Don’t Grow Faint or Weary

 

My mother-in-law fell a few months ago by slipping on a rug as she was hurrying to answer the door.  She ended up breaking her wrist and shoulder area.  She spent a few days in the hospital and then was transfrered to a rehabilitation center for therapy.  She was there three weeks working on how to dress herself with her left hand (her non-dominant hand), how to feed herself with her left hand, how to go to the bathroom by herself, how to walk with a walker until she regained her strength.  She is home but still goes to therapy twice a week.   She is making progress but it is slow going.  You at least can recognize what she is writing and she can right her own checks now!

It will take a long time until Bobbie has full use of her  wrist and shoulder.   At our strongest we are still weak compared to God.  God never faints, never grows weary and doesn’t get tired.

“Have you never heard or understand?  Don’t you know that the Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of all the earth?  He never grows faint or weary.  No one can measure the depths of his understanding.  He gives power to those who are tired and worn out; he offers strength to the weak.  Even youths will become exhausted, and young men will give up.  But those who wait on the Lord will find new strength.  They will fly high on wings like eagles.  They will run and not grow weary.  They will walk and not faint.”  Isaiah 40:29-31

Therapy has been very painful and tiring for my mother-in-law.  But the strength of her arm is being renewed day by day.  She has looked to the professionals to help her in her journey to regain strength.  A new friend today asked me how I move forward after all that has happened in my life.  I told her a few things that have helped me, which maybe will be in another post, but the main thing is that I try to look to God for my strength.  He gives power to the faint and increases my strength.  I grow weary and tired especially when I have to handle situations by myself or do repairs around the house.  God renews my strength and as the above verses say, then I can mount up with wings, as eagles.  Eagles soar high up into the sky with little effort and can glide for hours high above the earth.

Those who run will not be weary and they that walk will not faint.  God will strengthen us as we run and walk on our jorney.  That doesn’t mean that we won’t ever grow weary.  But as long as we are waiting and turning our eyes upon the Lord and as long as we have His strength, we will not grow weary and we will not faint.  If we go forth on our own strength, we will grow faint and utterly fall; but having our hearts and hopes in God, we will be carried above all difficulties.  We should seek our strength from God.  With that strength we can face the battles that come up every day.

“Those who wait on the Lord will find new strength.”  The whole idea of waiting goes against what we naturally and culturally do.  Waiting is often difficult because we equate it with inactivity and many times look at it as a negative thing.  Waiting can mean to wait with expectation, like I’m doing right now on the birth of my 7th grandchild any day.  It can mean to look for, to watch and wait with expectation to what God is going to do.

If the Apostle Paul went forth on his own strength, I don’t know if he would have survived being jailed, beaten, stoned, shipwrecked and adrift at sea.  Not to mention being hungry and not having enough clothes to keep warm.  Scriptures tell us that Paul was under house arrest in his own rented house for two years.  Yet, he welcomed all who visited him, proclaiming and teaching the things concerning Jesus Christ.  We are told that he did it with full boldness and without hinderance.  (Acts 28:30-31)  Paul kept pressing forward, keeping his eyes on Jesus, and refused to let his hinderances get him down.  He didn’t get furious with God over all that had happened to him or demand to know why.  He just stayed at it, believed and persevered.

Sometimes we focus so much on our hurt or what we are going through that it paralyzes us and hinders us.  What if instead of fixating on taking the hurt out of our hinderance, we pray for God to take the hinderance out of our hurt?  Sometimes it is in the hurt where the most growth occurs.  If I focus on all the negative things in my life, I can become bitter, angry and shallow.  If I take the focus off my hinderances, I grow in my relationship with God, have a deeper love, faith and trust in Him.  God has ordained my steps.  Everything I go through is for His purposes.

Bobbie has to go through the hurt of therapy in order to become stronger.  She has had to make some adjustments in her home:  throw rugs up, handle bars placed, meals prepared and frozen for her when she couldn’t use her hand.  Maybe our hnderances cause us to make adjustments in our lives.

If we seek our strength from God, he promises that we will not be weary and will not faint.  The key is to keep our eyes on Jesus not our curcumstances.

