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I probably reflect on this verse more than any other:

Then the Lord said to him, “Who has made man’s mouth? Who makes him mute, or deaf, or seeing, or blind? Is it not I, the Lord?   Exodus 4:11

It is a hard statement.  God doesn’t say that he allows disability to happen.  God says he does it.

As Pastor John was preaching yesterday (I’m sure it will be up on Desiring God by mid-day), I was so grateful to God that he not only allowed me to see that the above verse is true.

He also let me see it is beautiful.

A convicting and helpful guest post from my friend, Jan Lacher:

I have been incredibly inspired this week as I have listened to Revive Our Hearts with Nancy Leigh DeMoss.  The subject  over the past three days has been memorizing Scripture.

Usually, every morning, as I give Michael his medications and tube feeding, Revive Our Hearts blares across the radios in my home.  I typically listen to the program as I move from one room to another, going about my work getting Michael ready for the day. The  featured guest this week  has been a seasoned saint,  Nancy Epperson.

On Wednesday, the discussion between Nancy Leigh DeMoss and Nancy Epperson  peaked my interest, and I found myself nodding as they talked about all of the benefits of memorizing God’s Word. As a side note,  I have memorized some of our fighter verses over these past years.  I have had to learn them and relearn them.   I have taught my “normal” children fighter verses; although, I would argue that I did not teach them enough Scripture.  As Revive Our Hearts played, I contemplated how there has not been anything that I have done that has been more beneficial than memorizing the Word of God.  

My mind was swirling as I pondered the question that if memorizing parts of the Bible are so beneficial, why don’t I do more of it? Why am I not memorizing full chapters and possibly books? I certainly know the benefits and have experienced them.   Since Michael’s birth, I have been like a rock skipping across the lake as I have learned some verses and then having periods where I do not. For a variety of reasons, I have not been as consistent these past several years as I would like to be.   I sighed at the thought of the work that it would take to regain the momentum to do such a task as memorize verses and eventually chapters.

My attention was refocused on the program.  The two Nancys continued their discussion.   Then Nancy Epperson  said something that stopped me dead in the middle of Michael’s  feeding.  A segment from the January 6th transcript speaks for itself:

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Now, don’t go too fast past that because there are a lot of people who will say, “I can’t memorize Scripture.”

Nancy Epperson: They will say that, but can I tell you something? That is not true. It’s true people say it, but it truly is a lie hatched in the pit of hell that Satan loves us to think. The fact is, everybody can.

Now, listen. I’ll never forget this. About 35 years ago, I was at a church in Winston, Salem. They had a group of young adults who were very mentally deficient. They could barely articulate. They were severely retarded, severely. They got up in this church—I will never forget it as long as I live—they quoted verse after verse after verse with the reference—verse after verse.

I’m telling you, I knew exactly, exactly why they could do that, because some precious, dear saint had spent hundreds of hours with them. Those precious, severely retarded young adults just quoted and quoted and quoted. It was just such a blessing.

I realized then anybody honestly can quote Scripture if you’ll go over it enough times. Stop and think about it. Think of all the things you know from memory.

When I heard the story above, my heart jumped.  Michael falls into the severely to profoundly mentally retarded category. Plus, he is nonverbal.  We have no way of knowing what he understands and how he processes information.    We try to teach him simple commands that would aide in his care such as “lean forward” when bathing his back. And through the shear repetition of that command  and through physical prompting, he has learned to do so.   But, I must admit, I have not contemplated  teaching him  Bible verses.  Who knows what he could glean from the repetition of Scripture being spoken to him when he rises up and when he lies down?   Also who knows  how the Holy Spirit could  use it to strengthen and under-gird him in all of his difficulties?

After listening to this program,  I have come away with a renewed vision and a resolve to make Scripture verses part of Michael’s life.  He may never be able to quote the references and verses, but God’s Word does not return void. I am determined to get my hardhat on my head and do the heavy “work” of imparting Scripture to our sweet Fox.

I was reminded again on Monday that God has granted a special kind of credibility to me and to other parents of children with disabilities based solely on the fact that we have a child with a disability.  People who know nothing else about us make assumptions that we’re probably more serious about life because of this family quality.  It is a good assumption.

Which means we get to say things that people can’t dismiss quite so easily as they might for others.  Things like:

  • God is good in all things
  • Jesus is my treasure
  • My own sin is a much greater problem for me than my child’s disability
  • When I am afraid, I can trust in the one who created my child
  • God created my son/daughter intentionally for his glory and for my good
  • There is amazing joy in knowing Jesus is my righteousness

Let’s not waste this gift God has given us to make much of Jesus!

In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.  Though you have not seen him, you love him. Though you do not now see him, you believe in him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls. 1 Peter 1:6-9

I’ve written before of my esteem for our good friends at Grace Church in Eden Prairie and their God-centered Barnabas Disability Ministry.  God has provided great encouragements to many at Bethlehem through these friends!

Sue Hume, one of those friends and the writer for Hope for Special Moms, asked me to contribute to her blog.  So I did.

You can read it here: Rise Up O Men of God!

I shook Troy Dobbs’ hand once (their senior pastor), but have never heard him preach.  My embrace of that church comes entirely based on fruits of God’s work I see in the lives of the people impacted by their disability ministry!  I hope Pastor Dobbs takes encouragement that his people are the real deal on this issue of disability and the sovereignty of God.  Paul, writing to Philemon, speaks of the kind of encouragement I feel from those folks at Grace:

I thank my God always when I remember you in my prayers, because I hear of your love and of the faith that you have toward the Lord Jesus and for all the saints, and I pray that the sharing of your faith may become effective for the full knowledge of every good thing that is in us for the sake of Christ. For I have derived much joy and comfort from your love, my brother, because the hearts of the saints have been refreshed through you. Philemon 1:4-7

During this prayer week to begin 2010 at Bethlehem, Brenda Fischer identified two things among the many for prayer:

  • That the Lord would provide one-on-one aides for Sunday morning at the South Site and North Campus (and Downtown as well – my addition!).
  • That the Lord would provide direction in ministering to adults and older teens with cognitive disabilities.

