T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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131.1 | Praise in the face of tragedy? | FAILTE::JOHNSTONEK | Ken Johnstone | Thu May 06 1993 05:50 | 23 |
| At the risk of being controversial...
In no way do I want to take away from praise to our Father in Heaven,
who is always worthy of praise; but I struggle sometimes with what we
praise Him for....
Nancy, I'm amazed how you can praise God for His protection when one of
your kids has just been knifed! Do you not think that if God really had
"a hedge around" our families this kind of thing would not happen?
When faced with tragedy, did Jesus encourage us to "praise God for not
allowing something worse to happen"? I'm not aware of that.
Would an alternative Christian response be "Father forgive...he didn't
know what he was doing"?
I'd value your comments since I'm sure I have much to learn in this
area.
Ken Johnstone
|
131.2 | God is in control... | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Thu May 06 1993 10:18 | 59 |
| Hi Ken,
1 Thessalonians 5:18 tells us to "give thanks in all circumstances", which
I would understand to include things whcih the world would regards as
trials, as well as what are commonly seen as blessings. Paul and Silas
were beaten and thrown into jail, and at midnight (too uncomfortable to
sleep?), they were prayign and singing hymns - sounds like praise rather
than grumbing...
And Nancy sees very clearly that Clayton was effectively protected, so that
no long term harm was done, but rather his fraternal love was emphasised in
a very realistic way. What might well have happened in such circumstances
is unthinkable - an uncontrolled 3-year old loose with a 10" knife - but
now, Clayton is made aware of dangers where he wasn't before, but without
suffering undue harm, and the family unity is cemented by the event...
A traumatic event brought the family very close to the LORD, and they
needed Him to be present in their awareness of the situation.
Reason to praise?
I think it demonstrates very clearly God's hedge around them...
I believe that a lot of the perspective on this needs to come from an
awareness that we are in the world, not just to enjoy ourselves - we're
only here for one lifetime - but to be prepared for eternity. This implies
discipline, because the spirit which is being perfected is of infinitely
more significance than the body in which it temporarioly resides. Hebrews
12 emphases this, especially verses 6-11. "...God disciplines us for our
good that we may share in His holiness." I see this as including our
everyday circumstances and dangers.
An example is Job. We hear next to nothing about his early years, except
that he prospered and was respected. Satan claimed that the 'hedge' around
him meant that his faithfulness was merely cupboard love, so God gave
permission for areas of Job's life to be touched. Job's witness and
character took their place in God's Word because of what happened in this
time. We can thank God for His mercy in showing us our weakness, because
in that weakness, His strength is released to work - while we rely on our
own strength, faith is not operative. As we realise that we *need* God's
active intervention on a minute-by-minute basis, our hearts are opened for
His involvement....
The 'Father forgive...' response is also valid, but is the prayer towards
the wayward child, rather than the immediate response of the parent, caring
for the family member. Maybe it would be most powerful if prayed by
Clayton, in this situation!
I just have to add - the very worst possible *did* happen to the LORD Jesus
- by His choice. That's why He came - to bear our sin. And we can
certainly praise Him for that, because otherwise, it would have been too
much for us. For eternity.
� At the risk of being controversial...
Honest questioning must always be welcome. We don't always have the
answers given to us, but that's not a reason to pretend there aren't any
questions. Just a reason to turn to Him for the final answers, and maybe
be satisfied with leaving them with Him...
God bless
Andrew
|
131.3 | Who's "dumping" now ? | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Thu May 06 1993 12:21 | 34 |
|
Ken,
When my husband began to lose his sight in his left eye (his
right eye was already blinded), we did not praise God at first.
Then, doors opened up for us to see the head of Neuro-opthalmology
at Mass. Eye and Ear. Then, we saw a doctor who has been ranked
among the top three Neuro-surgeons in the country. Jamie ended
up in surgery for a tumor on his optic nerve. Just one week after
the first awful news, we were being shown many reasons to continue
to praise Him. Insurance obstacles were removed with mere phone
calls, appointments opened up where there had been no openings in
sight for weeks, surgeries that were forecast as 6 weeks away
were available within 3 weeks.
