Blurb Verse

"And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us."
Romans 5:3-5
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Showing posts with label Faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Faith. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2012

The Best is Yet to Come


“Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal” 2 Corinthians 4:16-18

At a first glance of reading this, you might think whether this writer really knew much about suffering. How can his troubles be light and momentary, while mine are hard and never ending? If only he had seen my life – I am endlessly sick, I have no time for family or friends, I can’t work….  

Brother! Sister! Let me tell you - Paul, a passionate follower of Jesus, wrote this passage and he, by no means, had an ‘easy’ life. In 2 Corinthians 11:24, we read that five times Paul received forty lashes, three times he was beaten with rods, once stoned, three times shipwrecked and constantly in danger at sea and from bandits, countrymen, Gentiles and false brothers.  He went long periods without sleep, battling hunger, thirst and cold, all whilst facing the  daily pressure of his concern for all the churches.

That’s a long list; so why in the world would Paul think that these troubles were “light” and “momentary”. Was he delusional? Did he love being persecuted? Did he enjoy being shamed? Of course not! He was hurt by the pain he faced, just like we are.

So if that’s not the case, maybe, we should re-read verse 17.  “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” Paul appears to be making a comparison between his troubles and the eternal glory we have in Christ.  What he is trying to say is that all these sufferings and struggles, as horrible and painful as they are, are nothing when compared to our inheritance in Christ. If these are our troubles, our joy in heaven will be that much greater!

Earlier in 2 Corinthians, in chapter 4, verse 14, Paul reminds us that God, who raised Jesus from the dead, will also raise us to be with Him and share in the above inheritance.  In 1 Peter 1:3-5, Peter, another passionate follower of Jesus, tells us about the glorious inheritance that awaits us because of Jesus – an inheritance that will never perish, spoil or fade. This is our joy, this is our inheritance – being adopted into God’s family and living with him forever. No harm or suffering in this world could compare to this joy that will be ours.
Does that seem a little incredulous?  Do you find that hard to believe?
Think of this – A woman in labour goes through unimaginable pain to have her child. This could take hours or even days. Childbirth has been described as one of the world’s most painful experiences; still, women go through this willingly all the time. Why?

Because of that moment - the moment when the nurse hands over the baby, when she holds him/her in her arms for the first time; she knows that it’s worth it. All the pain, hurt and suffering she went through cannot be compared to the joy, honour and the privilege of being a mother to that beautiful baby. It will be the same, if not more, with us when we go to heaven. I am sure that there will not be a soul in heaven who does not think that all of life’s suffering, were light and momentary compared to the eternal glory they then have.

Friends! What are your troubles? What causes you pain? Is it unemployment sickness, poverty, hunger or thirst? 
Do not lose heart. If you believe in Jesus and accept His death in your place, your eternal glory awaits you, because of Jesus’ sacrifice for you. 

Remember your troubles are temporary since your eternal life with Jesus will last forever and forever. Hold on to your inheritance, in faith, which is freely given to you through Jesus Christ.

This post is adapted from my contributions to EbenDavid Ministries & Charities newsletter. 

Saturday, August 11, 2012

The Glue that holds me together

I have to admit, like most women, The Notebook is one of my all-time favourite movies! The love between Noah and Allie is epic & almost every female I know swoons when everyone tells Noah to leave Allie's side as her Alzheimer's deteriorates.. but Noah simply says, "Allie is my home".. Every woman wants to be loved like this! If you haven't seen this, you really need to see it, ASAP!

It makes me wonder though.. Is Noah & Allie's love really the most epic love?
Well, no. Romance aside, God stands in front of us with a love that is far more deserving, fantastic and all-consuming, who has forgiven us infinitely more than Noah did Allie & who has loved us with a love that will last forever. He stands at our doors, saying I am your home. Come make your home with me & let's spend eternity together in love.

