Never Forget

We will never forget Psalm 147:3

Some of you reading right now remember this day. Some of you are too young to remember. Still some of you had not yet come into being. For my generation, this is the day in history we will Never Forget. This is my story.

19 years ago, today, I dropped my older son, Duncan, off to Kindergarten for only the third day. These were full days, so it was quite a change for this stay-at-home mom. I sat at home with my younger son, Ben, who was soon to be three years old. As I did every morning, I turned on the network’s Morning Show on TV to maintain a sense of normalcy. Little did I know that normalcy had become a thing of the past.

Serious tones and smoke billowing out of a building were the first images I saw. I sat intently in front of the TV. It was chaos, and like everyone else watching – including the news casters – I was trying to figure out what had happened.

“SPECIAL REPORT” streamed across the screen. A plane crash occurred on the Southern tip of Manhattan and as a result the North World Trade Center had been hit, or at least that was the initial news. At 8:52 am, that was still unconfirmed, but there was no doubt the upper floors of the building were on fire as smoke billowed out in a constant plume of thick dark ash. Eyewitnesses called into the networks to share what they had seen. Some of these witnesses were only blocks from the building. For some of these witnesses, their words heard and faces seen on national news would be the last their loved ones would have of them.

One caller thought it was a plane and another thought it was a missile. One street reporter asked an eyewitness what they saw. “Everything was coming out. All the windows were coming out; papers were flying everywhere.”

“Are there any people hurt, do you know?” the reporter asked.

Are there any people hurt…

As the news cameras kept the burning building on the screen, images of a second plane hitting the other tower were broadcast live. This plane hit further down towards the middle of the South tower. Images from every angle showed a plane flying low, turning sharply, and flying into the tower.

Panic was heard on every station.

I grabbed my Ben and held him close. He was a wiggle worm but seemed to understand I needed him near.

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.  ~Psalm 46:1

My Nana, who is – at the time of this article – now 101 was at home sleeping. Everyone knows not to call her before Noon. It was only a few minutes after 9:00 in the morning. I called her anyway. At first, she didn’t understand what I was saying, but got out of bed and turned on her TV. “I want to go get Duncan,” I kept saying.

“Honey, there’s nothing that will help by bringing him home from school.”

“I think we’re under attack,” I replied.

“It’s in New York City and seems to be isolated there. Leave him in school.”

We sat on the phone silently watching the news together.

Panic and disbelief flooded the morning news stations. The words “deliberate” and “terrorist act,” sprinkled through the noise on the TV.

“I think we have a terrorist act of proportions no one can begin to imagine,” one newscaster said.

I wanted so desperately to go and get Duncan. Tears streamed down my face. Every essence of my being wanted both of my boys with me.

Nana is a very wise woman. More than a century young, she was born into the Spanish flu pandemic right after WWI, experienced WW2 in her twenties, and was the nurse doctors turned to for advice most of her life. When I have had times in my life where my emotions tried to get the best of me, I turned to her – my earthly rock – for words of wisdom to keep me on the right course. She is the hands and heart of Jesus to me.

So, there I sat clinging to my Nana through the phone.

“An act of terrorism,” “hijacked,” and reminders of a bombing at the World Trade Center grew louder and louder on the television.

Elevators were out in both towers and due to the thick smoke, most were in total darkness. Rescue efforts had begun at both locations. Terrified individuals would walk hundreds, if not more than a thousand steps to the bottom and would run out into the street.

Some individuals were trapped on the upper floors. Intense heat rose into their areas and they broke widows in an attempt to escape the furnace-like heat and suffocating smoke. More than 1,000 feet above ground, lives were moved to hang out of these widows as the lesser of two evils.

The news broke to President George W. Bush who was visiting the Emma E. Booker Elementary School in Sarasota, FL. Students and adults stood behind the President as he revealed live on nation news that this was a terrorist act. After a moment of silence, he quickly left and would be on Air Force One in no time. That plane would end up being the only plane in the sky as more events unfolded.

The picture on the TV changed. The caption at the bottom of the screen read “The Pentagon – Washington, DC.”

“… Let me interrupt you here for a second..,” said Peter Jennings to a witness over the phone, “We now have a fire at the Pentagon.”

My eyes grew wide and Nana spoke only one word – “Go.”

