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Jesus’ Multiplication: Seed of Dependence or a “Muster Seed”

10.09.2018 by Jennifer Howe //

This month the FACETS are answering this question: How has God turned your little into much? It’s all about Jesus’ multiplication. What a perfect topic for the harvest season, eh? Check out Tracy’s post here. Kim will share next week, and then we have a beautiful guest we want you to meet. Visit us on Tuesdays to read new posts.How has God multiplied your little into much? (J. Howe)

Welcome to fall, friend! I (Jennifer) live in the midwest, and the harvests are in. The fields are down, cornucopia decorations are in displays, and piles of pumpkins dominate grocery stores and veggie stands. I don’t dislike everything about the “boo fest” in October, it’s just that I’m fueled by my favorite things in autumn: all things apple, golden pre-harvest fields, colorful leaves, November, and a meaningful Thanksgiving.

The season reminds me God not only makes a crop possible but also multiplies the harvest. Soon I’m recounting the stories that reveal God’s multiplication table (often at the table). Then I ask how those stories relate to mine.

What’s my personal harvest story? Dependence.

A Jesus moment catches my eye. A little background—

Greeks (non-Jews) have come to see Jesus and hope Philip will introduce them. We can’t be sure the introduction takes place; the text doesn’t say. (I like to think it did.) We might assume it was a brow-raising moment, considering rabbis rarely mixed in the Gentile world. Jesus was different.

Then it’s immediately a prophetic moment. The Messiah predicts the crucifixion, though the majority of listeners have no idea.

Jesus replied to them, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. I assure you: Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains by itself. But if it dies, it produces a large crop. John 12:23-24 CSB

More eyebrows jump? Jesus turns attention to the potential in a tiny seed. Seeds were important in the Jewish agrarian culture. For a plant to grow a seed must die, and the crowd knew it. Then a seed has incredible mathematic potential. Whole crops are hidden in a single seed. He knew billions of seeds and a beautiful, large harvest would come from the sacrifice of His life. But He continues.

The one who loves his life will lose it, and the one who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. John 12:25

The seed that dies and yields a harvest is inextricably linked to one who “hates his life in this world.” (That’s dependence!) Today the follower of Jesus knows the sacrifice He made and the harvest of followers that came. We know He died to make a way for all of us to be in beautiful, eternal relationship with the Father. We have eternal life with God through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. (And that’s dependence!)

What’s most important to me is the little faith I began with. I knew placing trust in Jesus was the beginning. Trusting Jesus with all of life is ultimate dependence. As much as I’d like to say I instantly trusted Him with everything, every decision, every hard moment—I can’t. Ease and perfection didn’t come from a single moment. I had moments that were more like a “muster seed” in my own strength. No, it was a tiny step. I leaned into dependence just a little bit. And then a little more. Twenty-odd years later, it’s still a million little decisions I want to make each day. God multiplies my little faithful dependence into much. Sometimes it’s depending on Him more often, or in the bigger things, and in more of the little things. Little things can be as hard or harder than the big things, if I’m honest. It’s tempting to “get ‘er done” in my own way.

The next verse is beautiful. And challenging.

If anyone serves Me, he must follow Me. Where I am, there My servant also will be. If anyone serves Me, the Father will honor him. John 12:26

This is where dependence really shows. I can’t muster a thing on my own, really. A Jesus-dependent faith life looks like the life He lived. It’s a life of seeing and serving others and thinking of them more than your own self. It’s a life that serves Jesus because it serves others. My little dependent moment is a tiny faith step God transforms. A small thing becomes more loving, more frequent, and more—Jesus-like! I’m far from perfect (ask my family), but I’m growing. If you see anything of the dependent life, you know it’s really not me, right? It’s God doing a thing in my life, finishing the work He started, and I’m just revealing a little of that. *wink*

Thanks for reading, friend. The FACETS love to hear from you. What are some of your favorite fall things? Share your thoughts on God’s multiplication in your life here or at the Facebook Page. How has God turned your little into much?

Signature, Jennifer Howe

Categories // Faith, Jennifer Howe's Perspective, Turning Little into Much Tags // Dependence, Facets of Faith, Faith, God's Multiplication, Harvest, Jennifer J Howe, John 12:23-26, The Jesus Life

Life Lessons: The Presence of God in Turmoil

09.25.2018 by Terry Bliler //

Friends, I (Jennifer) have the privilege of introducing you to one of our precious friends, Terry. Our team is honored she accepted our invitation to share with you. Take time to lean in and mine the life lessons woven into her story. They are bedrock faith truths we all need—now or in the future—as we face the most difficult trials. I just want to get out of the way and let you meet her. Terry has so much to share. Honestly, life is hard, and some of us hope to move through it with God’s strength.

