Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Who is Mike?

Mike's story has struck a chord with many of you.  I have heard comments about how much you all appreciate Mike's willingness to tell the "nitty gritty" of what he's been through.  Telling your story isn't always easy.  It takes us to a place of vulnerability, yet the rewards of seeing the hope it offers to others is worth it all!

Like Eve, Mike has been invited to speak at my church, Firm Foundation Ministries in Centreville.  Again, the service is being called Redemption Sunday, as we focus on the amazing gift of redemption!

Do you see it?  Are you catching on to the truth in these stories?  It's REDEMPTION!  To take what once had no value and give it meaning and purpose!  Remember the story of the Broken Pot?  Take it to heart! 

You and I are all Mike... you and I are all Eve!  God has taken my useless broken life and giving me meaning and purpose - and it's His desire to do the same for you - no matter who you are or what you've done!  Eve's life... Mike's life... my own life... it's all living proof of that truth!  God loves to redeem!

So I invite you - join us on Sunday, August 7th at 10 AM as we celebrate with Mike the special way God redeemed him and gave him the very life He had promised Mike - even when all seemed hopeless.

Summertime Recipes

This isn't really an organizational post like I normally do on Wednesdays, but it does have to do with caring for our families - unless yours do not like to eat!  :) 

Today got a little crazy since I went to Ft. Wayne with Erin Eve where she was invited to speak with on a radio program hosted by the director of Indiana's Right to Life!  I'll be blogging about that soon, but for now, here's my "Home" blog for Wednesday!

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To celebrate summer, here are some delicious recipes perfect for those picnics at the park or evening by the grill.  My first favorite is Cornbread Salad.  This salad is bursting with texture, color and flavor - what more could you ask for? 


Corn Bread Salad

1 small box corn bread mix

Mix as directed and add:

¼ t cumin
¼ t oregano
¼ t sage

Bake in 9 x 13 pan and cool.  Crumble corn bread and leave in bottom of pan. 

Dressing:
1 cup mayonnaise
1 cup sour cream
1 pk dry Hidden Valley Ranch mix

Pour over corn bread then layer:

1 can black beans – drained
1 can red kidney beans – drained
1 can whole kernel corn – drained
1 cup green onions – chopped
3 med tomatoes – diced
1 green pepper – diced
10 slices bacon – crumbled
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese




Another favorite summertime recipe is something my family calls Susan's Cheesecake.  Plus, it's a freezer recipe!  How much better can it get?


Susan's Cheesecake

Crust:
2 pkgs graham crackers - crushed
6 T sugar
1 stick butter


Mix together and pour into 9x13 cake pan.  Set aside.


In large mixing bowl, beat together:
2 pkgs cream cheese
1 cup sugar

Add:
4 beaten eggs
1 tsp clear vanilla
2 cups Cool Whip


Pour over crust and freeze at least 12 hours before serving.  Before serving pour pie filling of choice over top.  My preference is blueberry.  Here's how I make it.


Mix in saucepan:
1 cup sugar
1 cup water
3 T clear jel


Boil until thick.  Remove from heat and add:


3 T blueberry jello


When completely cool, add blueberries - amount is optional.  Just put in as many as your family likes.  I would suggest 3 cups.


Enjoy!!

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Dylan and Bailey


If you want to know the secret of getting my attention, it’s simple – tell me a story. But not just any story. It’s the stories of hope in the midst of pain and loss that hold me captive. It’s picturing the moments when lives are changed – whether good or bad.

As a mother myself, hearing the accounts of parent’s watching their child go through the pain of disease breaks my heart. I consider the gift I have been given often – the gift of Monday mornings at home preparing to tackle Mt. Laundry. Or the gift of unending meals needing to be prepared – followed by smeared spaghetti on the bar stools and the feel of cold green beans getting smushed beneath my feet as I load the dishwasher. The gift of uneventful normality.

Do I always see those moments for the gifts that they are? Absolutely not – and I say that to my shame. But it is in those moments that I strive to remember to thank God for my life – and offer prayer for strength and hope for those whose lives are filled with long, lonely hospital stays - nights of worry, wondering if their little one will survive tomorrow’s surgery or the days filled with keeping their child comfortable and content as they lie in their beds.

That’s why Impact of Hope is so close to my heart. This organization tells the stories of families battling with cancer, heart conditions, and all other types of medical situations most of us are blessed to know nothing about. Not only that, they go in to these families and support them by offering them hope, prayer and finances.

