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Jesus welcomed one of his own last week, a young mom who lived with cancer for several years until her fight was over last Saturday.

I never met Laura Black, but a friend of mine did know her and pointed me to something she wrote just a couple of weeks ago:  What I Want You To Know: Suffering for the Gospel (as I write this it is on page three; as posts are added you may need to look for it farther back in her CaringBridge journal).

Here is a sample:

Suffering adds to the Kingdom.  Nothing grabs someone’s attention like seeing someone suffer and living out the Christian life during it.  Let’s face it, you can sing the Hallelujah chorus when you just won the lottery, your first grandchild was just born on your birthday, or you just got a huge promotion, but who cares?  I’m not saying it’s not good to praise God for those things. Of course you should praise God for those things and rejoice in them.  But that doesn’t point people to the cross.  When you rejoice and praise Him in the good times, that is expected.  However, when you rejoice and praise God in the middle of the suffering, that points people to the cross.  The fact that our family has gone through five years of cancer and is now watching my body slowly fail and yet we still praise God and rejoice in His plan, that points people to the cross.  There’s no way we could ever do that.  There’s no way we would ever choose to do that.  When people see us do that, they know it’s nothing but the blood of Jesus.

Thank you to Martin Maners for sharing this piece of Laura’s story.  May we all live and die so well.

And one day I’m going to leave this wheelchair behind. I cannot wait. I may have suffered with Christ on earth, but one day in heaven I’m going to reign with him. I may have tasted the pains of living on this planet, but one day I’m going to eat from the tree of life in the pleasure of heaven, and it’s all going to happen in the twinkling of an eye. The Lord’s overcoming of this world will be the lifting of the curtain on our five senses, and we shall see him and we shall be like him, and we shall see the whole universe in plain sight.

Joni Eareckson Tada from her chapter, Hope. . . the Best of Things in Suffering and the Sovereignty of God, edited by John Piper and Justin Taylor, p. 202.

I’m grateful that Pastor John pushes us to go deeper into God’s word to see  and enjoy more of God’s intentions and plans and designs for his glory.  Alistair Begg does the same, like in this accounting of Mephibosheth, who was lame in both of his feet and the grandson of Saul, David’s mortal enemy. He was also the son of David’s greatest friend:

Mephibosheth was not an attractive guest at the royal table; yet he had an open invitation because King David could see in his face the features of the beloved Jonathan. Like Mephibosheth, we may exclaim to the King of Glory, “What is Your servant, that You should show regard for a dead dog such as I?” But still the Lord invites us to share intimately with Him, because He sees in our countenances the remembrance of His dearly-beloved Jesus.

Alistair Begg, Mephibosheth’s Example, May 27 Devotional

When we cling to Jesus, God sees Jesus’ righteousness and we get more of God rather than the punishment we deserve!  We are not turned away but embraced!

Pastor John pointed out that this can work in the other direction as well.  After Mephibosheth had been lied about and David had made a decision to give half of what rightfully belonged to Mephibosheth to the man who had lied about him:

Mephibosheth said to the king, “Oh, let him take it all, since my lord the king has come safely home.” (2 Samuel 19:30)

This is how we should feel about king Jesus. He has come to save us. And he will come a second time to be with us forever. He is our inheritance and our great reward.

Jesus is greater than anything!  It isn’t just to avoid God’s wrath that we should cling to him (as great a gift as that is); if that’s all there is to it, we have really missed the greatest gift of all in being with Jesus forever.

And God chose to use the lame grandson of the enemy of the king to be an example of God’s great mercy and to point us to the center of our joy.  We should never doubt that God is doing something great for his glory and for our joy through disability, even when it is not immediately obvious to us.  Someday, it will be!

Ed Stetzer preached a wonderful, and humbling, sermon on Saturday evening from 1 Peter 4:

As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace: whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies—in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.  (1 Peter 4:10-11 ESV)

He was very clear that the ‘each’ who has received a gift really means each.  That includes everybody called by God.  No exceptions.