“I love you!” I said as I hung up the phone. I ran out of the house with Ben, jumped into the van, and raced to the school to get Duncan. The school office was somber and the voice of the Principal broke through the quiet saying something like, “they’ll find out when the kids take lunch.” An obviously upset secretary asked what I needed. “I’m here to pick up my son.”

“Why?” she asked in a sharp tone.

“He has a dentist appointment,” were the quickest words I could muster.

“Oh,” she said. “Go ahead.”

I would later learn from Duncan’s teacher that I looked like a ghost when I entered the room. I had so desperately wanted to tell her what was wrong, but all I could say was, “You’ll find out soon.”

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.
~Psalm 23:4

That day, thousands lost their lives as a result of four hijacked planes. The fourth plane was taken back by passengers who had heard about the other planes during their flight. Two brave men lead the battle to fight off the terrorist pilots and drove the plane into the ground to save the lives of countless others who would have died had the terrorist plot been completed. “Let’s roll,” became a victor cry.

He heals the brokenhearted and binds of their wounds.  ~Psalm 147:3

Nearly two decades after the event my little boys are now grown men. Instead of planes hitting towers, New York City is on high alert for the resurgence of COVID-19 which shut down the city, much like that of September 11, 2001. Instead of arriving at an airport and running in quickly to catch your flight, security and precautions in place necessitate your arrival hours in advance.

At the site of the two towers lie two massive memorials with the names of all the lives lost that day in NYC. Nearby stands one single tower – a beacon of hope, a symbol of resilience, and a message to America’s enemies which implies “You can knock us down, but we’ll get right back up again.”

If you remember this day, share your account. If you were too young to remember, ask someone where they were on this day. I say this not so that we remain living in the past, but so that the words many of us promised that day would remain true and the lives of those who perished and those who rescued would be honored…

NEVER FORGET.

Physical and Spiritual Health

For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind. ~2 Timothy 1:7

That’s can be difficult to understand or believe when life throws you a curve ball, such as it has done recently with the Coronavirus known as Covid 19. I’m a mom of two grown boys, both of whom continue to work. One is more shielded as he works overnights with only one other person. My other son works for a pharmacy chain traveling from store to store. I also have a beloved grandmother, Nana, who is 100 years old. I help to care for her, as do her wonderful neighbors. She still lives alone in the house I’ve known all my life.

As you can see, worry and fear are part of my daily routine. That is why I seek out wisdom for keeping all of us healthy, and encouragement for my heart and soul.

For each of you reading, know I am praying for you, your situation, your health and the wellbeing of your family. I hope words bring you comfort.

Wisdom for Keeping our Family Healthy

My sister is a nurse, and I remember years ago she shared with me her routine when she would get home from work in order to keep her family from contracting some mega germ. She’s very wise and I want to share that wisdom with all of you.

Kids and family are not allowed to greet here until all of the following is complete:

  • Come in through the garage or side door.
  • Remove shoes and disrobe from there using a plastic bag as a hamper for all your clothes.
  • Put on a clean disposable or bleachable pair of socks, or a pair of slippers only for this use to walk through the house.
  • Immediately go into the shower and thoroughly wash everything from head to toe. Take your time and remember to get behind your ears, under your fingernails, and every other nook and cranny.
  • Dry off, get into clean clothes.
  • Now you can greet your family.
  • As for the clothing in the plastic hamper, use rubber gloves to handle the bag and dump clothing directly into washer to clean immediately. Dispose of plastic bag (using rubber gloves) outside into trash can.
  • Wash hands for 20 seconds minimum.

For anyone who is deemed an essential worker, is making deliveries of any kind, works in healthcare, pharmacies, or is even the one in the family who goes out to get groceries or prescriptions – if you are going out and mixing with other people in any way for any reason, taking the above steps is a great way to come back into your home in order to keep loved ones safe.

Encouragement for Your Heart and Soul

I remember September 11, 2001. My older son had just started kindergarten days before and my younger was still a toddler. I was glued to the television for weeks. I “needed” to know every bit of news. I feared we would be attacked again. I prayed they would find survivors. I wanted to know right away if there were any changes or new news day and night.

It was a month I will never get back; a month where my family got very little of me, and the TV and radio got all of me. Thankfully it didn’t damage my relationships, but it did have a lasting effect on my psyche as there are images I will never forget – terrible images that may very well have been replaced with the laughter of friends and family had I not become so overwhelmed by those events.

