“Remember not the former things,
nor consider the things of old.
Behold, I am doing a new thing;
now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?
I will make a way in the wilderness
and rivers in the desert.”
Isaiah 43:18-19 (RSV)
When I visit the residents at the Nursing Home, there are two in particular that I have formed a bond with. One is a lady with a history of drug abuse, who has two adult children that refuse to have anything to do with her. She has renewed her faith in God and prays every day. She still tends to fluctuate emotionally, often feeling that God must be angry at her, but I keep encouraging her.
The other resident is a man who has struggled with depression most of his life, since being abused as a child. He has a current diagnosis of heart failure, which causes him to dwell on his fear of death. He has a beautiful faith in God and is easily uplifted by prayer, but he often drifts into the sorrows of his past, submitting to feelings of depression.
In spite of their emotional ups and downs, I can see that they both have a rock solid belief in Jesus, with deep humility, and I know that God will use them to be a great inspiration to others.
Both of these friends tend to be asking the same questions that many people ask- Why does God permit suffering?
I remind them that we don’t get to know the reasons, as one minister once put it,
“We live by God’s promises, not His explanations.”
Since we live by His promises, we can be sure that He is always with us, because His word says so. I try to encourage them to look forward, and not get stuck in the memories of their past.
Whatever deep waters, fires and storms we have been through in life, God has always been there. He raises us up afterwards, to see the new mission He has for us, which fulfills our joy by helping someone else who is going through what we once suffered.
It’s how ministries are born. This is what happened in the life of an Iraq war veteran, named Ben.
Ben was a faith filled believer since his high school years, but later he joined the military and was deployed to Iraq. It changed him from within, in seeing so much death. He had a group of soldier friends, who were all killed in one day. Then he witnessed first hand, wounded and dead children, after a school was attacked by a suicide bomber.
Ben’s spirit was crushed, by the time he returned home, and he suppressed all his feelings. He began to lose his faith, while suffering with PTSD, and even contemplated taking his own life. One night, with a hand gun in one hand, he called an old friend who was once his mentor and advisor in the Christian faith. His friend answered the phone and told Ben to hang in there, because God is about to give him a spiritual resurrection and a victory over all that he suffered. Thankfully, Ben put his gun away that night, and revived his search for God.
After he resumed his prayer life, received counseling, and kept in touch with a supportive Christian community, he was able to share his feelings and memories. He began gaining inner strength, renewing his relationship with Jesus, who led him to see that he had a new mission to accomplish. His true story is not an unusual one, because statistics show that soldiers are nine times more likely to die by suicide than in combat.
Ben started an organization called, “Engage your destiny,” a faith based group to help veterans confront their mental scars and traumas, promoting mental and spiritual health, and free them of suicidal thoughts. God doesn’t want us to be controlled by a painful past, but to see the new thing He is doing in us and through us. When the Lord shows us a path through the wilderness, that path always leads to others.
God wants us to perceive the new mission He has for us. It can simply mean listening, responding and encouraging someone, who is suffering in a way we are familiar with. The qualifying credentials needed to start a new mission, is our faith and having been through the deep waters, fires and storms of life, ourselves.
Lord, heal all war veterans and raise them up to find purpose in helping others. Keep us from dwelling on the negativity of our past, so that we may perceive the new mission you are leading us to. Amen









