You know those stories that people tell where somebody is
described as “going weak in the knees,” or when there’s news that people have
to “take sitting down?” Those had always seemed like exaggerated figures of
speech to me. I mean, who really goes
all noodle-legged in the face of bad news, after all? Certainly not I.
I have never needed one of those Victorian fainting couches to catch my swooning form. I have no smelling salts in my medicine cabinet. And if you see tears welling up in my eyes, you can pretty rightly assume it’s from hay fever.
My seemingly stoical DNA, you see, derives from a rather chilly blend of tight-lipped Englishmen, hard-headed Germans, windblown Scots, and the kind of rugged, sunshine-is-for-sissies northern Europeans who chiseled out a living from the frozen fjords. Stout hearts and dry eyes—that’s us. As one author put it, “If I were commissioned to design the official crest for the descendents of emotionally muzzled Vikings everywhere, I would begin by looking up the Latin phrase for ‘No thanks, I’m fine.’” Exactly.
But on the evening of August 20, 2012, when my husband carried home the heavy news that our ten-year-old son, Jonah, had been diagnosed with leukemia, I crumpled onto the bottom step of our family’s stairway and sobbed.
All through that evening and for many of the days that followed I learned what it was to go weak in the knees in the most literal sense—no metaphor about it. Each time a doctor would bring new information, I had to take it sitting down. Every time the phone demanded to be answered, my chest felt squeezed in a vice that gripped tighter with every ring.
My child may die. My precious firstborn son may be taken from us. Everywhere I went, I seemed to feel an unbearable weight pressing down on my shoulders—a weight that I could not carry. We were given hefty stacks of informational books and brochures, but I could not open them. I could not allow my eyes to rest on phrases like “mortality rate” and “likelihood of relapse.” These were words too heavy for me to lift from the page.
My child may die. It continues to be a weight that I cannot carry. But I have learned that it is also a weight that I need not carry. That I do not carry. That is not mine to carry at all.
I have never needed one of those Victorian fainting couches to catch my swooning form. I have no smelling salts in my medicine cabinet. And if you see tears welling up in my eyes, you can pretty rightly assume it’s from hay fever.
My seemingly stoical DNA, you see, derives from a rather chilly blend of tight-lipped Englishmen, hard-headed Germans, windblown Scots, and the kind of rugged, sunshine-is-for-sissies northern Europeans who chiseled out a living from the frozen fjords. Stout hearts and dry eyes—that’s us. As one author put it, “If I were commissioned to design the official crest for the descendents of emotionally muzzled Vikings everywhere, I would begin by looking up the Latin phrase for ‘No thanks, I’m fine.’” Exactly.
But on the evening of August 20, 2012, when my husband carried home the heavy news that our ten-year-old son, Jonah, had been diagnosed with leukemia, I crumpled onto the bottom step of our family’s stairway and sobbed.
All through that evening and for many of the days that followed I learned what it was to go weak in the knees in the most literal sense—no metaphor about it. Each time a doctor would bring new information, I had to take it sitting down. Every time the phone demanded to be answered, my chest felt squeezed in a vice that gripped tighter with every ring.
My child may die. My precious firstborn son may be taken from us. Everywhere I went, I seemed to feel an unbearable weight pressing down on my shoulders—a weight that I could not carry. We were given hefty stacks of informational books and brochures, but I could not open them. I could not allow my eyes to rest on phrases like “mortality rate” and “likelihood of relapse.” These were words too heavy for me to lift from the page.
My child may die. It continues to be a weight that I cannot carry. But I have learned that it is also a weight that I need not carry. That I do not carry. That is not mine to carry at all.
Words Made Alive
Two years ago, our church started a Sunday School class to
teach the Heidelberg Catechism to the children. Week after week my kids would
recite from memory the answer to that week’s question and would review the
answers to the questions that preceded it. This means that week after week, the
question would come back: “What is your only comfort in life and in death?”
Then a chorus of sing-song treble voices would reply:
“That I am not my own, but belong— body and soul, in life and in death—to my faithful Savior, Jesus Christ. He has fully paid for all my sins with his precious blood, and has set me free from the tyranny of the devil. He also watches over me in such a way that not a hair can fall from my head without the will of my Father in heaven; in fact, all things must work together for my salvation. Because I belong to him, Christ, by his Holy Spirit, assures me of eternal life and makes me wholeheartedly willing and ready from now on to live for him.”