Recently, IOH met with two different families – the Hixon’s from Oxford, Mi and the Hackett’s from Sturgis, Mi. Meet Dylan and Bailey! Two precious little miracles that deserve all the love and hope we can offer!


Dylan’s Story

When you look at Dylan, you see a happy-go-lucky 4 year old little boy. He has a twin brother, David, and you wouldn’t be able to tell many differences by looking at them, but it’s what you can’t see that makes Dylan so unique.

Dylan was born with a condition called L-Transposition of the Great Arteries, causing the right and left lower chambers of his heart to be reversed and reversing the blood flow pattern. Doctor’s discovered complications with one of the twins at just 20 weeks gestation, but they had no idea what all that might entail. Dylan's main diagnosis is L-TGA, where both his 2 ventricles and 2 main arteries (pulmonary artery & aorta) were reversed.

Some people can live that way if that is their only issue, but Dylan had a large VSD or hole between the ventricles, and an underdeveloped aortic arch which required immediate surgery. The twins were born on March 24, 2007. Just 5 days later, Dylan had his first surgery at the Children's Hospital of Michigan to repair his aortic arch and add a PA band. His second surgery occurred shortly after his 1st birthday at the University of Michigan Motts Children’s Hospital, where he underwent the double switch.

He had many obstacles to overcome after his second surgery, requiring 5 days of life-support shortly after surgery, a pacemaker, and 2 cardiac arrests in early 2010 before going on a transplant list. Because of his young age and rare blood type, it was highly unlikely to find a compatible heart for Dylan; therefore, he was removed from the list.

Dylan had his third open-heart surgery to repair his baffle leak and mitral valve September 20, 2010. The third surgery was a success and drastically improved from that of a year ago, but unfortunately the repair on the mitral valve did not last.

On April 15th of this year, Dylan underwent a fourth open-heart surgery to replace his mitral valve with a mechanical one. He is currently doing very well. In his 4 years of life he has had four major heart surgeries and there are still more surgeries in his future.

Dylan is a precious little boy with the sweetest smile. He is a walking miracle!

You can find more of his miraculous encounter with Impact of Hope here. It's AWESOME!

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Bailey’s Story


Bailey was born in August of 2009. On September 26th, at 6 weeks of age, she was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. This ALL form of leukemia is the most aggressive in children. Her first surgery and chemo treatment would come just a few days later on September 29th.

Their only option was very aggressive chemo treatment. If they didn’t treat her she wouldn’t survive, and even with the chemo treatment, doctors said her chance of survival was 20%.

This was such scary news for her family, but they stood firm in their faith in God. He has been so faithful to them, even in the midst of these trials. Her diagnosis coming at such an early age was very rare, and it was a blessing to catch this leukemia so early.

Bailey has spent most of her life in and out of the hospital with spinal taps and multiple chemo treatments. She has three older siblings, two sisters and one brother. The first year of her life was a big adjustment for the whole family, as they quickly jumped from a two-income to a one-income family so her mother could care for her. Her 1st birthday was a huge milestone! When she reached age 1, her survival chance increased to 75-90%!
Today, she is almost 2 years old and is currently in remission. Even now, she will continue to go monthly to the doctor in Kalamazoo.

Bailey’s future has lots of uncertainties. Because of all of the strong steroids and other medications she has been on her whole life, they are not quite sure how she will develop and what her “norm” will be. Even with all of the unknowns in her future, we know every step of Bailey’s life has been ordained by God!

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I invite you to get involved in these precious little lives. Impact of Hope is planning a fundraiser for both families on September 10, 2011 at Lake Area Christian School in Sturgis, MI. Instead of selling tickets, T-shirts are being sold for $10, and all you need to do is wear the T-shirt to the event to gain entry where you will enjoy fun night including a concert, spaghetti dinner and an auction.

If you are interested in helping sponsor this event, please contact me for more information! I am also looking for items to donate to the auction and will be happy to come pick up whatever you have to offer...  well, within reasonable travel distance!  :) 

You can contact me at lynettecarpenter@yahoo.com


Monday, July 25, 2011

Losing It All - Mike's Story Part 4

The deeper I get into "Mike's" story, the more inspired I am. I love peeling back each layer as we discover who this man once was and I CANNOT wait to introduce you to him!