IMAGE: Life Lessons, Guest, yellow.

“Peace is not the absence of turmoil, it’s the Presence of God” – unknown

One night while I was praying, I had the sense that the Holy Spirit was telling me to specifically pray that my husband, Scott, and I would praise Him until our last breath. I was taken aback for a moment because I knew that was a loaded prayer. But I also know faith is an act of the will, so I obediently prayed even though it was scary. And I prayed it the next night, and the next…

I never mentioned it to Scott because, honestly, it didn’t occur to me during the day. It was at night, when all was quiet, that I’d hear Him whispering to me to pray that we would praise Him until our last breath. Oh, how I would need His strength to face the upcoming chapters of our lives.

In 2 ½ years I lost my daughter (June 2015: died in her sleep), husband (February 2017: cancer), and mother (January 2018: an extremely rare case of Cystic Fibrosis). Praying, “Lord, let us praise You until our last breath” is a “dangerous” prayer…

Jessica:  February 28, 1987 – June 18, 2015
Jessica (our only child) died in her sleep at 28 years old of complications from her auto-immune illnesses. Her passing took us by total surprise. We did not realize the impact her illnesses had taken on her heart.

Jess contracted a severe case of mono when she was 16. The mono wiped out her immune system and was the trigger for several autoimmune illnesses (Raynaud’s Phenomenon, Sjorgren’s Syndrome), plus Narcolepsy, high blood pressure, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. We pursued medical, holistic, and chiropractic treatments for 12 years with only minor improvements. She was only able to leave the house for short periods of time because of exhaustion and unrelenting pain.

Besides the Lord, her greatest joy was when she was with her nieces and nephews. (Technically they’re second cousins, but it would have been dangerous to your health if you pointed that out. Seriously.) She also loved playing sports, and it grieved her that she could no longer participate. Jessica was bitter that she “didn’t have a life.” She was homebound most of the time. And when she did have plans, she usually had to cancel at the last minute. She was very lonely, although we were very close. I also have multiple autoimmune illness and was often home as well. We did everything together, including seeing the same doctors. Our rheumatologist called us “The Twins.” We had the same odd sense of humor and made each other laugh hysterically.

At 2:30am on the morning of June 18, 2015, Jess woke me because of a severe headache (she had chronic migraines) and terrible nausea. She complained she was cold and asked for the down comforter. Jess and I were rarely cold, even in Chicago winters, so this was odd. I found the comforter and gave her nausea and pain meds.

I prayed over her for healing that night while she slept. And she was healed, but not how I had expected.

Later that morning (11:45am) I went to wake Jess. It was obvious she had passed away. No words can describe the feeling of seeing your child in rigor and being cold to the touch. I called 911 and explained the situation. I was as calm as you can be in the situation. The operator insisted I might be mistaken about her being dead, though I reiterated she was deathly pale and in rigor. He repeated that I should immediately get her on the floor and begin CPR. Suddenly, I thought he might be right! Maybe I was wrong! Then I lost it, as they say. I straddled her and began CPR, which was difficult because she was on her side. I began shaking her and screaming her name.

The police, ambulance, and coroner arrived. I was immediately escorted out of her room by the police. The coroner went in her room and closed the door.

My husband was teaching summer school, and the switchboard shut down at noon. I called his cell phone over and over, but he didn’t pick up his silenced phone. He called back ten minutes later, but the officer would not let me speak to him. He told Scott that he needed to get home right away. (Scott said later that driving home from school every day after was traumatic. He didn’t know which one of us was in trouble, and he relived the feelings every day coming home from school.)

Image: Jess a week before she died.
Picture taken at the rheumatologist’s office a week before Jess died.

“Until Jesus is enough, nothing or no one will ever be enough…”

I wrote this on a post-it note on Jessica’s door…then I was called to live it.

The next few weeks are a blur, but we had a sense of peace that was—and still is—hard to understand. I am not saying it was easy. When someone asked how I was doing, I quoted Psalm 119:92, “If Your law had not been my delight, I would have perished in my sorrow.” And that is the truth.

We didn’t have a service right away. Our family, friends, church family, lavished us with love and did everything possible to make the situation a little less painful. We held a Celebration of Life a few weeks after Jess passed. It was a joyous and beautiful service. ONLY GOD can give you the strength and peace to praise Him when what’s most precious to you is taken.

IMAGE: Shelter of His Wings, Birds
In the shelter of His wings, we found rest.

 

“God is good, all the time. All the time, God is good.”

