"Jesus walked
into the little girl's bedroom. And there, lying in the corner, in the shadows,
was the still little figure. Jesus sat on the bed and took her pale hand.”
"Honey," he said, "it's time to get up." And he reached
down into death and gently brought the little girl back to life.
The little girl woke up, rubbed her eyes as if she'd just had a good
night's sleep, and leapt out of bed...
Jesus was making the sad things come untrue. He was mending God's broken
world." (Jesus Storybook Bible)
It has been a number of years since I told Jesus I would
follow Him anywhere. Every day I learn more of Him and there will always be more
of Him to learn. I could never have imagined all of the places he would take me
over the last few years, the things He would lead me through. One thing I know,
there is nothing else for me. There is no Kristen without Jesus.
Before a couple years ago, being a nurse was not even on my
radar. I had this proud and selfish plan to become a rich, prestigious equine
vet and have a big ranch and lots of horses. I’m thankful that God took that
plan and replaced it with a love for people and serving them, doing the hard,
dirty, undesirable tasks to care for them in their sickness that is nursing. I
have learned more of Him through this journey of becoming a nurse than through
anything else.
Long is the story that led me to Haiti, to this hospital,
taking care of kids in tremendous sickness. It is nothing I could have dreamed
up for myself. And I certainly would never have planned the part of the story that
involved watching a dozen beautiful kids die over the last four weeks. A couple
of them have been on palliative care, broken bodies with brains too injured
from hydrocephalus to repair. We have loved and snuggled them until they were
gone.
More often we have been fighting death to the last minute-
in a code, with CPR, respiratory support, pushing meds, and willing the little
bodies to keep going. When we have done all we can there comes a moment when we
have to stop, and let go. That moment feels something like going 90-miles an
hour and pulling the E-brake, I think.
I have been often amazed at the amount of peace God has
poured over me in these moments. As we pull out IVs and wipe away blood and
wrap the child in a clean sheet, as we silence monitors and parents start
wailing, somehow there is peace. Because I know the Jesus that I serve. And He
is there.
“May the Eternal’s
answer find you, come to rescue you, when you desperately cling to the end of
your rope. May the name of the True God of Jacob be your shelter. May He extend
hope and help to you from His holy sanctuary and support you from His sacred
city of Zion. May He remember all that you have offered Him; may your burnt
sacrifices serve as a prelude to His mercy.” Psalm 20:1-3
Last weekend was different. On Friday morning, three of our
kids on the unit coded before noon, meaning they required emergency respiratory
support and CPR. Two of them we managed to stabilize. The third one died. It
was an avalanche, it just kept coming. Saturday morning, one of the babies that
coded the day before coded again and we lost him.
This time I wasn’t peaceful. That boy was so strong and
healthy only days before. I wanted him back. I was frustrated with God. And I
was frustrated that my boy, a teenager who has been my patient for five weeks,
had coded again and was doing so poorly. I have been praying, begging God for
this kid, he is wrapped up in my heart a hundred times over. Heal, Jesus, heal
him, like you do in the Bible, like you have done in my heart so many times,
like I know you can. Why is he getting worse and not better after all he has
been through? These kids are so sick. Where are you??
Fear, sadness,
frustration, brokenness- it washed over like a storm. And like so many times
before, Jesus called out and calmed the storm. He was there all along. He was
holding us all in His hand.
“As for those who
grieve over Zion, God has sent me to give them a beautiful crown in exchange
for ashes, to anoint them with gladness instead of sorrow, to wrap them in
victory, joy, and praise instead of depression and sadness. People will call
them magnificent, like great towering trees standing for what is right. They
stand to the glory of the Eternal who planted them.” Isaiah 61:3
One of my dear friends introduced me to a book that has been
an illustration for my life in so many ways, Hinds Feet on High Places, an allegory describing a young
woman’s journey with the Shepherd to the High Places of Love. Along the journey
Jesus chooses companions to help her on the way, Sorrow and Suffering. She
doesn’t understand the choice and is fearful at first, but they are the strong
helpers that get her through the hardest places and are ultimately transformed
into Joy and Peace. I never thought I would be walking hand in hand with sorrow
and suffering on a daily basis, but here I am. And it is difficult and full of
pain, but blessed.
“There is absolutely
no experience, however terrible, or heartbreaking, or unjust, or cruel, or
evil, which you can meet in the course of your earthly life, that can harm you
if you will but let me teach you how to accept it with joy; and to react to it
triumphantly as I did myself, with love and forgiveness and with willingness to
bear the results of wrong done by others. Every trial, every test, every
difficulty and seemingly wrong experience through which you may have to pass,
is only another opportunity granted to you of conquering an evil thing and
bringing out of it something to the lasting praise and glory of God.
“You sons and
daughters of Adam, in all your suffering and sorrow, are the most privileged of
all beings, for you are to be perfected through suffering and to become the
sons and daughters of God with his power to overcome evil with good.“ (Hannah
Hurnard)
On a daily basis I discover more questions without answers;
hard, ugly things I will never understand in this life, the fruit of a broken
world. However, I am reminded over and again of the things that I do know to be
true. Of God’s great and everlasting goodness and love towards us, I have no
doubt. Because even when I’m broken and crying and banging my fists on His
chest, there is nothing and no one else that is Love. And Love always wins. It
is winning even now, in the moments when the last breath is gone and the mama
is crying and it appears that Death is winning. That is the lie. Love is the
Victory. He is making the sad things come untrue. So what else is there but to
continue to love? I know of nothing.
I’m thankful to have stepped away for a few days, a chance
to grieve. I’m thankful for an afternoon in the mountains. I’m thankful for
beautiful, joyful living children that remind me what the Kingdom of God is
about. I’m thankful for the reminders of people I love, pointing me to the
cross and telling me that Jesus knows everything about the pain that I feel. I’m
thankful for His very own words, reminding me to keep asking, seeking,
knocking, never giving up. Every time this heart is crushed down and broken with pain, somehow He fills it full to bursting with joy again. That is just His way.
“Love others well, and don’t hide behind a
mask; love authentically. Despise evil; pursue what is good as if your life
depends on it. Live in true devotion to one another, loving each other as
brothers and sisters. Be first to honor others by putting them first. Do not
slack in your faithfulness and hard work. Let your spirit be on fire, bubbling
up and boiling over, as you serve the Lord. Do not forget to rejoice, for hope
is always just around the corner. Hold up through the hard times that are
coming, and devote yourselves to prayer. Share what you have with the saints,
so they lack nothing; take every opportunity to open your life and home to
others.” Romans 12: 9-13
thanks for sharing this Kristen! It came across my newfeeds and I was so glad to read it. beautiful reminder that though there is so much hurt in the world, joy comes in the morning
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