Back then, I did not have a strong relationship with God. I was a busy stay-at-home mom who “had it all under control.” It would be two years beyond 9-11 before I allowed God to break through and show me what real hope was. He showed me that I was not in control of anything, but He was. He revealed that watching TV and social media shows me very little, but He sees all. He assured me that I could sleep because He hears everything.

God knows all. I don’t have to be glued to the TV, radio, or social media to know every detail of the spread of Covid 19. Of course, there are updates I need to know, such as the latest legislation enacted by our governor, changes of store hours, any travel bans, and how to get tested should anyone in our family become ill. Those things I need to know. Beyond that, everything else is superfluous.

What we truly need is encouragement through these times. We need to fill our hearts, souls, and lives with hope and here are some great ways to do that:

Don’t Panic. Don’t allow fear to discourage you. We can take precautions to keep ourselves healthy while being a calm example to those who all who are frightened by what is happening.

Be kind and Show Understanding. We hear of people hoarding necessities and others reselling for ridiculous prices. Don’t repay their actions with mean social media posts.

Fear is a strong emotion that drives people to do things that they would not normally do, like hoarding. There is a strong sense of fight or flight in each of us. For many, this sense is active in the midst of all that is going on. If you see someone at the store, ask them how they’re holding up. Show them that you care.

Share. Reach out to your neighbors to make sure they are ok. Share resources: Toilet paper, soap, food items, etc. Not only will it help those in need, but it will give all of us a sense of community and compassion – something all of us need.

All of these actions are actions of love. When so many are kept up in our homes, some alone and feeling isolated, these actions can be lifesaving in so many ways. Below are some Scriptures to help you control your fears and focus on kindness, understanding, compassion, and love.

Bless and be blessed dear reader…

To Combat Fear

Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. ~Philippians 4:6-7

But now thus says the Lord, he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel: “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you. ~Isaiah 43: 1-2

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. ~Philippians 4:8

Kindness and Understanding

Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you. ~Ephesians 4:32

But love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return, and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High, for he is kind to the ungrateful and the evil. ~Luke 6:35

Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer each person. ~Colossians 4:6

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. ~Proverbs 3:5

Blessed is the one who finds wisdom, and the one who gets understanding, for the gain from her is better than gain from silver and her profit better than gold. She is more precious than jewels, and nothing you desire can compare with her. Long life is in her right hand; in her left hand are riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. ~Proverbs 3:13-18

Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. ~1 Peter 4:8

Sharing and Compassion

Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the Lord, and he will repay him for his deed. ~Proverbs 19:17

Do not neglect to do good and to share what you have, for such sacrifices are pleasing to God. ~Hebrews 13:16

Give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you. ~Luke 6:38

And he [Jesus] answered them, “Whoever has two tunics is to share with him who has none, and whoever has food is to do likewise.” ~Luke 13:11

Let all that you do be done in love. ~1 Corinthians 16:14

 

Saturday

Today is Saturday. Yesterday was Saturday. This is living in Saturday.

That thing you’ve been waiting for – the job you’ve wanted, the soul mate you’ve prayed to find, the wayward child you can’t seem to reach, the endless impulses that hold you, healing that never seems to come… you’re living in Saturday.

Are you hurting a hurt that seems endless? Carrying a burden that presses you down? Has your path had more valleys than hills? Are you wondering if your suffering will ever be lifted from you? You’re living in Saturday.

Have you tried and tried only to meet failure after failure? Have you prayed from the depths of your soul, believing God would answer, only to be met with silence? Has your well of Hope run dry and you’re on your knees with no more words? This is your Saturday.

You’re not alone.

Today is Saturday. But…

Sunday is coming.

There was this guy. He had a dear friend – a best friend. When these two guys met, they clicked as if they’d been friends forever. The guy quit his job and with lofty goals, the two of them set out to change the world. Things started out pretty good and the guy believed he and his friend really could achieve their dream.

Then Saturday came.

His friend died.

Dreams were shattered; a future erased. Darkness filled the man’s soul with unspeakable sorrow, swallowing up every ounce of hope he had. Loss. Failure. The Valley. Silence from above.

Suddenly, Sunday arrived – and Sunday changed everything.

His friend returned, alive and back to change the world.

You might be thinking, “Seriously? You expect me to believe that? Even if it’s true, that wouldn’t happen with me.”