The Devil comes but to steal and destroy, but God never leaves us.
I firmly believe that the devil wanted to rob us, to turn us from
our faith in the face of the battle, but God just kept saying,
"I'm with you, I will never leave you, I will see you through."
We've gone through more vision loss, another tumor, another surgery,
and radiation since then. We have had our cries of "Why, Lord, Why?"
and "How long, oh Lord?", but we've also been able to praise Him.
Jamie *could* have lost all his sight. He *could* have been left
legally blind. The doctors *could* have ignored Jamie's insistence
that something was wrong even when the brain scans showed no tumor,
but they didn't, and there *was* a tumor.
I still think back on the many blessings God has given us through
the storm, and rejoice. It isn't always easy, but it's always due.
Karen
|
131.4 | God is faithful | USAT05::BENSON | God's Love's Still Changing Hearts | Thu May 06 1993 12:26 | 40 |
|
Hi Ken,
Being recently acquainted with tragedy in the accidental death of my 2
year old daughter I understand to some degree why praise is appropriate
during tragedy and how it is performed.
God is God, right? We know from His word that He is just, merciful,
loving, righteous, and holy, to name a few of his attributes. I do
not praise God for my daughter's death but I praise God *in spite of*
my daughter's death because He is worthy at all times of my praise.
"Death" is our enemy, not God, and He has conquered death through His
sacrifice of His only Son, Jesus - all for our sakes. Aside from
giving God the praise that He is worthy of, we are commanded throughout
the Bible to give Him praise. And several passages describe praise as
a way to experience God more intimately. So praise is not just an
exercise of duty but a way that God will bless us.
Concerning the "how" part I have two answers from my experience. One
way this is possible is when one has the conviction of who God is. I
have kept my eyes on Jesus and on the Father and have taken Him at His
word concerning His qualities. It is a mixture of faith and conviction
which makes this possible. But the most important part, in my opinion,
is that God has given me the *grace* to praise instead of curse! I'm
just a man, subject to all the sin and frailty of any man, including
doubting God's love for me because He has let me suffer such a
grievous loss (even if I deserved it!). I know myself! God has
blessed me with His grace, He has adorned me with belief, He has girded
me with His Word. It's quite amazing!
The other aspect of "how" is to praise God, not the circumstances. No
mature person would praise God for a specific tragedy, rather would
praise God for being faithful in our tragedies (we hurt and we avoid pain
but we are told repeatedly in the Bible that trials and tribulation are a
part of life for everyone - because of our sinful world and our fallen
condition). As Andrew said, God is especially present in our weakness.
Honestly, His presence is so appealing and fulfilling that a truly
courageous one might seek to suffer many trials!
jeff
|
131.5 | so well expressed! | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Thu May 06 1993 14:25 | 5 |
| Thank you everyone, but particularly Jeff (.4) for such beautiful
responses that have been blessings.
Mary
|
131.6 | My 2 cents | SWAM1::BOHN_ER | Boo-Boo Bohn | Thu May 06 1993 16:46 | 26 |
| Hello everyone
Jeff, you really hit it right on the nose! My sister is dating a guy
who is a friend of mine as well. He's suffering from Lupus, which is a
blood disease that I've heard of but don't know much about.
I must say that it was never given by God for him to have such a
disease that has left him in the hospital countless time on the brink
of death. I'm sure that his faith must have been weakened due to the
pain that he has experienced. Doctors telling him that he would not
make it everytime the disease would act up again. The great thing
about it is that his faith has been streaghthen immensely.
I do believe that when God is ready to take us whoever it may be that
he feels that that person is ready to go and he is the final authority
on that. God allows things to happen for our character to be built,
and who are we to say that God shouldn't allow these tradgedies to
happen when he made the ultimate sacrifice of allowing his son to die
for everyone who is born and who dies. It's a bigger tragedy when
someone dies without the lord comparatively to the minute tragedies
however disturbing they may be.
