In the days following the 2001 terrorist attacks on New York’s twin towers and the Pentagon, everything that had been secure in our country suddenly became shaky. Peter Jennings came on TV at the end of his newscast the day after the buildings collapsed and said, “Talk to your children tonight, and assure them they’ll be safe.”
Nate and I had been watching together, and I said, “Children shouldn’t be told that, because it’s not true.”
We talked for a few minutes about the safety we do or don’t have in our country or on this earth and concluded it would be a lie to assure our children of something that isn’t a sure thing. The only guaranteed safety anywhere is in Christ, and that doesn’t include earthly safety. It’s only after death and leaving this world to live with the Lord that we can be sure no harm will come to us ever again.
After 9/11, security measures in America were drastically heightened. Waiting in long airport lines became standard for flyers. Anyone who seemed suspect in any way was pulled aside (as Nate was here) and “wanded” or searched, but if it meant we’d be safer on airplanes, we were willing.
Despite added rules and more personnel watching over us, safety still wasn’t guaranteed. We witnessed the shoe bomb, the underwear bomb, the SUV bomb in Times Square, the Boston Marathon bombs, and others. What can keep the next angry bomb-maker from succeeding?
A widow friend told me recently of her battle with fear immediately after her husband died. She’d never spent a night alone and had difficulty sleeping for fear of a break-in. Every noise gave her a chill. Sadly, no one can assure her a break-in will never occur.
Our own daughters, while living in Chicago, walked home from work with pepper spray in hand. Two blocks north of their neighborhood a pair of friends had been clubbed with a baseball bat, both hospitalized after the attack with one critically injured.
So what are we to do about life as we know it, since we’re all forced to live in a world fraught with danger? The only answer is to trust God for our ultimate security, which may not come until after we die. Nate, having left this world, is now 100% secure. No more airport security searches, no more dangers of any kind. He’s untouchable.
In the mean time, we can try to keep our children safe while telling them about Jesus. We could also install alarm systems or even hire armed guards, but who are we fooling? Bad things will continue to happen to good people. Although our bodies and earthly lives will always be at risk in this shaky world, our souls can be secure in God’s unshakable care. Once we believe this, we can rest easy.
”In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, O Lord, will keep me safe.”
Good blog, Margaret. Good reminder to keep our ‘intimate’ relationship with Jesus – in tact! Praying for ourselves and loved ones first thing each morning – with thanksgiving – for safety & well-being throughout the day. We re not in control of our lives on earth, so much as we want to think, but where we live eternally.
There is a peace and security in that.!
So glad Mary is doing so well….praying the nausea will go away & she continues to gain weight to the point she wants & needs.
God doesn’t grant any of us a guarantee of risk-free living, but He has made many iron-clad promises of His presence through harrowing experiences and His purpose in allowing danger and difficulty. In Jeremiah 29:11 God says,” For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord. They are plans for good and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. ” My challenge is readjusting my idea of what God means by “good”. It is not necessarily my comfort or enjoyment or freedom from problems and difficulties, pain or suffering. My ultimate good is to become like Jesus, and he had to suffer plenty. But, as I trust that God is able to cause everything that happens to work for my ultimate good, I am released from fear and can relax in His loving care. I have experienced that since my wonderful husband died and been astonished at the depth of peace He gives as I choose to trust Him. If I had not experienced it myself, I might never have believed it possible!