Don’t Let Your Love Grow Cold

Yesterday morning, our pastor taught about “Loving Your Neighbor”. He interrupted our scheduled teaching in the book of Mark to bring us a message God pressed on his heart. He talked about the Greatest Commandments and The Parable of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10:25-37. (Sermon link.) It was a timely and inspiring message, especially in light of the heartache and strife this country has been through lately. Yet Pastor Rich hadn’t known only a few short hours later our country would face another great tragedy.

LoveYourNeighbor

Like many of my fellow night-owls, I was scrolling through Facebook when I heard the breaking news about an active shooter in Las Vegas. I searched through my friends list looking for my aunt and cousins to check on them only to find out my cousin and aunt were at the concert. My heart pounded.

My cousin checked in under lockdown to say they were safe. Relief washed over me. The image my cousin described—her dragging my aunt as the shots came closer, promising her they were going to be okay, and urging her to keep running—will stay in my mind always. I want to cry thinking of it. I spent the night worrying, messaging my cousins, listening to their local police scanner, and praying my heart out. I cannot imagine what a terrifying experience they went through—what all the victims went through. Last night, a friend of ours lost her uncle. All over the country, families are mourning loved ones. Tonight my family down in Nevada had dinner together and comforted each other. We are so thankful, but it’s bittersweet and hard to comprehend this senseless heartbreak.

This world is rapidly breaking down. It is easy to become numb to the shock of it all—to become apathetic. In Matthew 24, Jesus described all of the crazy end-times happenings we are experiencing as “the beginning of birth pangs”. Life these days feels like labor in transition, the contractions so intense, coming right on top of each other so quickly one barely has time to breathe.

The pain is too sharp. It can be hard to cope.

Many of us want to lose ourselves in an escape, a distraction, so we don’t have to face the reality of the world we are living in.

In Matthew 24, Jesus comforted, “See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.” But maybe knowing God is in control isn’t comforting to you at all right now because you have too many questions about why a God of love would allow so much suffering in this world.

I don’t have all the answers, but I am confident in this: God is LOVE, God is GOOD, and God is LIGHT—and in Him there is no darkness at all. Sin entered this world through no fault of His own. He gave man free will and we blew it like imperfect humans do. Because of His great love for us, God sent His perfect Son to die for our sins to rescue us from ourselves. He did not send His Son into this world to condemn the world, but that through Him all might be saved who believe in His name. He weeps with those who weep. He promises He is close to the brokenhearted and to those crushed in spirit. He is with you. Trust Him. Let Him hold you.

He loves you. He loves us. And we love because He first loved us.

In Matthew 24 Jesus warned, “And then many will be offended, will betray one another, and will hate one another…and because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.”

Like you probably did, I spent the day in shock. I wanted to cry but didn’t have a moment to grieve. Then on the drive home, my 13-year-old son asked if he could donate blood.

My heart tore open and the tears finally broke through.

Pray. Donate. Give. Don’t pass by. Help your neighbor. Please. Don’t let your love grow cold.

May God bless you, watch over you, and comfort you.

The Gnarly Van and the Gift

I stared out the van window at the sunny winter sky, willing my raging emotions to quiet. We all knew we were late to church again. It didn’t matter how hard I tried, even with Mike’s help I could not get us there in time.

“How late will we be? Should we even go?” Our oldest asked, echoing my thoughts. “About ten minutes. Yes, we are going,” I replied as calmly as I could. None of this was his fault. Self-control. Don’t lash out. Don’t snap. This is a joyful day. Focus on why we are going. Obedience. That word had willed me out of bed. Sickness, stress, and chronic insomnia had me worn thin. The kids fell silent as they sensed my emotional state.

The tires rotated in sing-song down the road, “Failure, failure, you’re a failure.” My thoughts accused me, “What kind of a Proverbs 31 wife are you anyway? She does him good and not evil all the days of her life, and you can’t even get out the door for crying out loud.” I love You, Jesus. I want to obey You. I need Your rest. I’m exhausted. Why can’t I just get it together? Please help me get it together.  

On the bright side, we’d arrive after everyone was already tucked away inside the church, so our odds of being spotted in my husband’s van were lessened. My minivan and my husband’s work truck were on the fritz, so that left Mike’s awesome 80’s Toyota 4×4 white work van to get our family of six from A to B. I grudgingly glanced around the interior. If only we could go back in time and make better choices, we wouldn’t be in this financial position. We wouldn’t be in this thing. Thankful. I am thankful. Lord, please provide and set us free from this crushing debt. Please change our story.

One of my friends teasingly dubbed our ride “Mike’s gnarly van”. Gnarly of the “piece of junk” or “cool, quirky vibe” variety, I didn’t ask. Maybe both. My opinion waffled between the two. If we were missionaries in some third world country, I would be thrilled to have this ride. But we were in America, and driving anywhere in this van, much less with four kids, brought looks of pity or judgment. Would I even care what we were driving if other people didn’t? Nope.