The man’s name was Peter; his friend was Jesus Christ. It happened. It’s true. And perhaps the end to your suffering won’t come in three days, or your loved one won’t return to you as Jesus did for Peter, but your Sunday is coming.

Try this modern-day true Saturday story…

Ben was a small-town boy who loved to play ball. Having not yet hit his growth spurt in High School, Ben was a good player, but not great. In fact, by his senior year in high school, Ben was a better basketball player, but he was filled with a passion for baseball. Like any Midwest kid with a baseball field in his backyard, his dream was to play ball in the big leagues. Scouts often passed over his small town when seeking college players and by the time Ben graduated high school, he had put baseball behind him. No offers had come in. No scholarships had been offered. Saturday had come.

Right after his birthday that same year, his high school coach encouraged him to attend a summer event to highlight his baseball talent. $50 from his birthday money got him into the camp where he caught the attention of a several colleges. Ben went to college, started playing ball and one day, one glorious day, Sunday came for Ben.

Ben Zobrist was drafted out of college by the Houston Astros and today, he is the 2016 World Series MVP. Looking back, Ben never thought he’d play in the major leagues. He was happy to ever play to pay for college – that had been his goal post high school. But Sunday… Sunday had something greater in store.

There is great hope in Sunday, but first, you have to get through Saturday.

First, we must yield to the fact that God’s ways are not our ways. When He seems absent, it is when He is doing His mightiest work in your life. He is putting together all the pieces and parts that will make your Sunday so incredible. God is taking people, moments, situations and circumstances near and far, and setting them in motion. God is taking your heart, allowing it to break apart so that He can build it back up to be more in tune and better prepared for His plan to usher in the Sunday that awaits you. God is so incredibly close on Saturday, it’s not that He’s absent – it’s that He’s so close, we don’t recognize Him.

‘For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,’ declares the Lord.” ~Isaiah 55:8

Next, we must yield to the fact that God will answer our prayers in the best way for us – and we simply cannot, from our infinitesimally limited perspective, know what that is. We take delight in asking applicants where they see themselves in five years, ten years. Entire businesses are built upon developing life plans and how to get to where we see ourselves in retirement when we’re 25 years old. Does any 25 year old have any sense of the responsibility and discipline it takes to foresee life in retirement at age 25? No! But we ask, we expect, we plan accordingly. Friends, does it not seem strange to stand on the East coast and plot a course for the Pacific by simply telling ourselves, “Just head West” with the expectation the path is straight and we’ll reach our destination easily? Yet, that is what we do with so many things in our lives. We forget that we have Someone who is far wiser, whose vision is far wider and plans are far greater than anything we could imagine.

As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts. ~Isaiah 55:9

Third, and this may be the most difficult, we must be patient. For us, a day is 24 hours, or 1440 minutes, or 86,400 seconds long. When every moment seems to count, no wonder it feels like forever for Sunday to arrive. For Peter, it was roughly a day, and believe me, when His hopes and dreams were shattered, that day may as well have been a year. But for some, it is literally years; hundreds and hundreds of days, millions of minutes, hundreds of millions of seconds.

But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience. ~Romans 8:25

Here’s the really cool thing. Are you listening?

Sunday happens in a second. In just the passing of a second, a new day arrives. That’s all it takes for God to work and for Sunday to arrive.

For still the vision awaits its appointed time; ~Habakkuk 2:3

He has made everything beautiful in its time. ~Ecclesiastes 3:11

God knows all about your Saturday. He knows that Saturday can last a day and seem like a year; Saturday can last years and feel like forever. God knows that when we’re living in Saturday, He can seem silent to us, distant from us, absent from our lives. During that Saturday between the day Jesus died and rose again, God was defeating death! Thumbing His nose at evil and preparing to declare victory to all of creation! Friends, God is never absent, never not working for your good, for on Sunday, it will be revealed to us all the work He has been doing to bring about the dawn of joy that follows our Saturdays.

Jesus answered him, “What I am doing you do not understand now, but afterward you will understand.” ~John 13:7

Are you living in Saturday? Take heart dear friend… your Sunday is coming.

Faith: Dare to Dream

When is the last time you dared to believe – really believe – the impossible?