What excites me, is the fact that he is living proof of the gift of a REDEEMED life! Once you meet the man he is today, you will only shake your head in amazement and agree with me that God is a God of mercy! He is a God of grace!

What I want more than anything from these stories is for each of us to recognize ourselves in the Eve's and the Mike's staring back at us through the lines on this blog. We all are born with a sinful nature. We all have choices to make. But above all, we all have a Creator who longs to embrace us. He delights in who we are and wants more than anything to give us a life of abundant peace and joy.

Read Mike's story and stay tuned! Soon, very soon, I want to introduce you to Mike and the man he is today. I promise, you will be amazed at the transformation God has made in his life!

As always, I invite you to share his story with others! Our desire is to offer hope to those who are hopeless.







Losing It All

I had a hard time keeping my eyes off of her.  The similarities between this girl and the woman in my visions were beyond ironic – simply put, it was the same woman!   I didn’t speak to her that day, but I left completely convinced that she was the life God had been promising me. 


Time went by and I never could shake the girl-from-the-funeral from my mind.  I continued pursuing the life of sin with little thought or care for myself – or anyone else… still, there are moments I look back on and realize God was opening my eyes and revealing the utter darkness and despair my life had become. 


One day stands out among the others.  I was at a party in Kalamazoo.  A big shot drug dealer from a larger city was there as well.  Hanging out with guys like him had become the norm in my life, and I thought little of it.  We stood there, just shootin’ the breeze, having a few drinks when his phone rang.  As soon as he said, “Hello”, I could hear something was obviously wrong on the other end.  Screams were coming through the phone – a woman hollering for him to come help her.  He listened for a second then with a calm, cold voice said, “I don’t know you!” and snapped the phone shut.


I stood staring at him, obviously wondering what was going on.  He chuckled as he reached for a cigarette, “It’s nothing.  My girlfriend, well, ex-girlfriend, just got busted with some drugs.”  His enunciated words were dripping with sarcasm.  He paused for moment then went on, a sinister chuckle in his voice.  “My drugs actually.  I had her bringing the goods down here for me.”  He muttered a string of expletives under his breath.  “When I think about how much she had on her…”  His voice trailed off for a moment.  “Man, she’s gonna get locked up for a long time.  A long, long time!”    Lighting the cigarette, he tipped his head back and blew a thick white cloud above us.  We were silent.  What went through his mind, I don’t know, but I was disgusted.  Dark and uncaring as I had let myself become in my own thoughts and actions, still this stunned me.  That was just cold.  I knew I never wanted to sink to that level!


Eventually, I moved back home to work with my parents.  They had offered me a job at their business and I chose to quit doing drugs at that point.  I couldn’t stand the thought of hurting them with the knowledge of the kind of life I was living.  Quitting wasn’t hard.  I simply quit.  Besides, I still had booze, which I drank with pleasure.


To my surprise, I discovered the girl-from-the-funeral lived close by!   My aunt had introduced us and I wondered about this Rachel-girl often. 


It was getting on towards evening that night we first talked.  I was working late and was surprised to look up and see Rachel standing there.  She had stopped in for one reason or another and soon we got caught up in a conversation – just the usual, where’d-you-go-to-school and you-live-close-by kind of stuff.


She was by far one of the sweetest girls I’d ever met.  Rachel was one of those “good girls”.  Like me, she had grown up going to church, only she had wholeheartedly embraced the Christian scene.   We hit it off immediately and soon it became a common occurrence for her to stop by and see me at work.  I couldn’t help but wonder what her parents must think about Rachel spending time with a guy like me, but I wasn’t about to ask. 


One evening, though, our conversation took  a turn, she began talking to me about her relationship with God.  I had heard all the mumbo jumbo Christian stuff and I didn’t want to hear it again – especially from an intriguing girl like Rachel.  I had other things I rather talk about – like would she go out with me on Friday night. 

I finally worked up the courage to ask her out and she promptly turned me down.  “What?  Why?”  I asked, surprised that someone would tell me “no”.

“I’m sorry, Mike.  You’re a nice guy and everything, but I only date guys I would actually consider marrying.”

Ouch!  “Seriously?”  I was annoyed.  “Come on!  Go out with me on Friday.  We’ll just go catch a movie and get something to eat.”  But she wouldn’t be persuaded.

“I can’t Mike.  I’m sorry.”