 

Scott:  April 18,1959 – February 7, 2017
Nine months after Jessica’s passing, we learned Scott had Metastatic Soft Tissue Sarcoma. What a dermatologist diagnosed as a “pimple” turned out to be a cancerous tumor that had spread to his lungs.

The cancer was aggressive and continued to spread despite treatment. Each doctor’s appointment brought news of what organs the cancer had spread to next. Despite the chemo treatments, Scott continued to push himself to work. He didn’t want to let his students down and didn’t want them to know he was fighting cancer, lest they worry and not focus on their work. Scott soldiered on, not complaining nor wanting special treatment. He trusted the Lord, no matter the outcome.

I, however, was very overwhelmed. Whenever I would express my fear of losing him, Scott would remind me that, “God is good.” And it really grated my nerves. I agreed that God is good, but cancer is not. Scott never wavered that his precious Lord and Savior was good…all the time.

My beloved husband of almost 32 years died 11 months after the diagnosis. He praised the Lord until his final breath.

Once again, our friends, family, and church family rallied around me. Scott’s Celebration of Life was a true celebration of his life and love for the Lord, family, friends, and students.

And, once again, I have total peace but my heart is forever broken.

And, once again, I can say that the only way to survive the losses is with the comfort of the Holy Spirit.

Mom:  March 10,1939 – January 28, 2018
My mother, Laverne May, was a cross between Dolly Parton and Granny from the Beverly Hillbillies. Quite a character. She was truly one of the most generous people I have ever met. I don’t think she ever met a critter, save snakes, that she didn’t love. Mom was not without her flaws—as all of us are not—but she was wise. My little brother died in 1977 at the age of 11 years old, of Cystic Fibrosis. It was because of John’s illness that my parents came to know the Lord.

When Jessica passed, my mom gently reminded me that Jess “was never yours to begin with.” Had anyone else said that to me, it would not have been pretty. But having buried a child and two grandchildren, she had earned the right to speak that truth to me.

My mother had been healthy until the last ten years of her life. She contracted pneumonia over and over and this once-entertaining and spirited woman became increasingly somber. We thought the doctor had lost his mind when he suggested Mom had CF. Cystic Fibrosis is a cruel disease and takes away life early. She didn’t fit the typical description, but DNA tests confirmed she had a very rare case. The doctors theorized that the disease lay dormant until the stress of a number of significant losses (her brother, father, husband, grandson in six years) set the illness in motion.

We were blessed her suffering was not prolonged. She went to bed in early December and couldn’t get back up. She passed less than two months later. The world is a little less kind with her passing. I miss her greatly.

What shall I return to the Lord for all His goodness to me? Psalm 116:12

My brother-in-law, a very godly man, passed years ago in his forties, leaving behind a wife and three daughters. Someone expressed to my sister-in-law, Jamie, that “she didn’t deserve” to have her husband taken from her and her daughters. She replied that she didn’t “deserve” to have such a kind and godly man as a husband and father to her girls. Her statement impacted me greatly.

It’s tempting to focus on the losses and not on the blessings of having a daughter, husband, and mother that adored me, and I them. It’s a rare gift, indeed. And, like Jamie, I can never repay the Lord for His goodness to me.

My prayer continues to be that “I would praise Him until my final breath.”

Signature: Terry Bliler

Categories // Guest Perspectives, Life, Life Lessons Tags // child loss, Death of Loved One, Facets of Faith, Life Lessons, Loss of a parent, Loss of spouse, Praising God, Terry Bliler, The Presence of God

Life Lessons: The Truth is…

09.11.2018 by Jennifer Howe //

This month FACETS is thinking about life lessons—the sharp chisels, gritty sandpaper, and beautiful gems in our lives. Life lessons speak to where we’ve been, where we are, and where we’re going in life. I (Jennifer) am thankful for truth-filled lessons, but I rarely find them “easy-peasy, lemon squeezy.”

IMAGE: LIfe Lessons, Jennifer J Howe, pink

I’m a wife and mom, and I probably wear ten other “hats” interchangeably. Sometimes I imagine the hats are real accessories. The “wifey” one is shimmering white with a 21-diamond-studded, tungsten carbide band. My blue mommy hat dangles mini mementos from a wide brim: diapers, pacifiers, bottles, homemade baby food, Tonka trucks, Matchbox cars, Legos, dirt clumps, critters, frisbees, footballs, sweaty clothes, smelly shoes, an empty refrigerator, happy tears, sad tears, and a few fear tears. My teacher hat is decorated with green, orange, purple, and red pens; lesson plans; books, books, and more books. Antique typewriter keys spell out AUTHOR & EDITOR on the writer hat’s band. A pink friend hat is covered in rhinestones, dark chocolates, mugs, coffee beans, and tea bags (D’uh!). The athlete hat sports softballs, belts from several martial arts, fried eggs, smoothies, dumbbells, and running shoes. Graphite images wrap around the bright-white paper artist hat.