Just to make sure, I asked him after the service if this included those God created with the most severe of disabilities, like my son.

His response: “absolutely!”

That was encouraging to hear from a leader of his standing.

So, let’s work hard today to find the gifts that each of God’s creation has received from God, and work hard to equip every saint for the purpose of serving others in the strength that God provides, “in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.”

No exceptions.

Thank you, Dr. Stetzer, for this good word!

Marriages frequently suffer when disability enters a family.  It is good to get oriented around God’s purposes in marriage and to understand what a picture it is of Christ and his church.

Some friends of Desiring God in the Chicago area invited Jon Bloom, DG’s president, to speak on marriage and the sovereignty of God next Friday, June 29.

I’m meeting him there for that and some other meetings and it occurred to me – maybe there are people who follow this blog in the Chicago area, or their friends, who might be interested in that subject and I could also meet them!

Marriage: So Much More than Being in Love
Jon Bloom, President, Desiring God
 
Calvary Memorial Church, Oak Park, Illinois
Friday, June 29
7:00 p.m.

It is free and everyone is welcome to attend. Map and directions can be found at the church website above.

We’re also giving away copies of This Momentary Marriage: A Parable of Permanence, as well as some other books and resources.

I’m looking forward to being down there, and would be thrilled to meet other people living with disability in themselves or their families.  So, if that’s you, don’t be shy about finding me and introducing yourself.  It would be a joy to meet you and pray with you!

On Wednesday evening we were watching Dispatches from the Front, a wonderful, powerful look at what God is doing in various parts of the world in the midst of extreme poverty, violence, hostile leaders, and every other barrier you can imagine.

At the end of one episode the African congregation sang Amazing Grace.

Paul decided he should sing it as well.  I coaxed him to do it again for me.

I apologize for the volume and the lighting – we take what we can get when we can get it from this boy!

Obviously he also didn’t get all the words right, but it was still pretty cool and we were all very happy to hear him.  I believe Holy Spirit-filled worship was happening in our home on Wednesday!

Today also marks the 1,000th post at The Works of God.  Ironically, 500 Posts and Counting is still the most-viewed post in our 3+ year history.

Here’s the rest of the top five:

And here’s number six, just because it was so goofy and wonderful: Elephants Exist to Bring Glory to God!

We’re not done yet. Lord willing, we’ll be back again tomorrow.

Have you registered for Desiring God’s November 8 conference The Works of God: God’s Good Design in Disability yet?  You should!

For example, Mark Talbot will be speaking on Longing for Wholeness: Chronic Suffering and Christian Hope.

He has some credibility on the subject; he’s been living with chronic pain since he was a teenager.  One would expect that he would primarily long for freedom from that pain.

Yet, after decades of pain, he can write about freedom like this:

I know that he who has chosen to appoint me to eternal life (see 1 Thess. 1:4-5 with Acts 13:48) will complete the work he has begun in me (see Phil. 1:6) when, one day, “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet” (1 Cor. 15:52), he transforms me into the likeness of his sinless Son and thus ushers me into “the freedom of the glory of the children of God” (Rom. 8:21).

True freedom is the freedom that God in Christ, in their own unchangeable mercy and faithfulness, work within us. By the gift of that freedom we are indeed set free.

Mark Talbot, from his chapter, True Freedom: The Liberty that Scripture Portrays as Worth Having in Beyond the Bounds edited by John Piper, Justin Taylor and Paul Kjoss Helseth, p. 109.

God sets us free, even in the midst of extraordinary trials!  God is doing the work!  We will be transformed!

Dr. Talbot is definitely qualified to speak on his subject of pain and hope for the conference.  You won’t want to miss it.  I hope you can come.