In the frightening days that followed Jonah’s diagnosis,
those familiar lines that had rattled around in my own head for so many years
and that had echoed around the walls of the Sunday school classroom for so many
weeks sputtered to life. That dusty paragraph began lighting up like the county
fair at nightfall. I had seen those antique words before and believed them, but
never quite so fully. Never quite so desperately. Never in such bright, neon
colors.
Each night as I pleaded with God for Jonah, I pulled those
words, like a lifeline, into my prayers: “Jonah is not his own. He is not my own. God Almighty, he is your child. And nothing can happen to a hair on his head
or to a blood cell in his body apart from Your will.” And even in the praying
of those words, that suffocating, crippling weight began to lift. Jonah belongs
to his faithful savior. Body and soul. In life. And, yes, even in death.
Psalms, too, and hymns that I had sung for years and
committed to memory—sometimes without much thought—were now surfacing in my
head and heart and proving to be both priceless and indispensable. All those
pictures of God as a refuge, as a fortress, as a rock, as a tower, as a
physician, as a lover, as a friend now meant something far more concrete. Here
was comfort beyond imagining. Here was peace beyond understanding.
It was as if I, when I was feeling particularly wealthy, had
stuffed a large roll of high-denomination dollar bills into my pockets without
thinking and then forgot about them. But then, when hard times fell and I
thought I was going broke, I put a hand into my pocket and discovered that I
was still rich after all—and that I not only had all that I needed, but that
what I did have had appreciated in value.
Here were these words, that had seemed at times—especially
when I was young and tired of memorizing—to be so much gravel, tossed into my
empty little head and tumbled around over the years. But now, here they were
again, pouring back out all shining and precious and polished smooth—not gravel
at all but rubies.
“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in
trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though
the mountains fall into the heart of the sea” (Psalm 46:1-2). I remembered
those lines as a little ditty set to a tune for teenage voices and a solo
guitar. But thanks to that melody, simple as it was, those words were
epoxy-glued into the back pages of my mind such that I never lost them. But I
had also never really deeply considered them.
It’s not that I had ever doubted the truth of those words,
but I believed them, more or less, in the abstract. They existed somewhere in
the clouds. Now, however, in the middle of my trouble, with my comfortable
little world falling into the sea, those true words came down out of the ether
and touched the very solid ground beneath my feet. God is a refuge—from fear
and death. He is strength—when my knees buckle and I cannot stand. He is a very
present help—a right-here-right-now help; a help mediated through comforting
words and free babysitting and hot meals and carpool rides and peaceful sleep.
He is a help in trouble—in cancer and confusion and grief. Therefore we will
not fear. We will not be afraid of this. Not even if the world crumbles around
us and cancer does its worst.
Mongering Fear
The more I’ve read about cancer, the more it seems that
health publications (both mainstream and alternative) want everyone to
be very afraid of cancer. Scroll through a hundred health blogs, and flip through a
teetering stack of health magazines, and it seems that this is the endlessly
repeated headline: “5 Foods that Fight Cancer.” “12 Secret Weapons Against
Cancer.” “17 Strategies for Staying Cancer-Free.” Without the fear of cancer, I imagine that readership would plummet.
Believe me, I fully understand the desire to learn more about what causes cancer and what cures it. I had a cancer scare of my own not long ago, and I (like most people I know) have had friends and relatives who have died of various forms of cancer. It's a disease that touches the lives of just about everybody, so it's no surprise that we fear it. But it's also no surprise that there are people out there who are eager to prey on people's fears.
I once read a post, shared by a well-meaning Facebook friend, that said, "Finally! Johns Hopkins Medical School reveals the truth about cancer!" The link offered a numbered list of generic tips (Stop eating sugar!) but also endorsed a number of health products—by brand name—that we should buy. This seemed more than a little fishy, so I checked the sources. It turned out to be a hoax; Johns Hopkins had shared no such thing and had devoted a whole page of its web site to dispelling the misinformation and outright lies. But by that time, the link had already been shared on Facebook upwards of 20,000 times.
The reason I think we are so eager to read all those cancer articles and to believe sketchy posts like the one I mentioned is that it can make us feel like we have the tools to get back in control of our lives. Cancer is scarier than most diseases because it is still, in spite of all that up-to-date information (and misinformation), shrouded in mystery.
Why does one of our children get leukemia while the rest remain perfectly healthy? Why did one of my mom's siblings get cancer while none of the other 8 have? How is possible that a man who smoked his entire life never gets lung cancer, while a woman who never even touched a cigarette dies of the disease? The answer, from what I can tell, is: We don't know. Cancer is a bogy that seems to lurk around every corner, and we feel helpless against it.