With all the Lord's love and caring
E. Bontonovinchi
|
131.7 | Quite amazing! - INDEED! | LEDS::LAJEUNESSE | Wanted: An Ezra 7:10 heart! | Fri May 07 1993 11:03 | 49 |
|
A quick review of the GEMS found within the previous replies...don't skip
over them, they're worth re-reading...
Andrew:
> ...and the family unity is cemented by the event...
> A traumatic event brought the family very close to the LORD,...
Karen:
> I still think back on the many blessings God has given us through
> the storm, and rejoice. It isn't always easy, but it's always due.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^!!
Jeff:
> Aside from giving God the praise that He is worthy of, we are
> commanded throughout the Bible to give Him praise. And several
> passages describe praise as a way to experience God more intimately.
> So praise is not just an exercise of duty but a way that God will
> bless us.
> God has blessed me with His grace, He has adorned me with belief, He
> has girded me with His Word. It's quite amazing!
Hmmm... I am left with very little to add.
I used to wonder why God COMMANDED us to praise Him. I had this question
until I was shown that, as any loving parent, He guides us `for our own good'.
It is for OUR BENEFIT that we praise His Holiness and to add our voices to
the ongoing, heavenly choir that surrounds His throne! As mentioned, it offers
yet another opportunity for us to get together with our Father. Think of this:
If there were no trials in the world, would we still be dependant on God and
go after Him with the same intensity?
I praise Him for His grace and mercy that follow us all the days of our lives.
I thank Him for His patience as we come to "learn of Him." I thank Him for
the question that was raised, so we could all see our God's love in action
in the previous replies. I thank Him that He counted us worthwhile to send
His Son to eliminate the man-made wall that separated us from our Father.
I thank Him for this revelation in the book of John chapter 16, verse 33:
"These things I have spoken unto you, that IN ME ye might
have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but
be of good cheer: I have overcome the world."
Well, what do you know? He does all these things - out of love!
Choice blessings to you all,
Joe
|
131.8 | Thy Word - health & life to us | LEDS::LAJEUNESSE | Wanted: An Ezra 7:10 heart! | Fri May 07 1993 13:26 | 18 |
|
I was just on the phone with my friend, Paul Lucier, and told him about this
note. He read 1 Peter verses 6-9 to me.
"Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now for a season, if need be,
ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations (adversity - JL):
That the trial of your faith, BEING MUCH MORE PRECIOUS THAN OF GOLD
THAT PERISHETH, though it be tried with fire, might be FOUND UNTO
PRAISE and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ.
Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not,
yet believing, YE REJOICE WITH JOY UNSPEAKABLE and full of glory.
Recieving the end of your faith, even the salvation of your souls."
Joe
|
131.9 | For Ken | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Search Me Oh God | Sat May 08 1993 05:22 | 38 |
| Ken,
I hope you've read the replies in this topic. Some folks have really
poured their hearts out.. thanks Joe for the gems clips!
It's funny, when you asked that question, it sorta set me back a
little, cause my praise came naturally, without forethought. Since
Jesus came into my heart, there hasn't been room for very much doubt or
bitterness.
You see, my background was that of a very abused child, starting at
around age 4 [at least my first recollection]. And many folks have
asked me that very same question in regards to my salvation, how could
I trust a God who allowed an innocent child the abuse that I
suffered. And you know, I can't really answer that question. I know
what I know, cause I know it and about 90% of it is experiential and
10% of it is learned.
I experienced the loving hand of God reaching out to my very essence in
a way so real that when I came to the saving knowledge of the Lord
Jesus Christ, all abuse in my life was insignificant. You know he
turned hate into love, He turned bitterness into compassion, and pain
into empathy.
I have joy in my heart regardless of my circumstances, because of the
witness of the Holy Spirit. My body is the temple of the Holy Ghost
and I was bought with a price on calvary. And I must glorify God in my
body and in my Spirit which are His. Why? Not just because He said
so, even though that is enough, but also because He has manifested His
love to me through the fulfillment of the promise that once we become
His, old things are passed away and all things become new. I have my
innocence inspite of my abuse, because of faith in God.
When God has worked as mightily in your life [and He may have] as he
has in mine, you can't help but praise Him in all things.