There is an old hymn that says, “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in His wonderful face, and the things of earth will grow strangely dim, in the light of His glory and grace.”   Here is a version of that song:

So look up!

On the journey,

Trish

PS  After I posted this guess what was flying high above the trees at my house?  Yep, an eagle!!  God is good

Dragging our luggage

I have tried several times to do this post.  Once I had it almost completed and I somehow deleted it.  I was a week babysitting my grandson in Indy with no time for posting and my mother-in-law fell and broke her arm and wrist.  She was in the hospital 5 days and is now transferred to a rehab facility to hopefully transition back to independent living.  It’s like the weight of the world was holding me back.  More on that later…but now here is more about my London trip.

After arriving in London we made our way through customs and down to baggage claim.  I grabbed what I thought was my suitcase only to discover that someone else’s slippers were in my outside pocket.  Oh, wait, that wasn’t my suitcase!  Mine eventually did come down the chute.   Dan grabbed his bag off the convaror belt to find the bottom ripped.  Nothing appeared to have fallen out.  Fortunately Dan had packed some duck tape!

Dan saving his bag!
Dan saving his bag!

After we had retrieved our luggage we bought our Oyster cards.  I have no idea why they are called that, but they are like credit cards that are electronic ticketing used on public transport in Greater London.  We made our way to the Underground Tubes.  Mind you, we were toting our suitcases up and down stairs and onto the trains.  My suitcase was just over 50 pounds, Dans of course was broken, and one of the wheels on Barb’s suitcase broke.  People were so friendly and offered to help Barb with her suitcase twice. Not sure why only her… Instead of trying to carry mine I just pulled it behind me down the stairs, thump, thump, thump.  We got on one line and transferred to another to go to Harrod’s, a famous department store in London.  Harrod’s had a service of storing your suitcase while you shopped for a fee, of course!

Emma, me and Barb in front of Harrod's.
Emma, me and Barb in front of Harrod’s.

From Harrod’s we walked through Kensington Park, saw Kensington Palace, and headed to the next tube station.  Remember, toting our luggage the whole time.

Kensington Palace
Kensington Palace

 

Once on the next tube, we headed to Barb’s nephew’s apartment.  Walked up and down the stairs in the tube station, walked to the apartment, walked up the stairs to the apartment, all the time lugging our suitcases.  Once there, we enjoyed a nice dinner and seeing the rest of the groom’s family.  After dinner, walked back to the tube station, up and down the tube stairs and hopped on (more like struggled on with our suitcases) the tube to take us to our hotel.  At our stop we got off the tube, walked up and down the stairs at the station and walked to our hotel.  We received a warm chocolate chip cookie after checking in.  Chocolate makes things better!  Then we promptly fell into bed.

Walking to our destinations.
Walking to our destinations.

There are things in life that weigh us down.  It can be worries, tyranny of the urgent, burdens, knowing that something we are doing is wrong, certain people, bitterness or anger.  Corrie TenBoom said, “Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow.  It empties today of its strength.”

Hebrews 12:1 says, “Therefore…let us strip off every weight that slows us down, especially the sin that so easily hinders our progress.”  This verse probably was making reference to the races like Olympics in Rome.  An athlete can’t wear a loose fitting garment by which the runner becomes entangled and tripped up, or one that clings closely to him and impedes his ease of movement.  Like the athlete, we must also strip away from us and throw aside the clinging robe of familiar sin.  Sin is an obstacle to the race or journey that God has mapped out for us.  Everything that would hinder that path- weight of cares, of interests, of attachments to things, of relationships- that God has for us must be layer aside.

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While in London I wore very comfortable shoes which helped with all the walking and lugging we did.  Joyce Meyers uses an analogy of the discomfort that comes from wearing a pair of shoes that don’t fit.  When we are living a life where we have thrown off the weights and hinderances and follow God’s way he promises that we will be “at ease.” (Psalm 25:13). That doesn’t mean life will be easy.  But when we start following God’s plans for our life it is like finding a pair of shoes that fit comfortably.

Is there a weight in your life you must lay aside?  God has set before you a race.  You must run it and it will involve commitment and comfortable shoes!

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On the journey,

Trish

PS.  When it was time to leave London we took a taxi back to the airport instead of riding the tube and lugging our suitcases!