What will you do with change?

 

Change can be unexpected, unwanted and hard. Recently I went back to Taylor University, my alma mater, for some meetings. So much change has occurred since my time at the school. This was the place I met and fell in love with my husband Neal. Anxious feelings were mounting.

After a stop at the historic Ivanhoe’s Restaurant for a lunch of the best-ever strawberry shortcake, I headed to the main entrance of campus

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I drove around to see all the many changes and additions of buildings and landscaping.  After parking my car, I walked the old “loop” past Neal’s dorm and into my dorm. Things looked pretty similar except gone is the land phone at the end of each hall that all the girls had to use to place and receive calls! Continuing the loop brought me to the old/new science building where Neal spent many hours.

Science building
Science building

The Reade Liberal Arts building was next on the loop where most of my classes met and the media center where many of my elementary education projects were assembled. Past the old student union building around to the newly renovated chapel auditorium and student union building which included a Chick-fil-A restaurant.  Since when do college campuses have fast-food restaurants? Now I am dating myself!

Where I spent most of my time!
Where I spent most of my time!
The renovation chapel and new student union
The renovation chapel and new student union

Before heading back to my car I finished the loop at the dining commons which looked the same from the outside.

I recalled many fond memories from my Taylor days, many with Neal.  Memories included walking hand in hand with Neal around the loop to classes and meals, and the place of our first kiss.  I found myself smiling most of the day!

The campus is vastly different since our years there. These changes are a sign of progress and growth, while maintaining the core mission of who Taylor is. My life has greatly changed since my days at Taylor, not what I had envisioned. I thought upon graduation I would marry Neal and grow old with him, teach school, become a mother and grandmother.  We would go on mission trips; possibly in retirement go into full-time mission work. Some of those things have happened but I never thought about life being difficult. We all have our difficult stories. Thinking about the future at Taylor did not include a difficult adoption, an employee stealing thousands of dollars, having breast cancer, spending hours at a counselor’s office, starting a church, not teaching full time, taking a different career path, Neal getting non- Hodgkin’s lymphoma and dying, and so on…

Life can take us down a different path than we imagined but it can be good. We tend to fear and become anxious about change because we do not feel in control of life. It takes us out of our comfort zone.

There is one who does not change – God. He is the same yesterday, today and forever (Malachi 3:6; Hebrews 13:8). He guides us in the way we should go (Psalms 32:8). The Lord himself will lead us and be with us. He will not fail us or abandon us (Deut. 31:8; Josh. 1:9).

This journey is not one I envisioned. The changes in my life have not been easy and definitely out of my comfort zone.  How we respond to what life throws at us is our choice.  We can become bitter, angry and feel miserable all the time. Or we can choose to accept these changes and learn from them. The changes in my life have brought growth in ways I could not imagine. I have experienced a deeper love for God and His peace and comfort.  I have done things I never thought I could do, like install a garbage disposal or corral cattle!

life is like underware

How will you choose to respond to change?

On the journey,

Trish

Under the Wings of God

The stores this time of year are full of cute furry stuffed chicks and bunnies, yummy chocolates, jelly beans, baskets, and colorful plastic eggs in anticipation of Easter.

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This morning I was reading in Psalm 91 and thought of those cute little chicks and their fuzzy soft feathers.  “He will cover you with his feathers.   He will shelter you with his wings.  His faithful promises are his armor and protection.” (V. 4). I could picture a mother hen gathering her brood under her wings to protect them from other birds of prey or the cold blasts of air.  It’s safe, warm and I can feel the rhythm of the heart beat.  If God shelters us with his wings, how is it that bad things sometimes happen to good people and good things happen sometimes to bad people?

Later on in Psalm 91 it says that “if you make the Lord your refuge, if you make the Most High your shelter, no evil will conquer you; no plague will come near your home.” (vs. 9,10).   No evil will come to us?  What??  I’ve had breast cancer, had an employee embezzle, my husband died.  I believe God with all my heart and yet have had my heart broken.

Faith in the sheltering wings of God does not remove hardships.  While we are under those wings there may be a storm going on with tree limbs falling on those wings, hail beating down, and lightening.  In the commotion we may get knocked around a bit but we are still secure under His wings.  Those wings of God took the beating for us, became all bloodied, bent out of shape.  They were wounded for our transgressions and bruised by our iniquities (Isaiah 53:5).

Anything that has come through his wings to reach us is not an evil.  It can’t be because God is good.  In him is no evil.  The sorrows and afflictions work for our good.  We may not understand these pains but we can be assured that in the end they occur for our good or the greater goodness of the Kingdom of God (Roman 8:28).

It is our choice to take flight to the refuge of God’s wings.  He extends his wings to all who call on the name of the Lord.  It is by his great mercy that we have been saved, because Jesus died and was raised from the dead.  Now we live with great expectation and have a priceless inheritance of life eternal (1 Peter 1: 3-5).  “So be truly glad.  There is wonderful joy ahead, even though you must endure many trials for a little while.  These trials will show that your faith is genuine 1Peter 1: 6,7).”

Thank you God for taking on human form, suffering and dying for me.  You are faithful and true to Your Word.  You are the same yesterday, today and forever.  The best is yet to come!

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On the journey,

Trish