I wasn’t about to take no for an answer.  I never did.  Everyone else I had ever wanted something from gave it to me, yet here was this pretty little church girl telling me, Mike the tough guy, “no”?   

One Friday night she had a date – and it wasn’t with me.  I had asked her out over and over again, always receiving the same answer – still, one could hope!   That night though, I couldn’t stand the thought of her spending time with another guy but there was little I could do about it.  So I did the only thing I could do - I went to her house.  She was ready and waiting for the twerp to show up, so I sat with her begging for a chance.


“Why can’t you just like me for who I am?” I asked.


“Mike, I do like you,” Her brown eyes did crazy things to my heart and I wished time would stand still.  “But I can’t go out with a guy who doesn’t have a relationship with God!”  In that moment it hit me.  All my life I had searched for power… a strength that could only be measured as super-natural.  I pushed the limits time and time again in an effort to prove my strength.  I had stared death fearlessly in the face numerous times, impressed by the power I had over others.  The darkness of evil that hovered near me at every turn filled me with dangerous courage and I loved it – always pushing for more power… more strength.  Yet here before me, wrapped up in this beautiful woman called Rachel exuded all the power and strength I had searched for so long.  She was the essence of it!  I couldn’t get enough of her.  I wanted that kind of strength with everything in me. 

I sat staring at her, knowing my time was limited.  “What’s it gonna take, Rachel?  What do I have to do to get you to go out with me sometime?”

“Come to church with me,” she said.  Suddenly, I had to get going.  Her date was going to be there soon and I didn’t want to be there when he arrived. 


I stood to my feet, “Churches are full of hypocrites, Rachel.  Thanks anyway.”

I drove out the drive, ticked.  We had had that conversation before.  On one of the many evenings she’d stopped in to see me at work, I had told her in no uncertain terms that should I ever need help, I knew I could rely on my non-Christian friends way more than I’d ever be able to count on the losers I’d find sitting in a pew.


Her answer surprised me, but her words played through my mind, “You know what, Mike, you might be right, and I’m sorry that that has been your experience.  But you have to know that it’s more than that.  Those people, the Christians who have let you down, they have to answer for themselves, but what about you?  You will only find peace when you surrender your life to God!”  Over the weeks she had pushed and prodded, but I was stubborn, refusing to give in to her churchy ways.


The next morning I called her.  “Doing anything tonight?”  I hoped that somehow she had changed her mind after last night’s conversation.


“Well, yes, Mike.  Actually, I’m going on a date.”


“What?  Why will you go out with all these other guys but never me?”


She was relentless, and I hung up frustrated.  I spent the day annoyed, trying to figure out a way to change her mind, but I knew better.  It was that strength – that crazy ability to stand strong no matter how hard I tried to convince her otherwise.  Fine!  I’d do it!


She didn’t seem too surprised when I showed up again that night to sit with her as she waited for her date, but her eyes couldn’t deny her amazement when I asked if I could go to church with her the next morning.


Those next weeks were awesome!  True, we argued a lot about God and church and stuff like that, but as long as I was willing to go to church, she was willing to go with me. 


I was still doing much better as far as drugs were concerned until that fateful night at the concert.  The night my old “friend” stopped by and picked me up.  It was then I experienced the horrible night in the restroom.  As I stood scrubbing the vomit from my shirt that night, I couldn’t help but wonder what Rachel would think if she could see me now?  This life was miserable and lonely.  I wanted so badly the life God had promised me.  A battle was raging inside of me and I wasn’t ready to let go.  Simply put, I wanted to live my life my way! 


I left the bathroom that night, knowing that once again, I had been spared; still I was unwilling to surrender my will... my desires… my life to a Holy God.   My only hope was that maybe, just maybe, I could have this life… and Rachel too!


In an effort to appear like the godly man Rachel thought she needed, I began to study the Bible.  I made sure she found out about it, but in the next moment would pressure her to take our relationship further.  I saw no reason to “wait”, but Rachel, again, would not be swayed.  No matter how hard I tried, no matter the times I bombarded her to let me prove my love to her, she would not relent.


It was a warm spring evening when she came to me.  I had my head buried under the hood of my truck when I heard the door open.  She stood there staring at me, and I knew.  Her eyes were filled with tears as she said the words I never wanted to hear.


“We can’t go on like this, Mike.  I love you, I really do, but this isn’t right.  You’re not the kind of man God has for me.”  I stood staring at her sure I could hear the sound of my heart as it broke to pieces.