May God Bless You,
Nancy
|
131.10 | Thanks | FAILTE::JOHNSTONEK | Ken Johnstone | Tue May 11 1993 10:47 | 28 |
| Nancy,
Thanks for your comments, and initiative which generated such valuable
replies to my question.
I am fully in synch with praising God in all circumstances, perhaps in
spite of our feelings at the time. However, I'm not at all sure that
we should praise God for the circumstances themselves?
I guess my question was triggered by the string of repsonses to your
note which said "praise God for his protection" when in fact God has
not promised us protection from the trials of life in which all
humankind share. And clearly your child was not protected from this
terrifying incident.
It seems to me inappropriate to praise God for hypotheticall action
("Praise God it wasn't worse").
We have a sovereign God who is the master at turning the tables on the
Devil, and bringing good from evil, blessings from tragedy. Jesus
victory at the cross is the primary example of this.
Should we not be bringing thanks & praise for the "blessings" and good
rather than the hypothetical protection from something worse?
What do you think?
Ken
|
131.11 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue May 11 1993 13:15 | 63 |
| > I am fully in synch with praising God in all circumstances, perhaps in
> spite of our feelings at the time. However, I'm not at all sure that
> we should praise God for the circumstances themselves?
Agreed!
I can guarantee I was not praising God for the circumstance surrounding
a stabbing of my son. I was merely praising Him for protecting Clayton
from fatal harm, which I believe God has control over. Especially, and
more intensely since both Clayton and I have submitted Clayton's life
to the Lord. As a parent, I have dedicated to raise Clayton in the
admonition of our Lord, and Clayton has received Christ as Savior.
I hope this is more clear.
>I guess my question was triggered by the string of repsonses to your
>note which said "praise God for his protection" when in fact God has
>not promised us protection from the trials of life in which all
>humankind share. And clearly your child was not protected from this
>terrifying incident.
Let me clarify, protection from fatal harm, certainly the incident did
happen and lessons have been rewarded as a result. Examples:
Being a single mother of two very normal boys, at times control is not
always easily obtained. As Matthew who is 10 grows older, his
boundaries are spreading and he's in a time of trial and error as to
how far those boundaries can go with Mom. This situation has caused a
willful submission of Matthew to Mom as he realizes her wisdom and
discipline breeds safety and security. We were really struggling with
that before this incident.
For Clayton, well the best way I can describe him is as the Chihuahua
nipping at the heels of the Great Dane, absolutely unawares that the
bigger dog is not equal ground to his might. :-) By having 3 year old
who is smaller, yet made larger with a knife in hand, inflict harm on
him, has brought about another sense of wisdom in his life.
I'm actually breathing a little easier, as the kids are seeing wisdom
in their *backyard* as virtual *haven* for them. :-) :-)
Helen Keller once said and I'm paraphrasing, "We look so long at the
closed the door [or negatives in our lives], we fail to see the many
open doors afforded us as the result of the closed door."
> It seems to me inappropriate to praise God for hypotheticall action
> ("Praise God it wasn't worse").
That depends on whether you believe God is omniscient, omnipotent, and
omnipresent. I believe He is.
> We have a sovereign God who is the master at turning the tables on the
>Devil, and bringing good from evil, blessings from tragedy. Jesus
>victory at the cross is the primary example of this.
Amen!!! Which is why I praised Him.
>Should we not be bringing thanks & praise for the "blessings" and good
>rather than the hypothetical protection from something worse?
The Bible says rejoice in all things. Therfore, I say rejoice. So my
answer is yes and no. :-)
In His Love,
Nancy
|
131.12 | from current, painful experience, Ken. | GUCCI::BPHANEUF | On your knees! Fight like a man! | Tue May 11 1993 23:23 | 41 |
| re: <<< Note 131.10 by FAILTE::JOHNSTONEK "Ken Johnstone" >>>
> I am fully in synch with praising God in all circumstances, perhaps
> in spite of our feelings at the time. However, I'm not at all sure
> that we should praise God for the circumstances themselves?
In *all* things that we undergo, G_d is trying to teach us something.
Job was taught humility and trust by the things that he underwent.
