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1.31.2010

suffering well.

i have no doubt that anyone reading this blog has heard of matt chandler and his fight against brain cancer. the associated press recently released an article about him that has been published in newspapers across the country. if you haven't already, you really should read it. it's incredibly well-written. praise god that such a powerful word has been read by so many.

i've now read the article about three times, and each time my heart is challenged and convicted. my mind is racing with questions, so i keep reading it thinking i might find answers, but instead, the questions just race faster. so rather than presenting some organized, eloquent thoughts on the matter, i simply come with a list of questions. feel free to jump in and be a part of the processing.
  • how does "suffering well" translate from enduring a fight against cancer to grieving the death of someone you love?
  • has he really only asked "why me?" once? is it okay that i ask that question almost daily?
  • his calvinist theology is clearly communicated through this article. as always, it makes me slightly uncomfortable, but i can't help wondering: is it the secret to his ability to maintain such a perspective on suffering?
  • "he says he feels grateful that God has counted him worthy to endure it. he has always preached that God will bring both joy and suffering..." is it necessary to believe that second sentence in order to have the sense of gratitude described in the first?
  • during the last three years, have i grieved well? do i have regrets?
  • have i remained steadfast, or do i "grieve as others do who have no hope"? (1 thessalonians 4.13)
  • in the last three years, have i endured this trial in such a way as to point others to the gospel? in the future, will i face trials in such a way as to point others to the gospel?
in today's my utmost for his highest reading, oswald chambers writes:

"The one passion of Paul's life was to proclaim the Gospel of God. He welcomed heartbreaks, disillusionments, tribulation, for one reason only, because these things kept him in unmoved devotion to the Gospel of God."

may we be unmoved in our devotion to the gospel. may we learn to suffer well.

2 comments:

B said...

So very true....Oswald Chambers always puts it best.

erintumlin.blogspot.com said...

great post, ceej - and for your encouragement ... you have encouraged and challenged me in the last three years. you have suffered (grieved) well, and I am grateful for that. thanks for letting me in on some of the journey. thanks for teaching me.