“No,” I could only whisper as I clung to her. 


“I’m sorry, Mike, I really am.”  She had tried to break things off with me before, but I had always been able to change her mind.  This time was different.  I could see it in her eyes – there was that inner strength again.  The strength I still only dreamed of having. 

I knew it was over. 


I considered what my life was before her and what it would likely become again when she walked out that door.  I couldn’t hold back the tears and I sobbed like a child wishing I could find a way to recover what I had lost.


The tears were still streaming down her face as she whispered “good-bye”, and then, she was gone.




TO BE CONTINUED…


Monday, July 18, 2011

Invincible - Mike's Story Part 3


This is part 3 of a series I've been posting about a guy we're calling "Mike".  Mike's story is amazing to me - especially knowing who the real Mike is!  I cannot wait to introduce you to him!  

In two weeks, Mike's story will reveal who he is.

As I've worked with him in writing his story, I've been reminded once again how much I take people at face value.  I've known Mike since he met his wife and had no idea what all he had been through!  His testimony, like Eve's, is of modern day redemption!   Mike is living proof that God has a plan for all of us - no matter who we are or what we've done.  God's desire is to give us all a life full of abundant peace, joy and purpose.

If you know anyone who is living a life much like Mike describes below, please share this story with them!


Invincible - Part 3

I left for college, fully intent on becoming a Physical Therapist, but it didn’t take long for me to learn there was something I was better at than that part of the medical field.  As I said before, I was good at all the wrong things, but at college I realized I was great at all the wrong things. 


I started seeing the quality of my friends decline, but I didn’t care.  I didn’t care about them or myself.   It was time to party!   One night in particular stands out in my mind.  Someone had given me a challenge and I had something to prove, “What do you mean I can’t drink this bottle down?  I’ve been bonging vodka and whiskey all night while you sip that beer!”  I thought I was so cool… so tough.  These guys had nothin’ on me!  “Bring me another fifth!”  I tossed an empty bottle aside, “One only gets me warm and fuzzy.”   As the night went on, my vision not only blurred – it disappeared altogether.  That was the first time of many to follow that I went blind from drinking so much.  I don’t know why, but it would happen some times when I really drank a lot.  


Faster... faster... faster... more... more... more!  I’m searching for something, I want something, no, maybe everything!  Give it all to me!  I just couldn’t get enough.   Aw, come on, my truck only tops out at 130 miles per hour?  This isn’t fast enough!  I know, I’ll see how fast I can go around that curve.  Okay, that was a good rush!  How can I drive so good when I’m drunk?  I don’t know.   Here come some headlights, I’ll drive right at them and see what happens.  Yup, that was a rush!  I love it!  I think my heart’s coming out of my chest! 


But I needed more!  Alcohol on its own, just wasn’t enough anymore.


I hardly ever let anyone see this, but I look back, and realize that even as a kid I was like that – looking for a rush.  I would try things just to see if I could do it, but not if someone else was around – I was afraid of what they would think. I lived like that for years almost as though two people lived in one body.  The good Christian boy when I needed to be and the nothing can satisfy me sinner when I wanted to feel alive or maybe when I felt like I had to feel that rush.


As a kid, I remember climbing bins every day and each day jumping off one rung higher until I ran out of rungs.  My legs would just collapse when I hit the ground.  Another time I jumped from the top of one bin to another.  And then there was the time I climbed up three stories on the narrow side of a two by four.  I loved the excitement that would surge through my body, and was always looking for more.  


Now here in college, it was no exception.  I was on a constant mission for the next high.  With alcohol leaving me still wanting more, I started experimenting with drugs.  It didn’t take long before it wasn’t an experiment anymore and this too became a way of life - or maybe a suspended death.  I didn’t care about anything or anyone, including myself.   Someone would say, “You can’t drink that much” or other times, “Dude, you shouldn’t snort all that”.

“Double it!”  I would respond.   I was always surprised at how some people couldn’t handle drugs and alcohol.  I learned that when I felt like I couldn’t take anymore, if I made myself throw up, I could keep right on going!  It was a thrill to see what would happen, not knowing the outcome - even if it meant death.   I guess that’s what happens when you just don’t care.   