Re-read Job 32-37 and rediscover Elihu's wisdom on this.
> And clearly your child was not protected from this terrifying
> incident.
A ten inch butcher knife attack yields a 1/4 inch deep wound that is
closed with three stiches, and produces no facial swelling the next
day, and you can't see the divine protection? Come on, Clayton could
have easily been blinded or killed! Protection does *not* imply
immunity! Trust me, I'm walking through that right now, on emotional
and spiritual levels. I am being divinely protected from the full
onslaught, but I am by no means immune to the pain and sorrow.
> We have a sovereign God who is the master at turning the tables on
> the Devil, and bringing good from evil, blessings from tragedy. Jesus
> victory at the cross is the primary example of this.
Excellent example. The L_RD will engineer whatever circumstances in
which we find ourselves to mature us, draw us closer to Himself (He
*IS* a jealous G_d!!), and to bring Himself glory. Trust me in this
too, that if we rebel, He will turn the heat up, until we melt.
> Should we not be bringing thanks & praise for the "blessings" and
> good rather than the hypothetical protection from something worse?
Were it not for G_d's constant loving protection, Satan would have long
ago destroyed each and every one of us. You woke up this morning and
did not find yourself in Hell. Anything more than that is a gift of
G_d. Praise Him for it, or risk losing it.
Most sincerely,
Brian
|
131.13 | Appreciated! | FAILTE::JOHNSTONEK | Ken Johnstone | Sun May 16 1993 09:33 | 7 |
| Nancy, Brian,
Thanks for your comments. I'm not sure I'm there yet though, I'll need
to give this topic further thought and study.
Best regards,
Ken
|
131.14 | The Answer is Trust, Ken... | GUCCI::BPHANEUF | On your knees! Fight like a man! | Sun May 16 1993 14:30 | 32 |
| re: <<< Note 131.13 by FAILTE::JOHNSTONEK "Ken Johnstone" >>>
Ken,
> I'm not sure I'm there yet though, I'll need to give this topic further
> thought and study.
The *best*, *ABSOLUTE BEST* counsel that I can give you right now, dear
brother, is to read Genesis 22 again. It's the passage where G_d asked
Abraham to take his *only SON*, Issac, give him up to the L_rd without
reservation, and offer him as a sacrifice,
I believe that you now are were I was until Firday night and yesterday
morning, sitting in misery in verse 2. You've received the request from
G_d, but are sitting is abject terror and pain at the loss of that
which you love above anything else on earth. But G_d is trustworthy.
That is a very trite *sounding* sentence, I *KNOW*, but it is ever so
true. I *just* was able to walk through it, to verse 3.
In unreservedly giving up my wife, marriage, and family to the L_rd, He
ahs begun to restore them to me. There had been no observable movement
for over 7 weeks prior to that unconditional and unequivocal laying on
the altar. G_d could not move in my life and circumstances, so long as
I held something, even something so rightfully precious as my family,
between myself and Him. Note carefully the change that has occurred in
*me* , as well as the circumstances between the time of posting 6.277
and 7.114. While the circumstances *have* changed for the better, *I*
have changed, which is even more important.
In Deepest Love and Empathy,
Brian
|
131.15 | wonderful | MR4DEC::GFIESTER | Greta @MRO DTN-297-9233 | Mon May 17 1993 18:16 | 5 |
| What a blessing this topic is to read!
Special prayers going up for Ken. You, too, Brian.
-greta
|
131.16 | Yeah, Thou He Slay Me, YET Will I Praise Him! | GUCCI::BPHANEUF | On your knees! Fight like a man! | Mon May 17 1993 18:38 | 12 |
|
Ken,
BTW, I haven't got it down pat, either. I had a real down day today,
and with the help of a troika of brethren (and sistren), was able to
come through by G_d's grace. Sometimes, it takes God piercing your
heart with a word of rebuke before you can see reality.
But G_d's Word remains true. His Spirit continues to abide and to
guide, providing humily and repentance. The Son still forgives, redeems
and sheds mercy. The Father accepts once again into His loving arms.
What else is necessary?
|