The last time I did, I was practically a kid. The faith of a child is unstoppable. When we’re young, we don’t see obstacles, we see challenges awaiting victory! Do you remember how huge everything was as a kid? Get on your knees and make your way around your home for a while. The counters are higher, tables seem longer, light switches just out of reach (well, out of reach for those of us with short arms). Things were so big from our perspective, and yet we went along undeterred. A child knows things that we forget as we grow older. A child knows a parent will pick them up when they fall, hold them close when they hurt, reach things they cannot, heal boo-boos, and set into motion moments that leave fascinated. Watch a child sometime. One moment, they may be hurt, perhaps even in tears, running into the arms of that parent who loves them so much. The next moment, the child is off again to the next big adventure.

Children believe in the impossible all the time, and that is the kind of faith God desires of us. God wants us to look at Him and His abilities with the utmost trust, in wondrous awe and joy-filled expectation. When Jesus came down to this earth – a world filled with sin and darkness, I believe His heart smiled every time He saw a child: a child at play, a child hugging a parent, a child holding the hand of a loved one – free from worry, trusting completely, believing everything would be ok. Jesus made this point to His disciples as He called a child over to Him. *Matthew, *Mark and *Luke all record the same message, “Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.”* The heart and mind of a child freely runs to Jesus, without hesitation, trusting with complete and utter faith, and that is precisely what He wants us to do today.

Ok. So, life has knocked you down and pushed you around. Maybe you’ve become cynical. I can understand that. The world has that kind of effect. You’re bigger now, you have more experience, things didn’t always turn out the way you had hoped and it’s just easier to travel on this journey as a passenger. You know Jesus, you love Him and you believe one day you’ll live with Him forever because He died for your sins. Isn’t that enough faith?

Yes, we believe that Jesus died for our sins, that He – God Himself – humbled Himself upon a cross, enduring torture and a crushing no man has ever or will ever experience again, died and rose again so that we may live with Him for all eternity. But, my friend, there is far more to this life we are presently living. We are to shine for Jesus, proclaiming His miraculous ways. The only way to do that is to really believe. If God would die for you before you even came into being, He is certainly with you today. God has amazing plans for you in this life, as well as the next. He wants you to believe the impossible is possible. He wants you to look at the challenges of life and defiantly say to them, “Move you mountain! Jesus has plans for my day today!” Jesus wants you to run to Him and “trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding,” He wants you to believe with all your heart, soul and mind that He is there, at work, moving those mountains. So, dig into His Word to hear His promises, strengthen your faith, and draw closer to Him. Be “[assured] of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” God wants you and me to have faith like a child.

The more you practice your faith in God, the stronger it will become. So let’s practice, shall we? I recently read in a devotion something that blew me away. In “Sun Stand Still” by Steven Furtick, he writes “If you’re not daring to believe God for the impossible, you’re sleeping through some of the best parts of your Christian life. And further still…” listen to this. “… if the size of the vision for your life isn’t intimidating to you, there’s a good chance it’s insulting to God.”

Think about that for a moment. “If the size of the vision for your life isn’t intimidating to you…” When was the last time you dared to dream audaciously? When was the last time you looked at an obstacle and knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that God would make a way for you? When was the last time you had faith like a child?

There was a guy in the Bible named Joshua, and he was the guy in the Bible who followed in the footsteps of Moses. No pressure there. He would lead God’s people into the Promised Land. But there were mountains in their way; mountains in the form of armies. Now Joshua had faith – a faith I strive to have each and every day. Joshua needed more daytime to defeat his enemies and so he commanded the sun to stand still so they would have enough daylight to win the fight. A man, like you and I, made the sun – that huge celestial ball of fire at the center of our solar system, stand still. Yet, Joshua took no credit. He knew God was with him and he knew that God would make it happen. It was a step, cry, command of faith in God… and God did in fact make the sun stand still for Joshua. But God didn’t just stop there! No, He went well beyond that. God protected His people. The earth didn’t burn up as it stood against the heat of the sun. God fought alongside Joshua. He brought hailstones upon their enemies, easing the burdens of His people. God brought to fruition the hopes and dreams of Joshua and His people – seemingly impossible hopes and dreams He planted in their hearts long ago – and it was all done that day with one act of faith, a cry out to God from one humble, believing, trusting man who believed in the impossible, and the One who could make it happen.

Here’s the challenge: Today, right now, begin your journey towards trusting God for whatever seems impossible. Dream audacious dreams. Answer the courageous calling He has for you. Believe like a child and then step out in bold faith knowing that “nothing is impossible with God.” (Luke 1:37)

*Matthew 18:3, Mark 10:15, Luke 18:17