I got myself into worse and worse situations.  Let’s just say, I’ve looked at the wrong end of a gun more times than I want to remember.  One time that comes to mind, I was in a basement and I was pretty sure I was not going to make it out alive from a drug deal gone bad.   Then there was the time someone pulled a gun on me and I dared him to shoot.  I walked up to him, stretched my arms out to the side baring my chest and invited him to “pull the trigger”.  He didn’t.  Instead he ran off with his buddies to a nearby gas station. 

He wasn't aware of it, but I followed him.  As the he and his friends came out of the store and I grabbed the guy and pinned him to the wall.  I began choking him and I could see the realization in his eyes that he knew his life was in my hands and that he could feel it slipping away from him and he couldn’t do anything to stop it.  It was the ultimate rush and I loved it.   I controlled life and death face to face.  I’m not sure why his friends didn’t do anything to help him, they just stood there.  Thank God I finally put him down.  I remember listening to him gasping for breath as I bent down and whispered in his ear that if he ever pulled a gun on me again he better pull the trigger or I would take it away from him and kill him with it.  Then I just stood up and walked back to my truck and drove away. 

I just didn’t care! 


I felt like I was indestructible.  I got this feeling from Satan, I’m sure of it.  Most people start selling drugs just to pay for their own, and I’m sure that was part of it, but I liked the power, the control and the thrill of doing it.  I soon figured out that I was great at this too! 


The quality of my friends continued to decline.  One of them was facing forty to life for seven counts of attempted murder and several other felonies.  Another had just beaten his first investigation in which he was moving $30,000 of drugs every month.  Still another got busted as a repeat offender and ended up serving his time in Jackson.  Several of them were constantly in and out of jail.  One of my roommates decided to go to California and I found out later that they found his car - but they never found him. 


I cared so little that one day when I was shorted by ten dollars, I got angry!  This wasn’t acceptable!  So, I grabbed a buddy and we went to find the culprit.  I had a little machine gun and I had every intention of getting my money - one way or another.   I shake my head now in disbelief.  All over ten dollars (tell me that’s not Satan)! 


Still I continued to search for that next high – that next rush.  Several times when I was driving, I would slowly drift into the other lane to see what would happen – hoping to feel that excitement pulse through my veins!  One day while driving down the highway, I decided to close my eyes and see how long I could keep them closed.  I challenged myself to see if I could make it farther than the time before – without hitting anything – or anybody.  Other times, I would come to blind intersections and never stop or slow down, I would just gun it.


I thank God every day that I never hurt any of the people I forced off the road - especially now that I have a family of my own.  I can’t imagine how I could have done that!  Thank God he spared not only me but everyone who could have been hurt or killed. 


By this time I was so full of sin that people I used to know would comment about how different I looked and acted.   I believe my sin affected me on the outside as well as the inside.  Because of how I was raised, I knew what I had become and I accepted it, even asked for more.  But, through all of this, God never turned his back on me as I did to Him!  I remember battling with Him on many sleepless nights.  Through it all, He continued to reach out to me. 

I know it sounds funny.  I’ve tried to explain it to my wife even though I don’t fully understand it myself, but God continued to try so show me visions with a promise of a better life.  He was offering me a life with Him and I could see my wife (even though I didn’t know her at the time) that He was promising me.   He constantly would reveal to me what He had for me if I would just give up the control and give my life to Him.


I was at my Grandpa’s funeral when I saw her for the first time.  I find it ironic really – sitting there mourning the loss of my grandpa… contemplating death, when the promise of life walked into the room.  The instant I saw her, I recognized her – she was the woman from my dreams – literally!  I knew instantly she was the “promise” God had for me. 


Now I had a choice to make – would I choose life?  Or continue on this fast track towards death?

Friday, July 15, 2011

Keep Walking!

Have you ever read a story in the Bible and thought, “Dude, that is not fair!  How could God allow that to happen?”  I’ve had several of those, but one in particular stands out above the rest.  It’s found in 1 Kings 13.

The story is of a prophet, sent by God to proclaim a not so nice message.  Right in front of King Jeroboam, the prophet spoke to the altar on which the priests from the shrines were sacrificing, “There will be a new king and his name will be Josiah.”  But the prophet didn’t stop there.  He went on to prophesy that not only would the altar split to prove that he was right, but also that the priests would be sacrificed on it - yes, you read that right!

Ok, stop for a second and think about that.  This guy had some nerve!  “Hey!  How ya doing?  Ok, so a message from the Lord,” Can’t you just see him scrolling through his… well… um… his scroll, “Here it is, you, King Jeroboam, are gonna be replaced by another king.  Oh and these guys, the priests, they’re gonna end up as human sacrifices.  Thanks!  Have a nice day!”