Ross Douthat, a columnist for The New York Times, had a tremendous article last week on the new genetic testing that is becoming available and its impact on unborn children with disabilities.  In that article, Eugenics, Past and Futurehe rightly makes the connection between our eugenic history in the United States and Europe and a potential future that seeks to eradicate even more little human beings.  He brought it to a powerful conclusion (emphasis in bold is mine):

Having left behind pseudoscientific racial theories, it’s easy for us to look back and pass judgment on yesterday’s eugenicists. It’s harder to acknowledge what we have in common with them.

First, a relentless desire for mastery and control, not only over our own lives but over the very marrow and sinew of generations yet unborn. And second, a belief in our own fundamental goodness, no matter to what ends our mastery is turned.

For those of us who, by God’s grace, know we are sinful and evil and need Jesus to be our righteousness, we have no illusions about our own fundamental goodness and have seen at least a glimpse of where our own depravity typically leads.  Mr. Douthat is right to warn us against this flaw in our thinking that somehow we are good.  We only need to look around – that flawed thought stands in contrast to almost every shred of evidence around us.

But I disagreed with the basis of one of his questions:

Is this sort of ”liberal eugenics,” in which the agents of reproductive selection are parents rather than the state, entirely different from the eugenics of Fisher’s era, which forced sterilization on unwilling men and women?

It is true that in the United States, and later in Nazi Germany, that governments were making the decision about the value of ‘unworthy’ human life.  Across the United States, state legislatures were passing laws, implementing programs and executing judgment using the power granted to them.  Eventually the Supreme Court weighed in and determined such laws were constitutional.  And we know what happened in Nazi Germany.

From that sense, abortion is not commanded by our government and decisions are left up to the mother of the unborn child.

But does the lack of governmental coercion mean these are truly free choices?  The stories of women who received pressure to abort – from doctors, from family members, from the father of the child – are endless.  The ominous predictions about what life will be like living with disability in the family also feel endless, and frequently have little basis in reality.  Increasingly, the argument that it is ‘selfish’ to bring a child into the world with a disability is being raised.

And the most alarming statistics of all: rates of abortion that approach or exceed 90% for certain types of disabling conditions.  If that isn’t a demonstration of where our culture is on this issue, then what evidence do we need to provide?

Whether an individual choice or forced by the government, currently the result is the same for most babies identified in the womb with a disabling condition like Down syndrome or spina bifida.  From that perspective, we are no different from earlier eras that promoted eugenics through official governmental policy.

I’m grateful Mr. Douthat wrote an article that rightly used our evil history to lay out a potential future.  Let’s take it all the way and make sure people realize that there is a war against babies with disabilities in this country and there is no neutral ground on this issue.

Finally, we have nothing to fear from the science behind those tests, because they can also be used for a great deal of good. But in this culture until everyone understands the inherent dignity and value of unborn babies, those tests will be used to find and destroy children who would otherwise be born.

And given the selfishness of our own hearts, there is only one real answer that will protect babies: freedom from sin and the certainty of a glorious, joy-filled future with God, found only through Jesus Christ.

Thank you to Stephen Newell who tweeted these verses.

Since I don’t know American Sign Language, I’m trusting what is presented below is accurate.

 

God has granted Krista Horning, author of Just the Way I Am: God’s Good Design in Disability, the opportunity to be interviewed by Mike Ferris of Home School Heartbeat on Tuesday.

Home School Heartbeat is heard on more than 1,000 outlets around the world and via podcast.  Lord willing, the interview would be aired in the fall.

Krista asked for prayer:

  • Please pray that the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart would be acceptable in God’s sight. Psalm 19:14
  • Pray that I would be humble and cast all my cares on Him. 1 Peter 5:6-8
  • Pray that God would be glorified for the sake of His steadfast love and faithfulness. Psalm 115:1

I would add, please pray that the beautiful trust in him that God has planted inside of Krista flows out in powerful, life-changing ways for the listeners.

This is an extraordinary opportunity to introduce people to the sovereignty and goodness of God in disability!  Please pray!