twist the truth to our liking. All too often, we have been taught that we
are to go to God in prayer to express our desires, to convey our wish list, to
submit our orders so He can hop to it and begin to check off each request on
our list. It’s only human to do that. We
see that even Jesus experienced this in the garden of Gethsemane. But focus on the last part of his request
from Mark 14:36, “Father, all things are
possible for you. Take this cup away from me.
Nevertheless, not what I will, but what you will.” Jesus demonstrates a human desire for what he
wanted to see happen but he then models what our prayers are to be – we should
approach God seeking what He wants to see happen and submitting ourselves to be
a part of that process rather than coming to God to drop off our grocery list
of needs so He can get to work on them.
3. CHURCHES NEED TO BE CAREFUL TO NOT PROMISE
MORE THAN CAN BE DELIVERED.
All too often, in our zeal to grow our church
and reach the world for Christ, part of our ‘sales pitch’ includes saying “All
you have to do is ask Jesus into your heart and everything will be OK.” Again, boiled down to the statement’s basic
elements, this is true. God will see us
through. But to a neophyte Christian or
to someone suffering from unimaginable maladies, they see this as a life ring
to Easy Street. We don’t share the whole
truth that often our growth as a Christian is through some very difficult
exercises that are not to our choosing nor to our liking. Sometimes we inadvertently lead a person to
think that being in the family of God is like living at an “all inclusive”
resort: we live in a room and the maid
comes daily to clean up and freshen up; we order whatever and whenever we want
at the restaurants while others wait on us; we frolic each day while others
attend to our every whim.
I HAVE LEARNED
THAT though
this sounds great, but that’s not the way it is. We call ourselves the family of God for a
reason. We are to pull our share; we are
to care for others that need assistance; we do whatever is necessary to keep
the family functioning. That means, as much as we may prefer not to, there are
times we must do things ‘that’s not fun” but is necessary to the wellbeing of
the family. Nobody enjoys cleaning
toilets, washing the dishes or doing the clothes, cleaning up someone’s messes
– but that is what a family does.
In the Christian life, we will experience
things that we prefer not to experience but they can serve as character
development in our lives. We need to help our brothers and sisters be prepared
for this and how to react to the reverses of life.
4. GRIEF NEVER GETS EASIER NOR DO WE EVER GET
‘OVER IT’; WE JUST GET USED TO THE ADDED PACK WEIGHT.
People who have experienced the loss of a
loved one begin a new lifelong path of grief.
Contrary to what some people think (usually they are people who have not
experienced this depth of loss yet) you don’t simply “get over it”. And honestly, experiencing grief never gets
easier.
I HAVE LEARNED
THAT grief
becomes a constant weight in your backpack of life. You never get rid of it or get over it. Grief
never gets lighter. What happens is that
the person who has grief as a new life companion becomes accustomed to the
added weight. We learn to carry it
better so to an untrained eye, it appears that we are “back to normal”. However, in reality, if that added weight
shifts in our ‘backpack’ we are suddenly reminded of that originating
experience of grief. Because of that
shift in weight, we may falter or fall.
We may wince in pain or we may reinjure ourselves. And that original pain of grief is seen by
all. There are times in a year where you can expect that weight to shift and
cause pain again – birthdays, death days, most holidays, and other special
family occasions. You can count on experiencing pain on those days. But there
are other days, when the weight unexpectedly shifts as a result of a sound, a
scene, a word, a song, a person, a thing, a picture – and that grief pain
strikes suddenly and surprises us. At those times, we readjust the ‘weight’ and
allow for the pain to subside slowly.
5. FRIENDS MEAN WELL IN OFFERING COMFORT BUT
OFTEN THEY DO IT IN THE WRONG WAY.
Much like Job’s friends, a family member or
friend who wants to bring comfort will only cause more harm the minute they
open their mouth. Such statements as
these do not bring comfort to a grieving person:
“I guess God needed another angel.”
“You know this was God’s will.”
“God did this to make you stronger.”
“You must have done something to cause this
to happen.”
I HAVE LEARNED
THAT it’s
not best to try to explain what God is trying to get across or what He is
trying to teach the person numb in grief.
