Devastating
situations can knock the air out of us. Bring us to our knees.
Sometimes
we cause our own tragedies, other times we’re innocent victims of someone
else’s choices and actions. And often heartbreaks are part of life for everyone—like
the death of a loved one.
Sometimes
we are so broken, so helpless, we can’t do anything but fling ourselves into
God’s arms and hold on.
And
later—often much later—
we
discover that within that place of crisis,
we
learn our most important lessons—
- Sorrows can wrench us out of places we should never have wandered.
- Anguish can break down our stubbornness and make us willing, finally, to embrace a holy discontent with things that are not right in our lives.
- A crisis can force us to get serious about God and His forgiveness and grace—and about our need to forgive and extend grace to others.
- Devastation can shake us by the shoulders and convince us that God is worthy of all we are and all we have—that He is Number One.
In
that way, our brokenness
can
lead to our wholeness:
Heartbreaks
can be the stuff of turning points
and
second chances.
Personal
disasters can lead to personal victories.
Some
of you have been there. You messed up. Or maybe someone else messed up and left
you devastated. Shattered. But you survived. Your broken self healed—by God’s grace. You’re
living in a new chapter of your life.
- God has given you a new song to sing. (Psalm 40:1-3).
- He has given you beauty in place of ashes, gladness in place of mourning (Isaiah 61:3).
- He has restored places long devastated (Isaiah 61:4).
- He has turned your weeping into songs of joy (Psalm 126:5-6).
Write
your story!
Someone
needs to hear
that
you got through your disaster.
Someone
needs to know
that
you are living a new and better life.
Not
just that you got a new life—
but
how you got there.
How
did you and God, together,
get
you to this new place?
Someone,
sometime, will read your memoir—someone searching for answers, someone reeling
in the midst of his or her own anguish, longing to turn a corner, desperate to
receive a second chance, eager to leave the former life behind and make a fresh
start. God can use your story to help answer their prayers, give them hope, and
someone (you, through your memoir) to walk alongside them toward the other
side.
In
that way, you—just an ordinary person—can be a “messenger of the Most High.”
Take
in the following:
“And
so we understand that ordinary people are messengers of the Most High,” writes
Lawrence Kushner. “They go about their tasks in holy anonymity. Often, even
unknown to themselves. Yet, if they had not been there, if they had not said
what they said or did what they did, it would not be the way it is now. We
would not be the way we are now. Never forget that you, too, may be a messenger.
Perhaps even one whose errand extends over several lifetimes.” (Eyes Remade for Wonder, Lawrence Kushner)
Read
those last two sentences again with your memoir in mind:
“Never
forget that you, too,
may
be a messenger.
Perhaps
even one whose errand
extends
over several lifetimes.”
How
can your stories extend over several lifetimes? By putting them in writing,
making copies, and making sure your family knows they have copies—on a shelf
somewhere, or in a box in the basement. They might not read your memoir in your
lifetime, but someday, someone will read it.
Trust
God—
He
has given you a high calling.
Not
so much because of who you are,
Commit
your stories to Him,
believing
He will use them to bless your readers.
“Your struggle to share your
struggle changes the world.”
Mick Silva, Higher Purpose Writers
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