People often ask me how and why I still believe that God loves me even as I get weaker and sicker. The answer is simple... The more weaker I get, the more convinced I am that God loves me and works in all things for my good. Now God has always been wonderful to me. He made me & he has listened to and answered my prayers since I was young. But never have I known His love like this than He has shown me in the past few years. From helping me and supporting me, he now does almost everything for me. He helps me wake up in the morning. He makes me fall asleep at night even despite the weaning medications and the unbearable agony. He is my friend and companion when all my friends desert me simply because they don't want an "ill" friend. When I am treated unfairly, he works in the hearts of colleagues and others to restore love to the relationship. He holds my hand physically each night and I know that when I leave this earth to go home with Him, I will die in His arms.

Truly, in all things, God works for the good of those who love Him! He holds me together and he's by far the greatest love I have ever known. No man could even come close to comparing with this EPIC LOVE.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Our God is for us!

"I, even I, am he who comforts you.
Who are you that you fear mortal men,
the sons of men, who are but grass,
that you forget the Lord your Maker,
who stretched out the heavens
and laid the foundations of the earth,
that you live in constant terror everyday
because of the wrath of the oppressor,
who is bent on destruction?
For where is the wrath of the oppressor?
The cowering prisoners will soon be set free;
they will not die in their dungeon,
nor will they lack bread.
For I am the Lord, your God
who churns up the sea so that its waves roar -
The Lord Almighty is his name.
I have put my words in your mouth
and covered you with the shadow of my hand.
I who set the heavens in place,
who laid the foundations of the earth,
and who say to Zion, 'You are my people.'"
Isaiah 51:11-16

This passage is encouraging the people of God, who are struggling under foreign rule, who are crying out for God to send their Messiah, that God is sovereign. There is no need to fear their foreign rulers or the persecution they face, because they are God's people and the Lord, himself, has them covered & protected by the shadow of His hand. It predicts that wonderful, amazing day in the future, when we will spend eternity with God, when we will be set free from our rebellious bodies and be free to be God's people.

For us, as chronically ill, it has an additional meaning too - Because not only can we long for the day when God will take us to heaven to live with Him, but we can also long for Him in the everyday. He is powerful, more powerful that the disease that oppresses us, that causes us to live in constant terror of pain, being isolated and lonely or being unable to rest. He promises us that we will be set free, according to His promises and in the meantime, we can be sure that we will not be consumed and die in the dungeon of our illness and our daily needs (bread) will be provided for. He will give us words to speak, when we cannot find strength to speak ourselves and we are forever, protected and carried in the shadow of His hand. We are His people, because Jesus restored us to God by dying in our place on the cross.

This is the God that Paul speaks of, when he says, "If God is for us, who can be against us?" (Romans 8:31b). God is for you and he is with you today, no matter where you are at, be it a high, happy place or a dreary dungeon, dreaming of death; He is with you today and always.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

How I Met God

Lately, one of my favourite shows has been "How I Met Your Mother". It's a story of a man, Ted, in the future, telling his kids the story of how he met their mother. Only, he starts all the way at the beginning, many years & many girlfriends prior to their mum. Because it's all part of the story...

Stories are important. Where we come from influences who we are & what we become.
So here's the story of how I met God: where I was when he found me, how he found me & life since.

 I grew up in a Christian home. My mum and dad were followers of God & took my sister and I to church. Every week, I'd hear the speaker say, 'To be right with God, don't steal', or 'don't hurt others' or 'don't lie'. I'd try really hard to stop doing it & be good, but no matter how hard I tried, within a few days, I always failed. I got really frustrated. I just couldn't do it. It was too hard.
I looked around me, but no one else seemed to have as much trouble as I did. So I did what any sane teenager would do - I pushed it to the far reaches of my mind & focused on other things - money, possessions, love, friendship.. But no matter what I tried, nothing could satisfy me. Some things gave me temporary happiness, but nothing was permanent. I couldn't shake this feeling that something was wrong. It just got harder and harder to ignore it.