You’ve gotta be convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that God specifically told you to do that before finding the nerve to deliver a message of that caliber!  Most of us would turn into sniveling babies begging God to let us send the message as an anonymous email instead – or not at all.  But this prophet obeyed!  He did just exactly what God had told him to do.

The king didn’t take it very well.  He shouted for the guards to arrest him, but just as Jeroboam himself grabbed the prophet, his arm became paralyzed.  Instantly!  I can imagine his shocked expression, not knowing where to look first.  There’s pandemonium all around.  Priests, people, guards all running and shouting.  The prophet has several men holding onto him while there in the chaos is the king’s bejeweled hand swinging to and fro like the pendulum of a grandfather clock – completely limp and useless.

That changed the king’s tune.  Now he’s begging for mercy, “Help me!  Please!  Pray for me that my arm would be healed.”  So the prophet did, and the king’s arm was healed – just like that!  The king was so jubilant, he invited the prophet to share a meal with him, but here’s where it gets interesting.

The holy man told the king, "Not on your life!  You couldn't pay me enough to get me to sit down with you at a meal in this place.  I'm here under God's orders, and He commanded, 'Don't eat a crumb, don't drink a drop, and don't go back the way you came.'"  Then he left by a different road than the one on which he had walked to Bethel.

Pretty awesome, huh?  But hang on, here’s more.  There was an older prophet living in that town and when he heard about what had happened he went after the younger man.  He found him sitting beside the road under an oak tree.  “Are you the man of God from Judah?” He asked. 

“Yes, I am.”

“Come home with me.  I’d love to provide a meal for you.”  But again, the prophet declines and relays his orders from God.  Then something unexpected happens.  The older prophet lies to him, “"I am also a prophet, just like you. And an angel came to me with a message from God: 'Bring him home with you, and give him a good meal!'"  Well, that was all the younger man needed to hear and he jumped up and went home with him.

After the meal, the older prophet gave the younger one a word from God, “You were given specific orders, and you disobeyed.  Now, you’re gonna die.”  The young prophet saddled his donkey and headed out the drive.  Down the road a bit, he was met by a lion and the lion killed him.  End of story.

Doesn’t that just give you warm fuzzies?   I think I actually yelled at my Bible about that one, “FOUL!  Not fair!  You punished the wrong guy, God!  What’s up with that?”  So I chewed on it for a while.  I read the story over and over, convinced there was a deeper message in it for me, and here’s what I've found.

Do you ever find yourself in the same shoes…er… sandals as that prophet?  It’s those moments at the altar when we can boldly proclaim our trust in Who God is and what He has said.  But it’s after we’ve walked away that the doubts begin to set in.  Just look at the progression. 

At the altar, the prophet repeated God’s instructions then began to carry them out accordingly.  Before long, the other prophet comes looking for him, but by now the younger man had stopped walking – he’s relaxing under an oak tree.  I’d imagine he was hot, tired and hungry.  God hadn’t said he couldn’t sit under an oak tree, so why not?  Just for a bit, right?  He probably wanted to get some rest before he got back on the road to Judah.

The older prophet offers up his proposal, and ooohh, that had to sound so good - the coolness of the house, a chance to wash his feet, and… food…delicious, delectable, scrumptious food.  But no!  He had his orders and he would not be swayed. 

Still… it would be nice!

His mind was so wrapped around his personal desires that he totally missed what came at him next - an outright lie.  And unfair as it seems, it ultimately cost him his life.

When we are at the altar, we are convinced that God said it and He meant it.  We believe His promises and we trust Him without hesitation.  At the altar, our vision is focused.  We know our purpose – and we walk in it.  The prophet even witnessed two miracles as he stood proclaiming God’s message. 

I found that it’s easy to be just like him.  In the presence of God, I believe!  I trust His plan, I expect His miracles, I rest in Him for provision, but it’s after I walk away that the battle begins.

The challenge for us is to keep walking!   In life there will be shady oak trees and the comforting smells of food seeking to distract us from our calling, but press on!  Don’t allow your eyes to linger on the distractions of this world.  Fight on!  Keep your focus on God alone, remembering His plan for you. 


He will be your source of strength!

He will provide your needs! 

He will watch over your life!

Keep walking!