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8:00 a.m. update: Larissa Murphy’s first blog post, Why We Got Married, has been posted at Desiring God and is terrific.  Please read it and be blessed by a young couple who are not wasting their lives.

In case you haven’t seen Ian and Larissa’s story yet, it is below.  Larissa is also writing on the Desiring God blog several times this week.  Though I haven’t seen those posts yet, I am looking forward to learning more of their story.  They will be coming to the Desiring God conference, The Works of God: God’s Good Design in Disability, this fall as well.

Their testimony is incredible, and I’m glad the video has already been shared thousands and thousands of times.  But I’ve found myself chewing on one line that Pastor John included in his introduction to the video:

The most meaningful testimonies I receive are when people tell me that it was a vision of the sovereignty and goodness of God that got them through the most difficult times of their life.

“Most meaningful” – that sounds like these types of testimonies are of particular encouragement, a special kind of gift from God to a man called to make much of God over everything else.

I love Pastor John’s books and his conferences, but it has been his preaching which God has used to have the greatest impact on my life.  His persistent pointing to God’s sovereignty and his goodness as articulated in God’s word has changed everything in our family.

So it is really easy for me to say, ‘yes! This vision of the sovereignty and goodness of God HAS gotten me through incredibly difficult times in my life. And I know he is entirely capable of doing everything he has promised he will do, for his glory and for my good. He is always good, always right, always wise, always just, always purposeful – even including disease and disability.’

Ian and Larissa’s story is their unique story of God’s sovereignty and goodness, and it is an incredible one.

Your story is just as unique and incredible, if you have been called by God into faith in Jesus Christ!  Tell it today, do it in ways that make much of God, and encourage the ones who lead us that their work is not in vain but is being used by God in extraordinary ways.

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Chai Ling, who participated in the 1989 Tiananmen Square Movement, writes an incredible summary of Chen Guangcheng’s story in the Huffington Post yesterday.

Chen Guangcheng’s story is amazing even before we learn he is blind!

But that isn’t the best part.  Coming at the end, Chai Ling expresses her greater hope for Chen Guangcheng and all of China:

I, too, glimpsed freedom when I escaped from the grasp of the Chinese government two decades ago. And more recently I found full freedom in the name of one who — like Chen — suffered beatings, threats and imprisonment for his challenging words: Jesus of Nazareth.

It is my hope that Jesus’ calling to “proclaim liberty to the oppressed, and set the captives free” will soon be realized throughout China. Chen’s story may only be the beginning.

Amen!

I had never heard of All Girls Allowed or Chai Ling until reading this article.  I encourage you to read her short testimony and marvel at the goodness and sovereignty of God.

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As I write this, Chen Guangcheng is still reportedly at the United States embassy in China.  He is famous because he has stood against a great evil in China:

A self-taught lawyer, he has called attention to human rights abuses against the disabled and women who have been forcibly sterilized.

In Crisis Over Dissident, U.S. Sends Official to Beijing, The New York Times, April 29, 2012.

And he is blind.  I have yet to read a story that doesn’t make mention, usually multiple times, to his blindness.

Obviously, God has gifted him with both intellectual gifts and with courage.  We value those gifts a great deal, especially when applied to helping others who are weak.  And since we consider him inherently part of the weak because of his disability, we are doubly amazed.

It does not appear his life has been easy at any point. If I am reading his history correctly, Chen Guangcheng couldn’t even read until he was 23 yet by the time he was 34 he was bringing a lawsuit against the Chinese government in Shandong  Province for their brutal enforcement of the one-child policy.

The man born blind lived with such a problem of lack of opportunity.  He was only allowed to beg in his adulthood (John 9:8).

But when given the opportunity, he spoke truth to authority:

So for the second time they called the man who had been blind and said to him, “Give glory to God. We know that this man is a sinner.” He answered, “Whether he is a sinner I do not know. One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.”  (John 9:24-25 ESV)

Those in authority gave him another chance, and he refused to back down or be caught in their political games:

They said to him, “What did he do to you? How did he open your eyes?” He answered them, “I have told you already, and you would not listen. Why do you want to hear it again? Do you also want to become his disciples?” And they reviled him, saying, “You are his disciple, but we are disciples of Moses. We know that God has spoken to Moses, but as for this man, we do not know where he comes from.” The man answered, “Why, this is an amazing thing! You do not know where he comes from, and yet he opened my eyes. We know that God does not listen to sinners, but if anyone is a worshiper of God and does his will, God listens to him. Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a man born blind. If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.” (John 9:26-33 ESV)

The result: he was cast out (John 9:34).

Chen Guangcheng and the man born blind had unexpected gifts of insight, articulation and courage – and it appears both were underestimated until it was impossible to ignore them.

Are we doing the same with our church members with disabilities, missing the gifts and the opportunities for their expressing those gifts for the benefit of others?

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I had the pleasure of joining a group of people on Friday that included a Christian man from Ghana.  He loves Jesus and he holds tightly to the promises of God in ways that are beautiful and humbling.  He has been evangelizing, mentoring and teaching for years in Western Africa, including in some very dangerous places.

Last year he lost his daughter to an illness of some kind, a beautiful 21-year-old young woman about to finish college.  He and his wife suffered greatly.  The response from some of the Christian ‘leaders’ he knows made me sick: ‘confess your sins to me and she will be made well’ or ‘I have received a prophetic word that God has heard your prayers and she will leave the hospital.’  So little compassion, so much presumption, and so little Bible.

Yet, he knows that God is sovereign and good.