When I was 15, I was living in Dubai, and my sister was in Melbourne. She was involved in a Christian group at her university and annoyingly, she used to send me links to all kinds of talks and websites. And I ignored most of them. Out of curiosity, one day, I opened one.. and this is what it said - 'Jesus didn't come and die for those who were perfect, who had it all together. Jesus came for the bad, for the sick and the broken - those who never had any chance of being good enough for themselves. He came to make them right with God.'

Wait a minute... that's me... Jesus came for me?

All along, what I needed the most was not to discover a secret way of being good - it was to accept Jesus and what he'd done for me by dying on the cross, in my place. The reason everyone around me were able o be good was because of Jesus, not the other way around.

It has been nearly eight years since I became a follower of Jesus & I still get a lot of things wrong. I'm definitely not perfect. But I know that because of Jesus, I am right with God. And now, I try to do things that please Him, not because I want to win brownie points, but because of His friendship with me.

What about you? Are you right with God?

Friday, April 13, 2012

I Choose You..

Do you remember former Australian Idol winner (2009), Stan Walker's popular song titled 'Choose You'? If you listen to Mix101.1FM, you've definitely heard of it. In fact, you've probably heard it atleast a couple of times this week.  It seems to be a popular choice on 'Love Song Dedications'. I absolutely love the words of this song. And they've been really poignant to me over the past couple of weeks as I've been reading Hosea 1-3 with a friend from church.

Hosea was a prophet that lived & prophesied around the same time that Isaiah did. To show His love for Israel, God told Hosea to marry Gomer, a promiscuous woman. She bore him three children, including one who was called "Not my loved one" and another who was called "Not my people". She left him to go after her lovers but God tells Hosea to go buy her back & ask her, once again, to be faithful to him.

In and through Hosea's relationship with his wife, God speaks about his relationship with His people - how we are God's chosen people, but we turn away from Him and pursue other things (money, pride, greed etc) to fulfil our own desires, how punishment is required to make us right with God, how he calls us to himself & buys us back and how once again we are called "loved" and "God's people". What a beautiful summary of the gospel and all that God has accomplished for us in Jesus!

Through this song and through reading Hosea, God has really made me stop and think about 'love' - how what we understand of God's love for us & our love for others around us pales in comparison to the way Hosea and ultimately, Jesus describes God's love for us. Perhaps this is the reason that Paul, later on in his letters, prays for God to help Christians grasp how high, wide and deep God's love for us is, through Jesus.

I don't know what kind of day you're having today. Maybe it's a good day & you're poised and ready for the excitement of the weekend ahead. Or maybe, you're having a day like me, where you feel pummelled and overwhelmed by what today has brought you.

Either way, know this: God chose you. He chooses you, even though it makes sense for him to stay mad, even though we never deserve it, he chooses to love you, each and every day. He sent His own Son, Jesus for you, to bring you back to Himself. And there is nothing, no powers, no sickness, no fear or suffering that could ever take away this great & amazing love that God has for you.

Fear not, for have I redeemed you, 
____________, you are mine.
When you pass through the waters, 
I will be with you,
And when you pass through the rivers, 
they will not sweep over you. 
When you walk through the fire, 
you will not be burned.
The flames will not set you ablaze. 
I am the Lord, your God, your Saviour
Since you're honoured & precious in my sight,
I gave Jesus in exchange for you, 
Don't be afraid for I am with you. 
Isaiah 43:1-5

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Is trusting in God foolish?

Do you ever feel like the world mocks you for having faith in Jesus, despite the depths of your struggles and sufferings? Do they think you to be a fool to put your trust in God?


In Isaiah chapter 36-38, Israel is in war against Sennacherib, king of Assyria. The Assyrian king mocks God. He calls Israel foolish to depend on their God to save them from destruction. King Hezekiah of Israel, prays for God to deliver them and He does! Just when things look great, God tells Hezekiah he's about to die. Once again, he prays and is given an additional fifteen years of life.

There's a couple of things that have been really helpful for me to learn through this passage this week:
1. No matter how difficult the situation is, the first step is to go to God.
2. It is right to grieve when the world says hurtful things about you or about God.