Besides, Mike loves this thing. My husband is way cooler than I am. He has a laid-back style I wish I could emulate. Who cares what other people think? Not Mike. I could see his vision to transform this treasure into a Pinzgauer-inspired camping rig we could haul the kids around in, bouncing along on mountain roads and forgotten trails. One day he will have the time to tinker with it. He can fix just about anything—a quality in a husband I specifically asked God for long before we ever met.

We arrived late, as expected, but it was worth it. It was one of those encouraging services when God speaks right to your heart. When you get to pray with church family, sharing hugs and a few tears that fill your spiritual love-tank, while all the kids run around chasing each other. Our little family left happy, thankful we had made it to church. On the way home, Mike stopped at a shopping center and went inside the credit union to use the ATM. Our kids and I waited in the awesome van. They were in their post-church bliss, getting along well, which made this mama happy.

Suddenly, I became aware I was in the gnarly van so I slouched down in my seat a bit and looked at my phone. Oh brother. Get over yourself, Kim. God, please forgive me for my embarrassment over this van. It is a gift from You. Why am I being so superficial? Lord, You know where I’ve been. You know where I come from.

You see, I was homeless as a child. My family lived in a motel and, when things got worse, with whoever would take us in. When my mom became a brave single mama, she worked hard to provide for her girls. She rented a charming little house and often went without food so my sister and I could eat. Our home was broken into six times in one year, but my mom stayed strong for us. Then our neighbor friend told my mom about Jesus. I remember them talking through the chain-link fence in the backyard, the golden California sunlight surrounding them before dusk as I played. My mom wistful, hopeful. God turned everything around for us. He became my Father and within months He gave me a new daddy, brother, and two more sisters. God had blessed us abundantly, beyond anything we had ever asked for or thought of. If this van gave my children—or reminded me of—any lesson in thankfulness, humility, and compassion I was grateful. Thank You, God. You are so faithful.

After a few minutes, a knock on my door startled me. A lady stood outside, looking anxious. She glanced nervously toward the back of the van, and I assumed she was going to tell me there was something wrong with it. Maybe a taillight was busted. Or maybe she needed help. I shifted toward her in my seat and opened the door.

“I’m sorry, this is going to sound crazy,” she started hesitantly, shaking. Oh no. “But I need to do this. I just came from church and God is telling me to give you this and I need to obey so I don’t lose my reward.”

She shoved a trembling hand towards me, willing me to take something. I looked down at it for a moment until my brain registered she was offering me money.

“Thank you, but—“
“Please,” she interrupted, pressing the money towards me, “I don’t want to lose my reward.”

Every fiber of my being said not to take it. Voices of people accusing me of being stubborn chorused in my mind. I looked past her and saw a young woman, maybe her daughter, staring up at me expectantly from the passenger seat of her red car, parked in the space beside ours.

“Thank you,” I choked out and smiled. I willed my hand to hers. She beamed with joy as she pressed the money into my hand.

She left as quickly as she appeared. I shut the van door and kept my eyes on my lap until she pulled out of her parking spot.  I looked at the smartphone in my hands with shame. It was worth more than the vehicle we were sitting in. I shook off the condemning thought and sat in awe.

Lord, thank You. Thank You for sending that woman to show me You see me and You care. You will provide for us in Your grace. Thank You for showing me obedience is always worth it.

“What did she give you, Mom?” the kids asked, astonished by what they’d just seen.
“She gave me money,” I replied.
They asked me to count it. “Thirty dollars. Wasn’t that sweet of her?”
“But, why? Why did she give you money?”
“Because she thought we needed it. We should pray for God to bless her.”
They agreed.

Mike got in a few minutes later.
The kids spoke over each other, “A lady just gave Mom thirty dollars!”
He chuckled, surprised. “Why did she give you thirty dollars?”
“I think she thought we needed it,” I replied, eyebrows raised, nodding to the van.
“Wow, this thing is paying off!” He quipped in his care-free Mike-style.

As the kids enjoyed the rumbly ride home, I chatted with Mike about how I had been feeling that morning and how the woman’s gift was from God to encourage me. “I feel like this money should be spent on something special, but I’m not sure what. I’m just going to hold onto it. Is that okay?”
“Sounds good,” he agreed.

I tucked the thirty dollars away in my wallet and thought about what God wanted me to do with it. I couldn’t just buy pizza with it, although that would be a rare treat for our family. I thought about how little thirty dollars was to some people, and how much it was to others. I was reminded how none of our money is truly ours. Maybe we wouldn’t be in debt had we treated every thirty dollars to cross our hands like it was God’s to spend. The weight of the responsibility of those thirty dollars weighed on me heavily. This money was special and I knew it wasn’t meant for me. God had a greater purpose for it.

