children are resilient.

children are resilient.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines resilience as an ability to recover from or adjust easily to misfortune or change.

I recently completed a college childhood development course covering birth to adolescence. It was fascinating to learn the physical development of the brain throughout each stage of life and what components are responsible for various functions.

This was not only about physical milestones. It covered emotional and mental development and how children are able (or unable) to accomplish specific objectives. One reason more than ever I love working with middle school students is because I now have a greater understanding of what children mentally or emotionally can or cannot accomplish. When I help my students, in a way, I am helping my 13 something year old self.

The college text I used did not reveal any biases in terms of heavily liberal or conservative ideologies. Facts were presented with various childhood development theories (can I say here that I think Sigmund Freud was out of his mind?). Science and medicine is an ongoing process. There will always be questions, hypotheses, experiments, and observations. Always.

One statement in my textbook stood out to me: children are resilient.

It resonated with me deeply because when I consider some of the painful situations I experienced as a child, it is amazing to me that I emotionally survived it. There were some serious situations that could have should have not happened. But they did. Certainly my faith throughout the years has been significant in helping me resolve the damage. Some unbelievers might argue differently. But will they argue with a NY state college textbook?

When you are involved in a church for decades, you hear many biblical promises that easily can become catch phrases such expecting “cheerful obedience” from your child. That sort of lines up with children should be seen and not heard and as my textbook says, an authoritarian parenting style. This is the mindset of expecting behavior that the child is not able to do. Would we expect a 3 month old to walk? But we expect (and even demand) a 13 year old to “straighten up and fly right” (which ironically, is a catch phrase from my parent’s generation from a Nat King Cole song). Perhaps one of the books a first time parent should read is one outlining childhood brain development. It would be beneficial, especially during the adolescent years. While children are resilient, wouldn’t we want all of the information to best serve them? Resiliency certainly isn’t an excuse to be neglectful.

We all have our stories. Some have situations worse than others. But we are who we are and pain is pain and how we interpret it as children (or adults for that matter) needs to be validated. Sometimes that is all a child or adult needs. Ackowledgment. Admission. You weren’t crazy. I did this. And getting an apology is nice but that may not happen.

We live in a time when understanding human behavior and conditions is at the forefront. The availablity of the internet with all of the podcasts, online articles, and Youtube, abound. We get to hear what everyone thinks about any given topic. Anyone and everyone can chime in with opinions. As is typical, whenever a new way of thinking or doing happens, it is easy to jump on the bandwagon. This is being human. And the Christian is not immune. Even in Christian circles it happens when one navigates toward a particular scripture that resonates with them and they build their life on it (e.g. faith movement).

One hot topic today is adult children crying foul because of their childhood. There are severe cases of abuse and I am not dismissing that. In fact, God has something to say about hurting children:

It would be better to be thrown into the sea with a millstone hung around your neck than to cause one of these little ones to stumble.

There is a tendency for us to go too far with anything until we should find balance. Inflciting pain upon a parent with boundaries (e.g. not talking to them, withholding grandchildren, etc.) because they are “toxic” might be just as bad as you being toxic to them. Again, there are valid reasons and I will not judge those reasons. But certainly, because we are capable of chasing the shiny objects of new trends, we should contemplate some deep questions. We are living in a time when people want to feel better and maybe the focus can become too self centered at times.

For the Christian, we carry a responsibility. When we say we are “in the world but not of it”, it means we have the ability to live free from the weight of human emotions of bitterness, anger, resentment, lust, etc. When the Apostle Paul asked God to remove the “thorn in the flesh” (something that was difficult), God said: “My grace is enough for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” This wasn’t some dry commandment to obey. God didn’t say, “Straighten up and fly right, Paul”. He offered freedom for Paul telling him what was in him to overcome. There is a mysterious transfer of our mind, will, and emotions that occurs when we do it God’s way. And Paul had to agree with it for it to happen.

But even if we don’t agree, in God’s goodness to humanity, he has wired us to overcome much. There is a reason why memes such as, “You got this” and “I believe in you” resonate with us.

Children are no different. They, too, are wired to be resilient.

God promises that there will be a day when he will wipe away every tear of our pain and suffering. We can gain inspiration from my favorite chapter in the Bible, Hebrews 11. We are surrounded by a great cloud of men and women who went before us, endured pain and suffering without understanding why, because of the hope God put in them and in us.

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sin.

sin.

There was a time when my world view was pretty blissful. 

It wasn’t because I was sheltered from pain. It was because my personality was to accept and move on. 