Joyously, more families experiencing disability are finding Bethlehem and considering it as their church home.  But this also means our need for more volunteers, and thus our dependence on God to provide, continues to grow.

Thank you for praying with and for us.

We had the privilege of watching some children over the weekend as their youngest sibling, just 13 months old, needed to go to the hospital very suddenly.  He’s a complicated boy because of his disabilities.

Those early days and months and years of disability are intense, frightening and disorienting for young moms and dads.

Young moms and dads need our prayers.  If you know some today, pray for them by name.  If you don’t know any right now, pray for the ones he’s preparing to bring to you.  Experience tells me that eventually God will bring somebody experiencing disability for the first time into your life, no matter who or where you are.

And treasure Jesus above everything, because that is what they will need from you:

For whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.  May the God of endurance and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus, that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Therefore welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God.  Romans 15:4-7

Isn’t that what every parent wants?  Of course there’s a great difference  between our culture’s understanding of happiness and Christian hedonism!

I know the following statement has lots of exceptions; I try to stay away from sweeping, romantic statements about disability and happiness.  But the contrast offered by Dr. C. Everett Koop was just too good to pass up because of how our culture views disability, normalcy and the opportunity to experience happiness:

Yet it has been my constant experience that disability and unhappiness do not go hand in hand. The most unhappy children I have known have been completely normal. On the other hand, there is remarkable joy and happiness in the lives of most handicapped children; yet some have borne burdens which I would have found difficult to face indeed.

C. Everett Koop, M.D., Sc.D.
former Surgeon General, U.S. Public Health Service

Twenty-fifth Anniversary Foundation Day Lecture
Our Lady’s Hospital for Sick Children, Dublin, Ireland

Embedded in an article in the New York Times Magazine on blind people, braille, technology and literacy were these statements about how our brains function:

In the 1990s, a series of brain-imaging studies revealed that the visual cortices of the blind are not rendered useless, (emphasis mine) as previously assumed. When test subjects swept their fingers over a line of Braille, they showed intense activation in the parts of the brain that typically process visual input.

The architecture of the brain is not fixed, and without images to process, the visual cortex can reorganize for new functions (emphasis mine). A 2003 study in Nature Neuroscience found that blind subjects consistently surpassed sighted ones on tests of verbal memory, and their superior performance was caused, the authors suggested, by the extra processing that took place in the visual regions of their brains.

This concurs with other studies I have read that portions of the brain dedicated to processing information taken in by our sense of sight are, for people who are born blind, programmed to do other things.

In other words, what Jesus did for the man born blind in John 9 was far more significant than just making his eyes work.

This man’s brain, over decades, would have no ability to process visual images.  That portion of his brain would have been reorganized to do something else.

So when Jesus gave him sight, he re-wired his brain.  Jesus is amazing!

Jesus reigns over all things:

All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. John 1:3

That includes creating some who are blind:

And his disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  Jesus answered, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.” John 9:2-3

And then relieving some of their disability:

And (Jesus) said to him, “Go, wash in the pool of Siloam” (which means Sent). So he went and washed and came back seeing. John 9:7

But he did not heal the man’s blindness just so he could physically see.  Jesus provided something much better:

(The formerly blind man) said, “Lord, I believe,” and he worshiped him. John 9:38

What are decades of blindness compared to an eternity filled with joy in the presence of Jesus?

For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal. 2 Corinthians 4:17-18

Happy New Year!  Jesus is King over everything!

2009 Year in Review

We’ve been at this blog for more than a year and it has changed significantly in that time, particularly when we moved to WordPress and re-branded as The Works of God in September.

I want to publicly thank Abraham Piper, the very talented web content editor for Desiring God and the creator of 22 Words, one of the best personal blogs you will find.  He recommended many of the changes you have seen over the past year.  I was frequently slow to make the changes he suggested, but I have always been glad once I have done so.  Maybe I’ll move a little faster when he suggests things in 2010.

I will continue to trust God to provide the content on a regular basis.  I don’t think a whole lot about ‘traffic’ to the site. It should surprise no one that when Pastor John tweets about The Works of God, traffic increases substantially.  That is also the case when Noel Piper tweets about us.

The posts I labored over the most usually received the least amount of traffic.  Yet a few of those lesser-viewed posts seemed to have greater impact on specific individuals, sometimes months later.  I’m grateful God works like that.

I’m also grateful for friends who regularly feed me content.  God is very kind to me in the many relationships he’s given because of a common interest in disability, the Bible and God’s sovereignty.

So, to close the year, here are the top five most-read posts on the Works of God, along with one more from our old blog on Webjam:

5.  Disability, Disease and Treasuring God

4.  Year-end Reminders of Why I Love Bethlehem

3.  A Young Man’s Testimony to Suffering and the Sovereignty of God (Lord willing, this will end up on the top 5 next year as well.  Joe’s testimony is worth reading multiple times.  I know it will be posted again.)

2.  Wave Four: The Disability Community Fills in the Grave

1.  Helpful Things: Pastors Who Love Their People

The post that received the most traffic over the past year came while we were still on Webjam:

When Do We Get to Talk About the Other Consequences of Abortion, Mr. President?

As we end 2009, to God all the glory!  May he allow us another year to make much of him and his sovereignty and goodness over disability and disease and suffering.

Happy New Year Everyone!  Jesus is King!