Two nights later, my neighbors’ house burned down. By God’s grace, my new neighbors—a widow and her four girls—had just left to run an errand and were safe. The next morning she was outside, looking over the charred remains of her home, her dreams broken.

Lord, Mike hasn’t been paid yet. What can I do for her? And I knew. I took the thirty dollars out of my wallet and headed up the hill. It wasn’t much, but maybe it could buy pizza and comfort for a mama and her girls. “This is going to sound crazy…”

“Now to Him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to Him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen.”
Ephesians 3:20-21

~~~~~~

To the lady with the red car: You didn’t know I was your sister in Christ. May God multiply your reward in heaven and pour out His blessings on you here on earth!

“The Lord bless you and keep you;
The Lord make His face shine upon you,
And be gracious to you;
The Lord lift up His countenance upon you,
And give you peace.”’
Numbers 6:24-26

“The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work. As it is written,
“He has distributed freely, He has given to the poor;
His righteousness endures forever.”
He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness. You will be enriched in every way to be generous in every way, which through us will produce thanksgiving to God. For the ministry of this service is not only supplying the needs of the saints but is also overflowing in many thanksgivings to God. By their approval of this service, they will glorify God because of your submission that comes from your confession of the gospel of Christ, and the generosity of your contribution for them and for all others, while they long for you and pray for you, because of the surpassing grace of God upon you. Thanks be to God for His inexpressible gift!”
2 Corinthians 9:6-15

The Gnarly Van Cropped-201639

Abiding by Grace

Is it me, or do emotions get more intense with age? It’s as though the stress and trials of this life intensify them—like tossing dynamite into a hot oven. Sometimes I feel deeply homesick, right here in my home with my family in the same room. It’s an anxious feeling in my heart and I feel the urge to cry, but can’t. Other times I’ll be irritable with my kids simply for being kids. Usually during these “episodes” I find myself in my laundry room, with chocolate, begging the Lord for victory over my emotions. God, I’m failing. I keep walking in the flesh, and not the Spirit. I feel so lonely.

I remind myself I shouldn’t feel this way; I have Jesus, so I’m never truly alone. He is with me. He will never leave me, nor forsake me. All true. So what gives? Why do my emotions and actions betray these truths? I feel a pang of self-condemnation. I’ve been a Christian almost three quarters of my life and should have overcome this by now. I’ve had breathtaking, beautiful times of fellowship with God—my heart full to bursting. I know Jesus is the Answer. When others come to me for support I point them to Him. Not long ago, I texted with a loved one in crisis about God’s unconditional love and plans for her—quite confidently—only to find myself sitting on the floor of my laundry room a few hours later, pondering the same questions. I sat there reading through the texts, being comforted by the Lord as well.

How can I share my faith with others, with my kids, when I have these times of such emptiness or lack of self-control? What happened to the joy of my salvation, and my peace? IF I know He has overcome and my victory is in Him, THEN I shouldn’t have these desperate moments. Jesus didn’t rescue me from the power of darkness and bring me into His kingdom of light for me to live in defeat. He came so my joy would be full. He has a plan and purpose for my life—good plans that glorify Him.

I needed victory once and for all. I had to figure this out, so I started seeking God and searching His Word for answers…for answers within the Answer—and the Truth answered me:

I’m right here.
You took your eyes off Me, and you miss Me.
Return to Me, your First Love.
Know Me. Trust Me. Obey Me.
Abide in Me. Abide in My love.

His words pierced my soul, and it seemed so obvious now. Once again, I’d fallen into the trap of trying to live for Him, to live at all, in my own strength. That never goes well. It leads to spiritual dehydration every time. I’ll spend some time with my Savior, take a big gulp of Living Water, and promptly get distracted with the cares of this life. I’ll spend a few days living off one drink of Water, thinking I’m good to go. Before I know it, I’m in the laundry room: thirsty, muddled, discouraged, crying again, with a bunch of thirsty kids looking for me. Decidedly not good.

“Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself unless it abides in the vine, so neither can you unless you abide in Me. I am the Vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing … Just as the Father has loved Me, I have also loved you; abide in My love … These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full.”
–Jesus, John 15:4-5, 9, 11

Abide: to remain; continue; stay.

I may have read a scripture countless times, yet Jesus will shine a light on the passage and whisper to my heart: This…this thing you lack. Those words, “Abide in Me…Abide in My love,” quicken my heart and water my soul—and I know He is wooing me, beckoning me to return and stay with Him, to remain with Him. To remain in His love and bear His fruit, full of joy. He longs to take my hand in His and lead me every moment, by His grace. Sharing His mysteries and pouring His life into me. Knowing me and being known. In my weakness, He is strong. I can do nothing apart from Him. Nothing. And I don’t want to.