When you hit rock bottom, then you have located a foundation on which to build. A concrete pad. Can you think of tragedy that way?
Let’s call it the “bumper sticker of the week”: Often, the biggest favor God does is level the playing field.
Of course, that often means tearing down things. God’s a builder and sometimes that involves demolition.
What He demolishes is our evil, which can be in the way of our obsessions, our lusts, and especially our selfishness.
Tame the “self” and you’re halfway there!
Most of the time when God has to clean house, it’s because our pride has so badly messed things up (even our view of religion) that rubble has piled up around us or there are cracks to cement. We get blinded. We get attached to the rubble. We think it’s concrete, when it is really cardboard.
And we let it rise on all sides: ambition, over-competitiveness, unforgiveness, envy, things that always have an “I” to blame.
In other cases, it’s not so much that we have done anything wrong but that God is trying to clear the way for our expansion.
Whatever the case, when “devastation” comes, we should always look on it as an opportunity. One 9/11 widow, Cheryl McGuinness, whose husband was the pilot of one of the planes that hit the Trade Center, says she wants other people to realize that no matter what pains occur in life—”no”matter how horrific they can”be”—those tragedies can be overcome by “having a foundation that we can draw on in times of trial.”
Even illness and accidents have their place. They put things in (sudden) perspective.
As John Paul once wrote, illumination comes from purgation.
So many times in life, we just can’t seem to reach holiness without God sweeping everything aside. Major upheavals in our health, families, or careers are often enough to place things in a new, healthier perspective. It’s amazing how quickly the world we hold so dear can evaporate!
When things collapse (jobs, education, bank accounts), we discover how fleeting they were to begin with.
It’s God Who is always there—He is the only permanence—and what He is trying to show is that we should cling to Him, that we’ll be uneasy until we rest on His foundation.
He never said life would be easy, just worth it!
Persistence and even joy in the face of trial (especially surrender to the Divine Will) paves the road to the miraculous.
“Anytime I have ever stressed about not having enough money to pay the bills, the situation gets worse,” noted an e-mailer named Julie. “The more I try to control it, the less control I have. The very instant I give it all to God and bless and bless and bless the financial situation, however grim, the money flows in ways that truly do not seem physically possible.” Go with His flow. Forget numbers.
When we do that, often the results are far better than what we requested.
Anytime God tears something down, He is giving us the opportunity to build something better.
See His Hand in everything and it is easier to put everything into those awesome, awesome Hands and the flow of His Creation.
[resources: A Life of Blessings]
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