The question is, are my hats the reality and totality of Jennifer? Are yours the sum of you? Is it who we’ve been, are, and ever will be? When I answer those questions, I lean into truth lessons I’ve learned.

Truth: I am not what I do.
The life lessons I’ve encountered speak to something crucial: I am not what I do. See, when a hat defines me, I’m probably wearing it, loud and proud, on the treadmill of life. At least, that’s my experience. When I’m defined by what I do, what happens when marriage is hard, children grow up, jobs change, friends relocate, or the brain writes “athletic checks” the body can’t cash? Some hats can inform me of important details in my life. The hats can’t define me or you because we’ll be crushed under the weight of performance, good or bad, and permanence or absence. Lesson (being) learned.

Truth: Truth is hard.
If I listed identity words connected with my life, it’d be a mixed bag. There would be a childhood description, a young adult one, and something after that (technically, until yesterday). Good, bad, and ugly would swirl in the mix. Words reflect I’m a survivor…saved…but also selfish…and I battle anger, shame, and sadness over many things. That’s where I’ve been, honestly, even up to a second ago in some of it. I’ve seen the good, bad, and ugly in a hard but honest way: I’m oh-so-flawed!

Truth is hard, but one big truth can’t be ignored. As true as the description up there may be, reflecting my flaws and struggles, there is something truer (if that’s a “thing”).

Truth: Nobody’s perfect.
We hear that all the time, and it’s true, but the truth is imperfection causes problems deeper than just “not quite getting it right” and follow-up apologies. The cycle of wounding God, ourselves, and others has to be broken, and it will never be a behavior mod kind of thing. I was desperate to deal with the rotten “stuff” of life—mine and others’ dished my direction—and the road I took led me to biblical truth: this world (everyone and everything in it) is pretty messed up.

Truth: Jesus is the answer to imperfection.
When I think about who I am today, I’m thankful to rest in the truer truth: I’m a daughter of a king. Actually, the King. And that was brought about by a lesson: Father-God is real, He speaks true and loving words, and He demonstrated love in Jesus.

16 For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17 For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. 18 Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because they have not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son. John 3:16-18 CSB

That’s one of all the places in the Bible where we meet truth head-on. The reality is, truth has to be met; it can’t be ignored. Our imperfection (sin) flies in the face of Holy God and must be addressed. (If you’re unsure about God, the Bible, Jesus, and truth; maybe it’s time to have a conversation with a trusted Christian friend or pastor. I wrestled hard—and contentiously—with exactly those things. I encourage you because I care.)

Truth: God is real, and He loves me.
And that life lesson in truth up there—that God is real and holy, loves deeply, and has provided a way to be free from overwhelming power of sin and death—that’s what informs my identity and my future.

Jesus told him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. John 14:6 CSB

Then I learn how valuable I am and have no doubt where I’m going simply because…well, Jesus. I once had images of clouds and harps juxtaposed with fire and pitchforks. The Bible gives detailed descriptions, and I don’t see our culture’s caricature of the afterlife in there. What I love is that this intricately created universe truthfully reveals the fingerprints of the Designer who made it. And when He comments on truth and the only way to His eternal life, we should listen.

Truth: There is a reality I can’t see, but I will…
Somewhere between all ready and not yet. Where I’m going is all about a reality I can’t see—yet!

Now faith is the reality of what is hoped for, the proof of what is not seen. Hebrews 11:1 ESV

[F]or we walk by faith, not by sight 2 Corinthians 5:7

Fight the good fight for the faith; take hold of eternal life, to which you were called and have made a good confession before many witnesses. 1 Timothy 6:12

I once had a false impression of where I was going; now it’s clearer. While I won’t have a perfect image until I see it with my own eyes, I can walk more confidently in truth now about the future. (I’m learning to walk that out every day.) I don’t really wonder where I’m going. I do wonder what it will be like to see and embrace the perfect presence of God with a newly-created mind and body. (Can I be a little taller, please? *giggle*) And my spirit longs for that in some way every day! You, too?

When you think about your future, what feelings do you have? What about the future do you long for most? Comment below or at the FACETS Facebook page. I’d love to hear from you.

If you haven’t, take a peek at Tracy’s thoughts from last week, too!

Signature, Jennifer Howe

Categories // Jennifer Howe's Perspective, Life, Life Lessons Tags // Facets of Faith, Faith, Identity, Jennifer J Howe, Jesus, truth

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