Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? [.] But in all things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. -Romans 8:35, 37-39
There are times when life is not about moving forward.
George Lacy was a public school teacher when he and his wife Minnie decided to take their vocational skills to the mission field. In 1903, the couple and their five children journeyed to
Joy turned to sorrow one year later when scarlet fever swept through their household. First their youngest daughter fell ill; she died before doctors could diagnose her illness. Almost immediately, their youngest son fell ill, too, and just as quickly passed away.
Not yet knowing what was wrong, but desperate to escape the illness, Mrs. Lacy and the three eldest children immediately boarded a train out of
Three more times in the next few days, his faith would be challenged by a parent's worst nightmare: Before their train reached home, the three remaining children also died of the fever.
Lacy's letters to the Foreign Mission Board describe with terrible simplicity the utter despair he and his wife felt in those hours. He writes: "Sometimes it seems more than we can bear"
Some of you are facing just such a time now. The pain of the loss of a loved one; the struggles of caring for elderly parents who no longer remember you; the uncertainty and fears of grave illness; the loss of a job; the debilitating and misunderstood darkness of depression; all of these and so much more are real parts of a fallen world. In these moments it often seems more than we can bear. We cry out to God with questions, sometimes even in frustration and anger. When the answers aren't apparent, it often feels like He isn't there, or isn't listening.
He is there and he is not silent, though the sound of His voice may be hard to discern and the touch of His hand may not be easily felt.
These are the times when the work of the Holy Spirit goes on in you even in fits of rebellion, even in the very face of spiritual doubt. When you can no longer pray, the Holy Spirit lifts your heart's deepest prayers for you. When you cannot move forward one more step, the place where you pause is inhabited by a Trinity of compassion. Paul understood this when he built his list in Romans 8 of the things which cannot separate us from the love of Christ. He knew clearly what we need to remember when the pain is too great: It is not necessary for us to hold on to the love of Christ in those difficult times because He is doing the work, making certain nothing that is done to us, indeed nothing that we do ourselves, separates us from His love.
George and Minnie Lacy returned to
It was not their own strength that moved them through the storm. It was the promise Christ made that "I will never leave you nor forsake you."
He has not left you either. He will never leave you nor forsake you.
It's His permanent promise.
--Randy Kilgore
For a look at the letters Dr. Lacy wrote to the Southern Baptist Convention's Foreign Mission Board during this crisis, visit our new website, www.madetomatter.org.
