01. Introduction
A small group of Christians suffering under Adolph Hitler once heard Dietrich Bonhoeffer preach to them from Psalm 85:8 (NLTScripture quotations marked (NLT) are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Streams, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.):
“I listen carefully to what God is saying, for he speaks peace to his faithful people. But let them not return to their foolish ways.”
My many-months-ago agreed upon assignment was to write an article that fit in with the theme of this issue of Conversations, the problem of pain. As one member of the editorial team put it, I have the reputation of being “so open about what God teaches [me] on [my] personal journey of pain.” It was thought that perhaps I might be able to help understand the promise of pain more than to strategize its relief.
When I agreed to write this article, I did not know that the cancer that nearly killed me fourteen years ago was back. There were suspicions then, but now it’s been confirmed that gastrinoma has found its way both into my liver and in nearby areas. I am writing these words in early June 2011, two months before scheduled surgery. You are reading these words two months, perhaps longer, after the surgery.
Do I believe in divine healing? Of course. But only for a divine purpose. If God will be more meaningfully revealed if the cancer disappears, then the upcoming and final imaging of my abdominal area will show none of the lesions that were earlier spotted. If God can impact my soul and the souls of others more through successful surgery, then I can count on the surgeon removing his mask and telling me as I wake up in the recovery room, “We got it all. You’ll be fine.”
If God can more clearly and powerfully tell his story either through difficult recovery with chemotherapy and radiation or through my death, then I will slowly recover or I will die.
From childhood, I’ve heard that a Christian is to be all about God’s glory. I’ve sung “to God be the glory” a thousand times. But I can remember sitting in church thinking, Isn’t that rather selfish of God? If I live for my glory, perhaps by getting As on my report card or winning a match for my tennis team in college, I’m subject to the charge of narcissism. But when God displays himself, I’m supposed to admire him. Is he really that insecure, so self-centered that he lives for my applause?
Childish thoughts, of course, but they linger. And they lead me to wonder what’s in God’s glory for me. For many years, I answered that wondering with reminders that God displayed himself by rescuing me from hell, from Satan, and from sin. But I didn’t recognize that when I centered God’s story in my salvation, I was insidiously feeding my spirit of entitlement, my inheritance from Adam that made it seem reasonable to enlist God’s cooperation with how I wanted my story to be told. Salvation was a good beginning. Heaven was an appreciated ending. But in between I wanted whatever blessings from God that, in my judgment, were needed to give me the abundant life of feeling good in this difficult world. Good health ranked high on the list. If God was loving and good and powerful and if he wanted to unselfishly display his glory, I had no trouble coming up with suggestions for what he might want to do for me. And those suggestions became my prayer life.
I had written about shattered dreams and change from the inside out. I knew that God promised to mature me through suffering, to spiritually form me like Jesus in any circumstance of life. But I couldn’t shake the assumption that the display of his glory meant the enjoyment of my story. If he loves me, he will bless me.
What I did not see was that he wanted to bless me with himself. I was still too much like the spoiled child at Christmas who really didn’t much care if Dad showed up on Christmas morning, as long as he had stacked lots of presents beneath the tree. Christmas without presents? Christmas with only my father? Unthinkable. It wouldn’t be Christmas.
It still amazes me how easily and naturally I assume that the Christian life consists of my efforts to persuade God to help me tell my story as I want it told. It still humbles me to realize how I wrongly think that God’s commitment to his own glory is really a bit selfish unless he reveals his love and power by protecting me from the tragedies I fear the most, and unless he provides me with the blessings I value the most.
Bonhoeffer encouraged suffering Christians whose stories were about to end in Hitler’s ovens to listen carefully to what God was saying because God speaks peace from his loving heart in any circumstance of life, even in Nazi Germany. And God’s words reveal a story that becomes a privilege to tell through comfort or persecution, through life or death, through pleasant or troubling times. When we hear his story and actually meet the storyteller, our spirit of entitlement loses its power, and we see the proud foolishness of our enlisting God’s cooperation in telling our stories according to a script we provide for Him to follow.