In fact, he spent most of the time talking about the dangerous advance of the health, wealth and prosperity gospel.  Too many ‘pastors’ are selling God as little more than a robot programmed to respond to certain actions: if you need money, give the church more money and it will be returned to you in blessing; if you experience sickness, it is your fault because you don’t have enough faith, or you have unconfessed sin, or you have not been generous enough with your church.

No talk of the suffering Jesus told us to expect.  No talk of Jesus being of greater treasure than all earthly goods.  No mention of seeking God above all things.  No hope in future grace.

We spoke a bit about disability and the news was the same: it is presented as God’s curse and families are given a terrible, hopeless picture of God.  There is no talk among the prosperity preachers about disability serving a greater purpose for the glory of God and the benefit of his church. There is no trusting in the Word where God takes full responsibility for disability in this present age.

Yet, this man stands on promises and clings to Jesus and talks of God’s mercy and grace and peace even in the hardest of circumstances, like the death of his much-loved daughter.  I want to be like him.

And I want the cruel, inhumane, unbiblical, Satanic prosperity gospel to go away, forever.  Come quickly, Lord Jesus!

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During my travels to Oklahoma this week I met a man with tattoos up and down his arms who loves Jesus, rides a motorcycle – and who lives with multiple sclerosis. He visits men in jail and tells them about a transformed life in Christ. A friend of mine simply remarked, ‘he can go places I can’t go’ to tell others about Jesus.

I met a lawyer who, I was told, provides significant amounts of pro bono legal advice to members of his church. In a very different way he can go places where I can’t go.

I met a pastor who loves Jesus and proclaims his sovereignty over all things and who will lead the funeral of two little girls and their father who died in the tornado this past week. He is going to a place where most men fear to go.

I heard the story of a grandfather who daily cared for his wife for the last six years of her life when she could no longer take care of her own needs. He willingly accepted that this was his special role reserved for him. His grandson spoke so affectionally about the lessons he keeps learning today about the loving sacrifice he watched many years ago. I look forward to meeting that man in heaven someday.

And I had the chance to tell our own story of God’s goodness and mercy and love in the midst of the hard things in our family.

God gives us stories to use them for his glory. Sometimes our stories convict others about their need for a God who is this powerful and this good. Sometimes our stories encourage weary saints to persevere in the strength that only God can provide. Sometimes we just get enjoy, in fresh ways, who our God is and how much we can depend on him in all circumstances.

Let’s make much of him today, and possibly go places others cannot go or fear to go because we have been given a special story of God’s extraordinary goodness and sovereignty over all things, for his glory and for our good.

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Pastor John was speaking specifically of missions in the video below, but he could easily have also been talking about disability ministry!

When we have a big view of God, when we soak in what God has to say in his word, when we feel the joyous burden to do something to bring him glory, some will be called into foreign missions, some will be called to serve those with disabilities here, and some will be called to do both.

I know that’s true because Paul’s current aide at church does a lot of disability ministry for us and a lot of support for those serving in other parts of the world.

Whether in missions or in serving those who experience disability, there is so much to do.  I’m grateful that “my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus (Philippians 4:19 ESV).”

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Ryan Pittman, a young man who lives with Down syndrome, gives his testimony of faith in Jesus.

His testimony takes about two minutes.

The entire video is pretty special as well.  He has served as a missionary to Peru!

May we all work harder to find and use the gifts that God himself has given to each of us, for his glory and for our joy.

Thank you to Jill Krummen for pointing me to this video.  May your Jonathan’s gifts be used mightily for the sake of the Kingdom!

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Much thanks to Igniter Media for posting The Last Painting.

The Last Painting can also be accessed by clicking here.

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By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers. (1 John 3:16 ESV)

This fellow is Bob Horning.  The little girl belongs to Kempton and Caryn Turner.  Bob and Mary were taking care of the Turner children on Saturday.

It does not appear to be a duty for either Bob or Carysse, does it!  Yet Bob is fully attending to his duties as protector and caretaker.  Carysse was fully attending to her duties of being cared for!

Bob and Mary’s oldest child, Krista, was born with many complications due to her disabilities.  Kempton and Caryn’s oldest child, Christian, was born prematurely and also lives with many complications from his disabilities.  So it is safe to say that disability brought these families together.

And then Jesus knit together their hearts.

Most of the parents I know (including me) who unexpectedly entered this life of disability never imagined that this life could also include the joys of affection and friendship – particularly when those joys come because of disability, not in spite of it.  Yet the experience of deep sorrow also opens the way for hearts to connect in unusual, joy-filled ways.

And the rest of us get to see a glimpse in a little girl happily attending church with two people who love her very much while her parents are away.

God is always doing 10,000 more things than we can begin to see or imagine, for his glory and for our good.

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A.W. Tozer on why it is better for us to change than to even want God to change (paragraph formatting and emphasis in bold are mine):

Much of our difficulty as seeking Christians stems from our unwillingness to take God as He is and adjust our lives accordingly.

We insist upon trying to modify Him and to bring Him nearer to our own image. The flesh whimpers against the rigor of God’s inexorable sentence and begs like Agag for a little mercy, a little indulgence of its carnal ways.

It is no use.

We can get a right start only by accepting God as He is and learning to love Him for what He is. As we go on to know Him better we shall find it a source of unspeakable joy that God is just what He is.

Some of the most rapturous moments we know will be those we spend in reverent admiration of the Godhead. In those holy moments the very thought of change in Him will be too painful to endure.

A. W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God , p. 66.

By the way, there is a free version of this book available on the Kindle right now.

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