3. Prayer changes things. Prayer resulted in God saving Israel and also in God saving Hezekiah's life.
4. God is in control of everything, even suffering. Even when medicines are the means of healing, this does not take away from God's sovereignty in using the medicine to heal us.

5. Our God will deliver us. It may not be immediate like Israel saw when Hezekiah prayed, but his deliverance is assured to us through Jesus. He does this for His own sake and for the sake of His faithful people, that is us!

What a great God we have! Only a fool wouldn't put his/her trust in Him.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Could God be using my suffering for good?

Is there any chance that there is some method to this madness? Could some good actually be coming about by my illness, not just for me, but for others?

Here's a few things that might be accomplished by your illness/suffering:

1. Suffering deepens faith and holiness. (2Cor1:8-9)
Suffering has the effect of weaning us from the world and setting our hopes fully in God alone.
It builds compassion into us & those around us.

2. Suffering makes your cup increase. (2Cor4:17-18)
It not only gives us hope in heaven to endure suffering but it actually enlarges our capacity to enjoy God's glory both here and in the age to come.

3. Suffering is the price of making others bold. 
If he must, God will use the suffering of his devoted emissiaries to make a sleeping church wake up and take risks for God. Suffering wakes up those who have become apathetic due to life's comforts.

4. Suffering fills up what is lacking in Christ's afflictions.
This is not to say that Christ's afflictions were insufficient; merely that they are lacking, because they are not known and felt by people who were not at the cross. We not only carry the message of Christ's sufferings but suffer with Christ in way that others can see a glimpse of Christ's suffering through our own.

5. Suffering enforces the missionary command to go. 
Where comfort, affluence, prosperity, safety and freedom produce apathy and self centredness, suffering can result in more prayer, power and open purses.

6.  Suffering shows the world what is really important & of great worth.
Suffering is finally to show God's supremacy and his power and love to sustain us when we can't do anything to sustain ourselves. The reason we can rejoice in persecution is that the worth of our reward in heaven is so much greater than what we lose through suffering on earth; therefore, suffering with joy proves to the world that our treasure is in heaven & not on earth, and that this treasure is greater than anything the world has to offer.

Source: Chapter 4, Suffering & Sovereignty of God, Piper & Taylor

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

God says always be, not always do!

"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God"
Ephesians 2:8


Do you ever hear friends, family or even yourself ask the question, "What have you been doing?"
If you're anything like me, you find that to be a very stressful question. I feel guilty to say, 'nothing'. I feel weak to say 'I've just been trying to survive". 


Our society places a lot of pressure on us to do. Holidays need to be planned. Weekends need to be busy. Events need to be organized, goals met & promotions achieved. As a chronic pain sufferer, it can be debilitating & frustrating to not be able to 'do'. Sometimes, trying to 'do' is the very thing that breaks us down & pushes us into yet another pain spiral. 


If you're struggling with something like this, dear friends, take heart. I urge you & encourage you not to let this thought pattern slip into your relationship with God. Remember we are not saved by works but by faith alone. While we were still sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8). 
There is definitely a lot in the Bible about how we should live our lives, that much is true. But our faith, our maturity in Christ and God's love for us is not measured by us & what we can do. It's measured by how much we fall short of God but yet, are loved & saved completely only because of Jesus. 


The world may want you to do & do & do. But more importantly, God wants you to be... To be his daughter / son, to be a sinner in need of a forgiving, loving & just God & to be whatever he has called you to be in your current circumstances. 
If I stop to think about the people who have been most influential in my faith, to those who've challenged & inspired me most, they are usually completely unaware of their depth of the effect of their ministry to me & after years of faith, they definitely still see themselves just as they were when God first found them - sinners desperate for relationship with our loving, just & merciful God. 


Friends, if today is a really tough day for you, just 'be'. Leave the 'doing' up to God. He's much better at it anyway. 



