My eighteenth summer held the day of my first heartbreak. Just the day before that, I had sat at my piano with a song swelling inside. “Come thou Fount of every blessing…” It was a praise to hold out where I was at peace that the step I was about to take was a step God was calling me into. I fully expected God to meet me in my step with His perfect blessings. But the way it all unfolded disappointed the three years of hope that led me there. And I curled with wet cheeks on the floor of our upstairs study with the small yellow flower that was my relief that day. St. John’s Wort. That was the flowers name.
I read that my yellow flower was named after John the Baptist. And that the crushed petals of the flower steeped in oil turn the oil into a blood red balm that is useful in treating wounds. When the petals are crushed they become a healing thing, but they have to be crushed first. It was fitting that the flower was named after the martyr. And it was fitting to the heart inside me that day.
It resonated so deeply and so dearly. Because I felt like a person who had just taken the most treasured, most long-guarded flower from my own garden and held it out shy, trusting and hoping that it would be received as a gift. But what felt to happen instead was that it’s petals were softly crushed.
The great hope I held was crushed. All that was love felt broken.
My flower that day was a new hope to hold. It was a hope that God was doing more beautiful things in the crushing of this than He could have done in giving me just what I hoped for. A hope that maybe in the crushing there was a kind of healing coming that I couldn’t understand.
The very next day I met a man named Luiz. I shook his hand having no idea that eight years before that moment he had had a dream that God showed him who he was supposed to wait for. And as we shook hands, he knew... I was the one.
One year later we stood side by side at our wedding with a song. “Come thou Fount of every blessing...” Today we share a home with our three babies and the sweetest kind of messy love in each other that we get to share every day.
Then, exactly seven years to the day after I lay in tears with my broken heart and my flower, I received what I never could have seen coming... The flower of hope I had held that had been crushed when I was eighteen was pieced back together in a whole new way. It was given back to me not at all as I had first hoped for it. Nothing like I had expected. No, it was a more perfect and beautiful blessing than any dream I ever hoped in. Seven years to the day after my hopes were crushed God gave me what I hoped for in the way He knew it would bless the most. ( Here is that story. )
Come thou Fount of every blessing. I am more than abundantly blessed.
After all of this blessing, it’s nonsensical of me that I still try to figure God out. It’s nonsensical when I start thinking that God is waiting on me to figure my life out. Yet I do... I've been in a season of feeling like everything I know as me has been blown down.
In my most recent reading journey, God used Shauna Letellier to help me see these blessings in my life with new eyes and remember my faithful God fresh. It’s a remembering hope that I need every day.
Shauna tells the stories of people in Scripture who didn’t get at all what they expected from Jesus. Eight people with disappointed hopes. And of course, the one that stands out the most to me is John the Baptist. Reading his story revived the memory of my St. John’s wort. My new hope when I was crushed.
I was amazed at the number of vital details about John the Baptist’s story that I had never slowed down over. John gave his life preparing the way for the Messiah, the King who would take over and set the captives free. John even risked his life to share his news at the palace. He fully believed and expected that Jesus was the Messiah who would reign as King and it would only make sense that John would be safe. But John was taken captive. And he never saw Jesus again on this side of heaven.
John had always been so certain that Jesus was the Messiah. But from prison, he sent his questions to Jesus so confused. If Jesus really was the coming King, then why was John stuck in prison? Why was Herod still king? Had he been wrong after all?
And even in hearing John’s questions, Jesus affirmed the faithfulness of John. Jesus sent word assuring John in his belief and told him to trust. Then... John was beheaded.
John expected to see the fruition of everything he had prepared the way for. He had expected to see his faith made sight, the promise fulfilled. But it was in John’s death, that he was rewarded with the holy love of His Father’s voice, naming him faithful. It is in John’s crushing death that this story of hope is made so beautifully healing.
Shauna has taught me a new hope to cling to. I still expect so much from Jesus. But Jesus rarely gives what we expect. Yet He always, always gives everything He promised in astonishing ways. One of the biggest gifts that Shauna’s book has given me to hold is the truth that when I try to understand the story I always make it way too small. I’m sure John the Baptist knows alot about that now. The story God is writing is so much bigger than my life and bigger than my human understanding can hold.
I resonate with Shauna’s words, “I am prone to squander peace of mind by conjuring solutions that discount Your power.” Oh, how I am prone.
Disappointment can bring you to places where hardly anything you’ve ever known to be true makes sense anymore and all that is left is hope. But hope in the God of Love is enough to anchor us through all the blowing winds. While we're trying to figure out what to do with these flowers of love we hold, Jesus just enters in quiet and assures us that He's got this.
I can see myself in Peter when Shauna says, “he thought he was devoted to Jesus but Jesus showed Peter that he was devoted to his own expectation of what Jesus ought to do.” Peter’s strongest devotions were crushed, firm walls of his life blown down.
The blowing winds of disappointment can tear down every single little thing that you have built your life on. But disappointment can never move the anchor that rests in the sanctuary of God.
Hebrews 6:19. Hope in God is a hope secure.
As long as we hope in God, no storm destroying the building of us can blow us away from His Love. He will still be God.
In the end we will find exactly what Shauna said… “disappointed wishes were God’s way of satisfying our needs and building his kingdom.”
His Kingdom come. His will be done.
Here is the hope that holds us.
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“This hope is a strong and trustworthy anchor for our souls. It leads us through the curtain into God’s inner sanctuary.” Hebrews 6:19.
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