Hard Places
“Thou hast shewed thy people hard things.”1 I have
always been glad that the psalmist said to God that some things were hard.
There is no mistake about it; there are hard things in life. Some beautiful
pink flowers were given to me this summer, and as I took them I said, “What are
they?” And the answer came, “They are rock flowers; they grow and bloom only on
rocks where you can see no sod.” Then I thought of God’s flowers growing in
hard places; and I feel, somehow, that He may have a peculiar tenderness for
His “rock flowers.”—Margaret Bottome
*
[Pain] is one of your Father’s ways
of speaking to you; it is the evidence of His limitless love, by which He would
draw you farther from evil and closer to Him, …[and] help you lean more
trustingly on the Lord.—Walter A. Maier
*
One of my dearest and oldest
friends, Jon, married a girl I grew up with. In the middle of the night two
years later, Jon called me because he had just found emails that made it clear
to him that his wife was cheating on him. Soon after, she left and never came
back. Less than a year later, they were divorced.
Jon had every right, you could say,
to let his life be defined by that day, by that year, by that woman, by that
betrayal. But what he did instead was a marvelous thing to watch. He laid
himself open and vulnerable to life and God and therapy and close friends, and
began the breathtaking process of becoming more than what he had been in a thousand
different ways. He is softer, in the best possible way, and when you talk to
him, you know that he’s been down to the bottom and fought his way back up. He
listens more closely and prays like he’s talking to a best friend. I knew him
well for years before she left, and although I would never wish upon anyone the
searing pain I saw written on his face during that season, what God did in his
life through that event makes me believe in God’s goodness even more than I did
before.
I know that it seemed like God was
being cruel that year, that middle of the night when Jon called me. But he was
not. What I know now is that his kindness burns through even the deepest
betrayals and invites life from death every chance we let him. There are things
that explode into our lives and we call them curses, and then one day, a year
later or ten years later, we realize that they are actually something else.
They are the very most precious kinds of blessings.—Shauna Niequest2
*
“Trials equals good.” Understanding
and believing this simple equation can make your life richer, more meaningful,
and happier. It makes all the difference in the world whether you fear problems
and challenges, expecting the worst to happen, or if you face obstacles bravely
and full of faith, anticipating the good that the Lord will bring out of them
and the strength of spirit you will gain. Naturally we wonder why “bad” things
happen to us. God always has a purpose [in what He allows to happen in our
lives], although it is not always revealed immediately.
The Lord sometimes uses sickness,
problems, and troubles to cause us to draw closer to Him and rely more on Him.
Otherwise we would have a tendency to just rock along.
Sometimes things happen just to keep
us humble; sometimes they happen to draw us closer to others; sometimes they
happen to make us pray; sometimes they happen to teach us to be more careful
and prayerful; sometimes they happen to test our faith. God allows troubles for
all kinds of reasons, but ultimately they can all fulfill the same goal: to
draw us closer to Him so that we can avail ourselves more of His power, and
thus be filled with more of His love and joy.
“Many are the afflictions of the
righteous, but the Lord delivers him out of them all.”3 The Lord allows these things as
tests to strengthen your faith and to get an even greater victory out of
seeming defeat.
But always remember that whatever
God allows, He allows it in love. “All things work together for good to those
who love the Lord.”4 God is not going to let anything
happen to you, His child who loves Him, except what can work together for your
good. Even though you may have many afflictions or difficulties, as the verse
says above, He will deliver you out of them all, no matter how many or what!—David
Brandt Berg5
*
I had a tiny box, a precious box
Of human love—my spikenard of great price;
I kept it close within my heart of hearts
And scarce would lift the lid lest it should
Waste its perfume on the air. One day a strange
Deep sorrow came with crushing weight, and fell
Upon my costly treasure, sweet and rare
And broke the box to atoms. All my heart
Rose in dismay and sorrow at this waste,
But as I mourned, behold, a miracle
Of grace Divine. My human love was changed
To Heaven’s own and poured in healing streams
On other broken hearts, while soft and clear
A voice above me whispered, “Child of Mine,
With comfort wherewith thou art comforted,
From this time forth, go comfort others,
And thou shalt know blest fellowship with Me,
Whose broken heart of love hath healed the world.”
—R. A. Torrey
*
No physician ever weighed out
medicine to his patient with half so much care and exactness as God weighs out
to us every trial. Not one grain too much does He ever permit to be placed on
the scale.—Henry Ward Beecher
*
Before I was afflicted I went
astray, but now I obey your word.—Psalm 119:676
*
It is good for me that I was
afflicted, that I might learn your statutes.—Psalm 119:717
1 Psalm 60:3 KJV.
2 Cold Tangerines
(Zondervan, 2007).
3 Psalm 34:19 NKJV.
4 Romans 8:28.
5 Obstacles Are for
Overcoming (Aurora Production AG, 2010).
6 NIV.
7 ESV.