Saturday, February 25, 2012

Jesus is no stranger to our sorrow & trials

"Then Jesus went with his disciples to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to them, “Sit here while I go over there and pray.” He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee along with him, and he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.” Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.”
Then he returned to his disciples and found them sleeping. “Couldn’t you men keep watch with me for one hour?” he asked Peter. “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” He went away a second time and prayed, “My Father, if it is not possible for this cup to be taken away unless I drink it, may your will be done.”
When he came back, he again found them sleeping, because their eyes were heavy. So he left them and went away once more and prayed the third time, saying the same thing. Then he returned to the disciples and said to them, “Are you still sleeping and resting? Look, the hour has come, and the Son of Man is delivered into the hands of sinners.Rise! Let us go! Here comes my betrayer!”
Matthew 26:36-46

Friends, do you ever feel like you are being swallowed whole by the day to day struggles of living with a chronic illness? Do you feel like nobody really understands you or gets what you go through each day? Do you feel alone?



If you're anything like me, you probably feel these feelings often. It's hard dealing with long-term illness & the truth is many of our friends, family & peers, who've never experienced it for themselves or had a close encounter through a friend, actually don't know what it's like to struggle with this.
For years, I have had feelings and thoughts that quite frankly, I used to think were somehow "un-Christian" or ungodly. I thought, "The world holds absolutely no joy for me", "There's nothing but heaven for me to look forward to in my future" and I've even thought, "My soul is overwhelmed to the point of death".

Jesus knows what it is like to feel like this. In the passage above, we see Jesus' last actions and thoughts before his arrest and subsequent cruxification. Jesus knew that His death was imminent. He knew the struggles that He'd face and He knew He'd face them alone. I want to point out five things about this passage:

1. Even though Jesus knew it was God's will for Him to suffer this way, He felt sorrow, even to the point of death (verse 38). 
It is not wrong for us to feel upset and feel saddened by the state we are in. This is hard. It is most definitely NOT wrong for us to grieve, even when we know and believe that God has and is using our circumstances for His glory. Struggling with depression is therefore NOT wrong.

2. Jesus brought the full weight of His sorrow to God in prayer (verse 39,42). 
When life is hard, we can bring this sorrow and pain to God. God's big enough to handle the absolute worst and scariest, deepest, darkest feelings we've ever had. He's big enough to deal with it all. In verse 38, Jesus basically tells God that he is so full of sorrow, that He might drop dead. I don't know if you've ever felt this way; I have. It is the point where everything is falling apart, and where, in the limitations of my human mind, I just cannot imagine how life could go on from here. It is safe, right and good for us, as children of God, to share these feelings with Him. Sometimes, just the mere act of taking those feelings out of our thoughts and speaking to God about them (ie. making them a reality) makes us feel better because it reminds us that we are not alone & gives us the opportunity to replace those feelings with words of hope, God's very own words from His Word.

3. Even though Jesus knew it was God's will for Him to suffer this way, He asked for the possibility of God freeing him from sorrow and death (verse 39).
It is not wrong for us to want to be healthy, to be well. This is a basic human desire; When this world was made, when we were made, sickness did not belong in this world. It is not wrong for us to desire to be well, to desire for the world to be put back to its original state where death, sin, sickness and suffering are not present.

4. Despite all that He felt, Jesus asked God to do His will (verse 39, 42)
This is important. As followers of Jesus, we know that this life is not merely about us. It is not about our happiness or accumulating large volumes of possessions or even feeling wanted and loved. This life is about bringing glory to God and sharing God's love with the world. And believe it or not, God can use your life altering, crippling chronic illness to do exactly this! In 2 Corinthians 12, Paul tells us that he too had a thorn in His flesh. And though He asked God thrice to take it away, God responds differently. He says, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." At first glance, you might say, 'well, that's great, but it doesn't exactly help me work out how to live with this', but bear with me on this. For whatever reason, human beings tend to grow closer to God during difficult times, not good ones. Struggles remind us of the fact that we are only human. That we are only the created, not the Creator. Over the past seven years, as I reflect over life and all that God has accomplished through me, I am amazed. God has done a great work in me! Despite agonizing pain, He has given me opportunities to serve, provided for my day to day life & still managed to help me be a witness and light to others!