It won’t make sense or it may even fan the flame of their anger at God even
more. Even saying to a person who is in the depths of grief, “If there is
something I can do, just let me know” isn’t adequate. When a person is grieving, they don’t know
what is needed. To the person wanting to
minister to a grieving friend, think what you would want done and then just go do
it. Go to the house and see what needs
to be done and organize a crew to handle it. After Jacob died, a friend came to
my house and asked for my dress shoes. I stared at him numbly and asked why. He said, “I want to polish them for you so
you won’t have to worry about that for the funeral.” What a blessing that was!
Ministry to a grieving person is done through
self-initiated acts of kindness or simply the ministry of your quiet presence.
Jacob & I, a month before his death |
THINGS
YOU MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN ….
FOR CHURCH LEADERS: Revive Conference – a
time for revitalization and replanting, September 26, Prince Avenue
Baptist/Bogart http://www.cvent.com/events/revive-september-26-2017/event-summary-1d6a78855fd549d6a46a67e0c3af802b.aspx
FOR
BIBLE STUDY LEADERSHIP: “Does It Matter Whether You Call It Sunday School or
Another Name?” by Bruce
Raley - http://www.lifeway.com/groupministry/2014/09/09/call-it-sunday-school-or-another-name-does-it-matter/?ecid=84521512&bid=731704431
FOR
CHURCH & COMMUNITY – DevoHub, providing daily devotional material directly to your smart phone or
tablet - http://devohub.com/
FOR LEADER
TRAINING: Sunday School Matters by Alan Taylor, 12 sessions to build, expand and
maintain a healthy Sunday School ministry - http://www.lifeway.com/Product/sunday-school-matters-leader-kit-P005792826
FOR DISCIPLESHIP: Think Differently by James McDonald - http://buff.ly/2nIbKaO
FOR DISCIPLESHIP: Disciples
Path: The Journey, all four volumes are now available! Relational, Intentional, Progressive,
Comprehensive: http://buff.ly/2fWPk2b
FOR
DISCIPLESHIP: Foundations for Adults, a 260 Day Bible reading plan - http://www.lifeway.com/Product/foundations-P005769893?intcmp=FoundationsSearch-MTX-Foundations-20170103
FOR WOMEN’S
MINISTRY: Transformed Lives: Taking Your Women’s Ministry to the Next Level by Chris Adams - http://www.lifeway.com/Product/transformed-lives-revised-and-expanded-P005371579?intcmp=LWB-WM-transformedlives
FOR MEN’S MINISTRY: The Main Event - http://buff.ly/2jvnImd
FOR MEN’S
MINISTRY: Sleeping Giant by Kenny Luck, steps toward beginning a men’s ministry that transforms
men - http://www.lifeway.com/Product/sleeping-giant-leader-kit-P005469852
FOR STUDENT MINISTRY: Disciples Path for students – a
new series for developing your student’s discipleship - http://www.lifeway.com/Disciples-Path/Youth/c/N-1z0znzeZ1z141ym?intcmp=DisciplesPath-MTX-Text-Students-20150625
FOR STUDENT MINISTRY: Foundations for Students, a
260 Day Bible reading plan - http://www.lifeway.com/Product/foundations-teen-devotional-P005791600
FOR STUDENT MINISTRY: The LIFT Tour for
developing student leaders - http://www.slulead.com/lift-tour
FOR STUDENT MINISTRY: Youth Pastor Summit
registration is now open - http://www.slulead.com/youth-pastor-summit
FOR STUDENT
MINISTRY: Student Pastor Network, connect with Student Pastors around the country
without leaving your office AND get $200 worth of 'stuff'. http://buff.ly/2lksLHS
FOR KIDS MINISTRY: ETCH (Equipping The Church & Home) Conference,
October 16-18, Register Now: http://buff.ly/2nw9Wpc
FOR KIDS MINISTRY: Kids Ministry 101 Podcasts - http://buff.ly/2kPNDFV
FOR KIDS MINISTRY: Kids Ministry 101 magazine, sign
up for this free resource - http://www.lifeway.com/kidsministry/kids-ministry-101-magazine-signup/
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