Category Archives: Life

Don’t give up hope

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Benjamin shares our big news.

The news came suddenly and rather surprisingly back in early March. After more than two years of trying to conceive our second child, I’d been so used to the same cycle that I expected to hear the same result from my wife Amy and to walk through that same familiar feeling of disappointment that we’d done so many times before.

But this was different. The test was positive. Amy was pregnant with our second child. Praise God!

I almost couldn’t believe it. It felt like it wasn’t real. It couldn’t be possible that after two years of challenges, doubt, uncertainty and tremendous transition that God had blessed us with a second child. But it was true. All of it!

From the outset, we knew we might be in for a challenge. It took about a year to conceive Benjamin, our first child, back in 2010. That was a time of uncertainty and questioning but we slowly learned to trust in God and his timing. We thought that period was hard, but little did we know about the path ahead.

We always felt that our family wasn’t complete at three and knew that God put the desire for second child on our hearts, but some days it seemed like an impossible dream. We’d both been through tests and screenings. Yet, we never gave up hope and we never stopped praying. But for some reason there is sometimes this disconnect that even though you see God’s faithfulness, provision and miracles in the Bible and in the testimonies of friends and other believers, you don’t think he will bless you in the same way. I mean either God is God and we are part of His story today or he’s not.

I’ve learned so much: humility, patience, surrender, persistence and trust in God’s timing. But most of all I’ve learned about endurance, about trusting what God is telling you through the Holy Spirit and not giving up faith. It’s easy to give up, but to endure and finish you must keep moving and keep trusting in God and His timing.

A Reboot backpacking trip in northwest Alabama’s Sipsey Wilderness in March reminded me of this journey. On the first day of trip, me and five other guys hiked about 6 miles through the rain and mud crossing numerous streams on our way to see the very scenic but very rugged Bee Branch Canyon and Big Tree area. It was a pretty tough challenge. We made camp that night very close to our destination, but with the hardest part of the journey still ahead on day two. The last half-mile follows an unmaintained trail to get to the Big Tree. The path is full of tree blowdowns you have to hopscotch over and sometimes crawl under. The terrain that day was very muddy and slick. It felt like walking 2 or 3 miles.

About 30 minutes into hiking this difficult last stretch, it was easy to think about giving up and just turn back. However, we pushed through and only about 5 minutes later, we were rewarded with the awesome and exhilarating views of the canyon and its waterfalls. We were pumped and relived to finally make it to this remote, rugged canyon. We had endured, and this was our reward. A journey of 6 ½ rugged, hard-fought miles was complete.

One of the waterfalls at Bee Branch Canyon in the Sipsey Wilderness.

One of the waterfalls at Bee Branch Canyon in the Sipsey Wilderness.

As we spent about 45 minutes exploring the area, my mind wandered to thinking, “what if we had given up and turned back just minutes before our destination?” Enduring and pushing through 5 more minutes of pain was totally worth it to get to the awesome, scenic reward of the tallest poplar tree in Alabama framed by two waterfalls.

With our second child, what if we had given up hope after a year? What if we’d stopped praying after 18 months? What if I believed and given in to some fears that arose after I had a test done? What if we’d given in to some suggestions offered by a well-meaning nurse? Thank God we trusted Him and followed the Holy Spirit’s lead.

The whole thing finally became less like a dream and more real for me when we were standing in the ultrasound room at Amy’s first maternity appointment. After getting a glimpse at this 6 ½ week miracle with a strong heartbeat, we prayed and gave thanks to God. It was overwhelming. God is faithful!

Now we are on new trail in our journey as a family. We’ve still got a few more months to go the pregnancy and a lot to prepare for before we welcome our second son into the world this fall. There are some uncertainties, but I know this: as long as you as a family put God first and seek after His kingdom, he will provide what you need exactly when you need it.

If you are facing something or in the middle of something and feel like quitting and giving into fear: Never give up hope. Never stop praying. Never stop believing that God the creator of the universe loves you and cares for you. Don’t listen to the voices of fear that tell you lies like it won’t happen to you, that this is a punishment, that you aren’t good enough. It’s not true.

If you don’t know Christ. I beg of you to turn to Him and seek Him. Having a deep relationship with Christ is the most important thing you can have in your life. He is your shepherd, your guardian, your hope, your rock. He will transform your life from the inside out. As this piece hopefully shows, your life won’t be free of troubles, but you’ll always have everlasting and eternal hope.

“Even though the fig trees have no blossoms and there are no grapes on the vine; even though the olive crop fails, and the fields lie empty and barren; even though the flocks die in the fields and the cattle barns are empty, yet I will rejoice in the Lord! I will be joyful in the God of my salvation. The sovereign Lord is my strength! He will make me as surefooted as a deer and bring me safely over the mountains.”  Habakkuk 3:17-20

God's word always offers a spring of hope.