A couple of years ago, I remember reflecting on Philippians 3:8 and  4:13, asking God to help me 'consider all things a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord' and 'learn the secret of being content in all situations and know that I can do everything through Christ'. Now, as I reflect on the year gone by (yes, because all things are clearer in hindsight), I see that God has and is answering that prayer. The things of this earth, with each day, hold less and less joy & power over me, as I see the futility of pursuing them. Furthermore, God has taught me so much about how to live in complete reliance & dependence on Him, as I grow weaker. I now see why Paul says in the passage in 2 Corinthians 12, "For when I am weak, then I am strong."

I am grateful to God for all that he has taught me and is continuing to teach me through my weakness & chronic illness, probably lessons I would not have learnt otherwise. Praise God that He doesn't just give us what we ask for blindly, but gives us what we need.

5. Though Jesus took His closest friends with Him (Peter, James and John - verse 37), they did not understand what He was going through. They fell asleep. They did not and could not comfort Him (verse 40,43).
If you're anything like me, you've probably experienced an array of frustration at the lack of understanding you've received from people. I know how you feel. Over the course of my illness, I've lost more friends than I can bear to remember, people who thought I was exaggerating things, people who got mad at me for not being able to attend parties or come to events, people who just got tired of the burden of bearing with a person who has so much need, and people who themselves are struggling with so much that they do not have time or energy to deal with anyone else's lives & problems. It's hard; chronic illness sometimes walks hand in hand with chronic isolation and friend-less-ness.

Jesus experienced this. See Peter, James and John did not know what Jesus knew. They could not imagine or conceive that the Son of God had such a future to come, even though Jesus did tell them it was coming (eg. Matthew 20:17-19; 16:21-28). When it came to the depths of His sorrow, God remained his only comfort. And yet, Jesus knew that this did not mean He was not loved. They loved Him; they just did not know how to deal with this - "The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak".

Friends, forgive your friends for their lack of understanding. Forgive them because chronic illness is not anything they have ever dealt with themselves. Forgive them because God has forgiven you.
But that's not all. Forgive yourself. It is so easy to feel burdened & at blame for not exerting beyond your strength to 'save' those friendships. If they don't work out, you need to forgive yourself because you are not in control of it all. Finally, treasure those friendships that do last. Everytime I plunge into misery and feel all alone, I reach into my special boxes, where I store cards, notes and letters people have sent to me over the years. I read them all to encourage myself, to remind myself that others are praying for me & also, to remind myself that even if I feel alone, I am NOT alone. And neither are you.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Why bother with a blog?

Life is busy... there's work & study, TV & hobbies, God & church, add in family & friends and before you know it, life starts becoming crazy. It seems like everyone is running a race, desperate for an extra moment, an extra hand or leg to complete our never ending lists of things to do. And that's for a perfectly healthy person.



Those of us with a chronic illness know only too well, that illness only makes life busier, adding to that list of things that never seems to get done. 

So why bother blogging? Surely, I could spend my limited energy doing other things.

Three reasons:
1. Life is hard. Life with fibromyalgia (or any chronic illness, for that matter) is hard.
2. God comforts us during our times of struggle, not just for our benefit, but so that others may be comforted through us as well.
3. Since I was diagnosed last year, I have been searching, through Google, Amazon, Ebay, Support Forums and pretty much any other source I could get some hands on, for advice on what day-to-day living with God looks like for those of us who are chronically ill. How can we pray while in pain? How can we serve? etc. What I found was plenty of calls to have more faith to be healed, to persevere by acting as though we are not chronically ill & plenty of "I don't know. I've never thought about it." God has been very faithful to me through these years. He has helped me with some of these questions. I would like to share some of these answers as well as other questions I struggle with in hopes that some one out there might find them helpful.

I'm no expert on faith or fibromyalgia and I don't pretend to be. But it is my prayer and hope that God would use these reflections and thoughts to encourage you in your struggles & help you remember that you are not alone. Definitely not alone.

Love always. :)