A+ with God

Back in 2005, Nelson was on the leadership team of “The Wave USA,” a group of Youth With A Mission kids criss-crossing the country. After months of planning, they were bringing the message of Christ to state capitals (and many politicians), conducting intensive prayer ministries in each city.

Nelson called when they were about to pass by Chicago, wondering if they might spend a few days with us for some badly needed R & R. Every exposure we’d ever had to WYAM-ers had been positive, and we were happy they wanted to come.

Several days later, a chunky bus and several vans pulled into our driveway on a hot July day, adding 28 newcomers to our family. Six bedrooms wasn’t nearly enough, but our guests arrived well prepared with sleeping bags, pillows, and a willingness to bunk anyplace, including the concrete basement floor. They insisted on bringing all their food and promised to do all the cooking, even for us!

 

YWAM-ers are an interesting crop of “kids” from all over the globe. Hearing their tales of the wondrous ways God had shown up in power, the amazing things they’d witnessed, was a shot in the arm. All that week I enjoyed spontaneous conversations with the 28, trying hard to memorize names and remember faces.

But then there was that one day. I needed alone-time, so grabbed my journal and Bible, but couldn’t find quietness anywhere. Small groups were praying, people were practicing instruments, doing laundry, planning ministry, reading aloud, preparing food, giving haircuts, napping on the lawn. And suddenly a week with 28 guests seemed like a bad idea.

I’m ashamed to say when Nate came home from work that day, I pulled him into a bathroom to privately whine and complain until his ears were probably burning. It was all about me.

I’d forgotten what Jesus had instructed about strangers: warmly inviting them was like inviting him. (Luke 25:35) Those 28 YWAM-ers qualified as strangers, but my attitude was anything but welcoming. God had created the perfect opportunity for me to win his approval, but as it was, I deserved a rebuke.

The day before they departed to resume “The Wave” they said, “Tomorrow you should go out for a few hours. We want to bless you with a thoroughly clean house before we leave.” They wouldn’t allow me to help and silenced my protests.

When I returned, they were putting furniture back, having moved all of it to wash/vacuum behind and beneath, a job I hadn’t done in years. After I’d waved them out of the driveway, I stepped into my sparkling home and discovered they’d left all their extra food for us, too. “I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink.”

Guess who won God’s approval that day.

“Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers [or sisters] of Mine…, you did it to Me.” (Matthew 25:40)

Dear Nate

I miss you.

Especially today, because it’s your birthday.

Sometimes my longing to be with you is so strong it grows into an ache that’s hard to handle. One day that longing will melt away, when I travel to be where you are now. That’s comforting.

Two years ago, you and I were still celebrating our birthdays together, an annual double-header. With only 10 days between us, we were the same age 355 days a year. But that calendar has aged me into 66; you locked in at 64. It’s hard to get old without my birthday-buddy.

In August of 2009, cancer wasn’t part of our lives. Mary and Bervin hosted a party for the two of us, remember? And despite ongoing back pain and a mysterious stomach ache, you smiled for the camera.

I never heard you complain about physical pain, not in 43 years of knowing you, but that summer you didn’t feel good. One day you even said you wondered if something other than back problems might be wrong. A month later we found out you were right.

Today I spent time praying about you. Of course you don’t need my prayers in Paradise, but I wanted to thank God for bringing you into my life and for choosing you as my husband, a man who was willing to love me with a 1st Corinthians 13 love as well as to father and support 7 children.

I also re-read journal pages from those days surrounding your birthday two years ago and found something utterly astounding. Your back had become so severe that the highlight of every day had been at 8 pm when you eased yourself onto the bed atop two ice packs placed at the small of your back.

I was concerned about our future, upset by your pain, and worrying about what God was doing (or not doing). So I wrote out a 3 page prayer to him, all about you. Here’s part of it:

Lord, please touch Nate’s body with your supernatural power, I pray. Lift this back misery right out of his life. I cry out to you to bring him to your feet, into your presence, Lord, fully dependent on you.

And that’s where I caught my breath, because that’s exactly what God did! Touched your body… lifted away your pain… brought you to Jesus’ feet… into his presence… dependent on him.

(I bet you’re getting a kick out of this,  probably laughing with joy. Oh how I miss your hearty laugh!)

I know you’re glad I read that journal today and made the God-connection, saw how he’d answered my prayers. Although your departure wasn’t my choice, I want you to know I’m doing ok (partly because I know you’re doing ok). All of the credit goes to God. I don’t know where I’d be without him…

…but I know you can say the same thing.

Happy Birthday, Nate. I love you.

“Satisfy us in the morning with your unfailing love, that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days.” (Psalm 90:17)

Breathing Easy

While driving from Michigan to the Chicago area recently, I passed a boxy-looking white truck that said, “Medical Oxygen” on its side. It brought back a rush of feelings from 21 months ago, of the day Hospice knocked on our front door with an oxygen supply for Nate.

Jack barked with vigor that day, not wanting any harm to cross our threshold. Cancer had arrived silently, colorlessly, terminally, and he was on guard. I felt the same way: “Don’t open the door! No more strangers parading through! No more medical equipment dominating the environment! No more reminders of our life-and-death battle!”

But of course Van’s Medical Supply had only come to help. I shushed Jack and nudged him aside, allowing the oxygen tanks to roll in – one, two, three, four.

The delivery man kept up a steady stream of conversation as he went in and out, a kind attempt to soothe our frayed nerves. He assured us the equipment would be easy to use while my brain screamed, “You mean Nate isn’t going to be able to breathe ?!”

The tanks were wheeled past Nate, and the man greeted our patient cheerfully, like a friend. I can’t imagine what was in Nate’s head as he contemplated needing breathing assistance, but he didn’t let the stress show.

“Where should I put these?” the delivery man said. We settled on a tight corner behind Nate’s hospital bed. I can still hear the cold clanking of the 4 green tanks as he clustered them efficiently in the small, already-crowded room. My heart hurt that day contemplating Nate’s next slip downward.

Today the oxygen tanks are gone, as is the hospital bed and every other reminder of Nate’s killer illness. Nate is gone, too, but as I drove down the highway feeling sad, God reminded me that because Nate was gone, so was his need for breathing support. The cancer is gone, too, along with severe pain and approaching death.  Our dark night did end, slowly for us and dramatically for Nate.

Today we’re steadily moving forward, edging away from those agonizing days, not with reluctance anymore but with future-focus. Although a hopeful future was always there, in the darkness we just couldn’t see it.

When God allows life’s toughest stuff to dominate us for a while, he doesn’t leave us stumbling weakly without direction or purpose. Instead he equips us daily, much like Van’s Medical supply equipped us with oxygen before Nate needed it. When the need arose, we were ready, thankful for 4 green tanks in the corner.

In a way, that’s what God wants to be for all of us in every crisis. When we trust him to equip us for what will be needed, he causes us to breathe easier, despite being surrounded by calamity.

Breathe on me, breath of God,
Until my heart is pure,
Until with thee I will one will,
To do, and to endure. (Edwin Hatch)

“It is the Spirit in a person, the breath of the Almighty, that gives them understanding.” (Job 32:8)