God’s word always offers a spring of hope.

God uses the ordinary

Gaining a new perspective from an overlook along the Pinhoti Trail.

Think you aren’t qualified enough to do something God has called you to? I don’t feel qualified either.

But guess what? The Bible is littered with tons of examples of God using everyday, ordinary people to accomplish extraordinary things for His kingdom.

When I started Reboot, I didn’t have any sort of formal ministry training. I just had a love for backpacking and hiking and just being outdoors. And I think helping people connect to Christ for the first time or deepen their relationship with Christ is the most important thing I can do. So, I felt strongly that God was calling me to combine the two into what is now Reboot Wilderness. But it took a step of faith to overcome my fear and make this idea a reality.

As I’ve walked through this ministry for the past couple of years, I’m continuing to learn a lot. One of the biggest lessons is that if God is calling you to do something, He’s going to provide what you need exactly when you need it. It might not look like what you think it should, but He will lead you step-by-step. However, it requires taking that first scary step where it goes from an idea that you’ll do someday when you have more time, more training, etc. to reality.

In my experience, this is the point when Satan often uses his handy tricks of self-doubt and fear. I start thinking I’m not qualified or not good enough and then I really start to overthink everything. I don’t think I’m alone with that feeling, and sometimes it is enough to scare us away and prevent us from even trying something that God is calling us to do. But the Bible is very clear that these are the types of people God loves to use.

Recently, I’ve been hit with this theme a lot in my Bible reading, as I prepare to start a weekly men’s small group lunch gathering. I think we sometimes forget the power of God when we trust Him, surrender our agendas to Him and are obedient to what He is calling us to do – whether it is something simple or something really big.

Check out these examples:

Most of the disciples were fishermen with no special education, hardly the qualification one would look for on paper when selecting candidates for spreading the Good News about Christ to the world.

When Peter and John went before the ruling council after healing a lame man in Jesus’ name at the Temple entrance, they were filled with the Holy Spirit so much that it shocked the Jewish leaders.

“The members of the council were amazed when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, for they could see that they were ordinary men who had had no special training. They also recognized them as men who had been with Jesus.” – Acts 4:13

The prophet Amos was just a shepherd and a fig-tree grower when God called him to send a warning message to Israel and Judah.

“I am not one of your professional prophets. I certainly never trained to be one. I’m just a shepherd, and I take care of fig trees. But the Lord called me away from my flock and told me, ‘Go and prophesy to my people in Israel.’” – Amos 7:14-15

Moses…

David as a child…

The list goes on….

Don’t feel qualified? You are in very good company. Take the next step and surrender that fear to God and trust Him to be faithful to what He is calling you to do.

‘I just want to be happy,’ or what being dad to a toddler is teaching me about perspective

Easter 2013 meltdown

Easter 2013 meltdown

Since Father’s Day last month and my son Benjamin’s birthday last week, I’ve been thinking about how being a dad has given me a little better understanding of the patience God as our Father has with us, His children. One example in particular struck me.

Benjamin is a joy to be around and I’m so proud and honored to be his dad. He truly is a gift from God. He’s funny, he’s smart and he has a great imagination. However, as with any 3 year old, we are always only minutes away from a meltdown over something very minor like “I wanted to flush the potty,” “I don’t want to take a bath,” or “I want to wear the Superman shirt” even though he wore it all day yesterday and got dirt, sunscreen and food stains on it. (He would wear that Superman shirt for 100 days straight if he could).

Usually in the middle of a tantrum he says, “I just want to be happy.” It’s hard not to laugh but we try to patiently tell him that he can be happy and that what he is upset about is no big deal. We get him to stop, take a deep breath and calm down. It usually works and he is just fine a few minutes later.

As parents, it’s easy for Amy and me to get frustrated because we can easily see that 99 percent of time what he is upset about is very temporary and is no big deal in the grand scheme of things.

But that got me thinking, isn’t that how we often act toward God when we don’t get recognized for good work, when we feel like no one cares, when things don’t go how we expected, or when we are facing a challenge?

We lose perspective and think the world is ending because we are facing a challenge that maybe God is using to grow us and strengthen our faith and dependence on Him. We let fear and anxiety take control and basically throw up a prayer, saying in so many words, “I just want to be happy.”

All the time, God is like the ever-patient parent who sees the big picture and says “Everything is going to be OK. Just take a deep breath, trust in Me and follow Me.”

“Don’t let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God, and trust also in me.” – Jesus in John 14:1 NLT