I believed doing good would reap good. This is often true. But life is not so neat and tidy like that. Because bad can happen to anybody at anytime for no particular reason.

That’s because of sin. That’s because the world is broken. We are broken. There is a kind of physical “law” in place which our world is immersed in: the effects of sin. God promises not to keep us from it, but to be with us in it.

We should certainly avoid sin at all costs. The Bible guides us in this. We make choices everyday to do wrong or right. Yet, we will fail and it can cause us trouble.

But other people fail and it can cause us trouble, too.

After losing my oldest adult son 18 years ago to suicide, my heart and everything I thought I knew was shattered. He, along with my other children, were raised in a family centered church. We were first generation Christians who wanted to see our children anchored to their faith in God and living their lives better than we did. I once taught a class on praying for your children – and believe me – I prayed constantly for them.

How can these things happen when you’ve covered all the bases?

Because-

“For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
Nor are your ways My ways,” says the Lord.
“For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
So are My ways higher than your ways,
And My thoughts than your thoughts.

Isaiah 55

We walk in as much light as we have. We may not do everything correctly as we follow the scriptures the way we understand them. But once God shows us how we are thinking is wrong, we must step back and trust we don’t have all the answers.

The scriptures that I thought was having faith gave way to the scriptures of what real faith is. Even though others around me were still doing their “prayers of faith”, believing for “complete healing” and such, my prayers of faith took a u-turn and I went a different way.

While the church was singing “I Surrender All” one Sunday, I wanted to say, “Do you? Do you really? Do you know what that might mean?”

Growing in faith when you have good outcomes is one thing. Growing in faith when you don’t is another thing.

Maybe it’s our western world culture. We are conditioned to grab hold of the shiny object we want when we should be grabbing the hem of Jesus’ garment. Either way, there is room for both. We can ask God for good things. But we have to be ready when the affect of living in a sinful world will knock us off our feet.

I found comfort in the scriptures of God’s protection. Until I realized it doesn’t necessarily mean from suffering but in suffering.

But there’s more.

The affects of sin is far greater than I thought. It touches every human being in some way. And I think when we have a greater understanding of this, we are more able to forgive (that’s for another day).

We are all prisoners to this world of sin. Yes, we see God’s presence in all the beauty around us. But we also have loss, sorrow, and death. 

For now, the world is locked into its present state. But that’s not the end. 

One day, God will break the hold of sin on the world.

Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. 

And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God.  ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”

When we are suffering because of sinful humanity in a sinful world, we should remember this promise. We have centuries of believers who have suffered greatly and endured.

We can, too.

heaven.

heaven.

On June 23, 2018, my father died. He was 89 years old.

I helped care for him the month of June in between working at a nearby school. June came and went – hard to believe.

The days seemed long but looking back, everything happened so quickly.

And now, reality sets in. He’s gone.

From here.

This prompted me to re-read a book I read 13 years ago, Imagine Heaven.

The reason I chose this book is because the author, John Burke, spent over 30 years researching the topic of near-death experiences from all kinds of people and all kinds of religions along with what the Bible has to say about Heaven.

It got me thinking about how little I have heard about Heaven. I’ve been in church for over 30 years and I do not recall a sermon or teaching. Is it because the Bible has little to say about it? Maybe. But since it is our forever home, I would think God would want us to know something about it.

Because to live well here, don’t we have to know something about life there?

One common thread with those Burke read about and interviewed, was the intensity of love the departed individual experienced. With their life displayed in a kind of panoramic view, the good, bad, and ugly – the love was still intense – no matter what. No shame, no guilt, no condemnation. Just love.

Granted, this is difficult for us to grasp but so is the enormity of the universe. Yet, we believe.

*Side note: all to often in Christian circles, morality seems to have replaced the love of God. Usually, Christians lean to one or the other. God does not condone sin, but his way of drawing us is with chords of love.” Holding morality, Christian values, and/or character up as the standard is missing the point. Time and time again, God has chosen men and women in the Bible who would not meet the criteria in conservative, traditional, Christian thought. Are we holding the Law up to the world of morality? Or are we holding up the Light of the world?

Each day, I watched my father dying. Death is ugly. And if God is good, and if Newton’s 3rd law is true, then there has to be something far greater in power than death.

We have all seen the beauty around us. It is only a foretaste of what is waiting for us.

Have you lost a loved one? Are you hurting? Suffering? Live with the hope and confidence of Heaven.

Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”

He who was seated on the throne said, “I am making everything new!” Then he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.”

-Revelation 21

 Tree in meadow under dramatic sky

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