Sunday, February 15, 2009

February 15

Two weeks and a day have passed since my last post, and I am here to report that I am presently working the five hour per day light-duty assignment, a custodian's job in Archdale, and will continue to do this for a month or more until I am ready to come back to carrying mail. I putter around, here and there, all at my own sweet pace. God is so very good!

I was sharing with my pastor today that, prior to my surgery, several groups of people had prayed for divine healing of the tumor. I believed with all my heart that this was a possibility, and even asked for one more MRI in case it had happened. It had not, however, and I proceeded with the surgery.

If it had happened, I would have missed one of the great blessings of my life. This whole process has brought me much closer to Jesus and has begun to warm my heart in a way I had longed for but never really thought possible. More specifically, I have been able to spend more time with Jesus and to grow, albeit so slowly, in the captivating, lovely discipline of drawing near to God. I had known beforehand what it meant to be warmed and nurtured by the Word of God, to crawl up on Jesus' lap, so to speak, and pour my heart out, to listen for his voice to me, but these times were much more irregular than they should have been. It occurred to me after the surgery that the time God was giving me was a great gift, and so I began to spend regular periods in the evening reading my Bible and then praying--either lying on my back beside my bed or just kneeling. Sometimes my mind would wander, but I saw a growth in my ability to call it back.

Somewhere along the line, I asked specifically to be able to pray passionately, and, praise God, that is happening more frequently.

And one more thing. I have begun, oh so slowly, to comprehend the amazing love of the triune God for Chuck Eggerth. There was a time when I did not really think I could comprehend it. Now I'm thinking differently--now I believe he wants me to know and experience and live in that tender, overwhelming love.

The challenge now is to transfer the evening time to the morning, which will involve getting up earlier. I'm not sure I'm up to it, but I'm going to try.

Sheldon Van Auken wrote a book entitled "A Severe Mercy." In it he recounts the death of his beloved wife and all the beauty that terrible, terrible grief ultimately worked into his life. My situation is not tragic like his, but the beauty is similar, and it has stirred my soul.

By the way, you don't need a brain tumor to experience this.

But that's what it took for me!

1 comment:

  1. Wow, Chuck!

    I am experiencing that in a tiny way here in our own trial.

    If God uses cancer to draw us much closer to Himself... how can that be a bad thing?

    Love you so much!
    Your kid sis, Elaine

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