Believe me, I fully understand the desire to learn more about what causes cancer and what cures it. I had a cancer scare of my own not long ago, and I (like most people I know) have had friends and relatives who have died of various forms of cancer. It's a disease that touches the lives of just about everybody, so it's no surprise that we fear it. But it's also no surprise that there are people out there who are eager to prey on people's fears.
I once read a post, shared by a well-meaning Facebook friend, that said, "Finally! Johns Hopkins Medical School reveals the truth about cancer!" The link offered a numbered list of generic tips (Stop eating sugar!) but also endorsed a number of health products—by brand name—that we should buy. This seemed more than a little fishy, so I checked the sources. It turned out to be a hoax; Johns Hopkins had shared no such thing and had devoted a whole page of its web site to dispelling the misinformation and outright lies. But by that time, the link had already been shared on Facebook upwards of 20,000 times.
The reason I think we are so eager to read all those cancer articles and to believe sketchy posts like the one I mentioned is that it can make us feel like we have the tools to get back in control of our lives. Cancer is scarier than most diseases because it is still, in spite of all that up-to-date information (and misinformation), shrouded in mystery.
Why does one of our children get leukemia while the rest remain perfectly healthy? Why did one of my mom's siblings get cancer while none of the other 8 have? How is possible that a man who smoked his entire life never gets lung cancer, while a woman who never even touched a cigarette dies of the disease? The answer, from what I can tell, is: We don't know. Cancer is a bogy that seems to lurk around every corner, and we feel helpless against it.
A sense of helplessness, however, can give us a glimpse of
something like Truth. And that kind of Truth can be terrifying. Our days are
numbered, and not—contrary to to our hopes and wishes—by us. So it’s easy, even for Christians like us who
should know better, to want to panic in the face of our helplessness and to grasp at some semblance of control. We could easily spend countless hours trying to keep up with the latest health advice—even when we know that latest health advice keeps changing on us again and again and again.
First we're told to hide from the sun to avoid cancer. And then we find out
that our sun boycott is causing Vitamin D deficiency, which can cause cancer. So we start chugging fish oil for the Vitamin D.
But then we are told that the fish oil can be tainted with mercury, which is linked to cancer. We work hard to provide our families with
good nutrition that will fight cancer. But then it turns out that kids who have
better nutrition are also more likely to be tall, which puts them at greater risk for cancer. And then when we finally do get cancer, we fight it
with radiation and toxic drugs that can cause cancer. Cancer, like Shakespeare’s fool Touchstone, chases
us around the world-stage, shouting, “I will kill thee a hundred and fifty
ways!”
I don't think it’s simply a fool's errand to try to steer clear of this threat to our health. Especially not after all that we've been through with Jonah. But at the same time, I think we have to be careful. There does come a point when concern for health becomes obsession with health—when prudence crosses the line into panic and we lose sight of God's promises and providence.
Whence Comes My Help?
Sitting by Jonah’s sickbed for countless hours has provided
me with plenty of time to meditate on our own helplessness—on our own lack of
control over so many of the details of our lives. And what’s odd is that our
helplessness, while it might seem frightening to some, has actually provided a
very real sense comfort because we know that “our help comes from the Lord who
made heaven and earth.”
Who is more helpless than a small child? And yet who in the world is more carefree? That is because a young child is not burdened with a sense of self-sufficiency or a compulsion to pull himself up by his own bootie straps. He is free to rest and play because he knows that somebody else takes care of his needs.
Who is more helpless than a small child? And yet who in the world is more carefree? That is because a young child is not burdened with a sense of self-sufficiency or a compulsion to pull himself up by his own bootie straps. He is free to rest and play because he knows that somebody else takes care of his needs.
If our lives are ultimately in our own hands, however, then we can never rest, never turn our backs,
never loosen our white-knuckle grip for a moment. But if our lives are ultimately
in God’s hands, then we are free, like that child, to keep our own hands open—both to
give and to receive a thousand other joys.
As we have dealt with Jonah’s cancer, our helplessness has deepened our dependence on God. And dependence on God, paradoxically, has brought independence—a sweet freedom from all the other cares and worries that can so easily take over.
As we have dealt with Jonah’s cancer, our helplessness has deepened our dependence on God. And dependence on God, paradoxically, has brought independence—a sweet freedom from all the other cares and worries that can so easily take over.
Even as a Christian, it’s easy to be swayed by the
messages
of every health article under the sun. But as I’ve read the Bible this year, I’ve noticed that there are an astonishing number of promises from God (you know—the One who made our bodies
in the
first place?) that have to
do with health and strength and long life. And yet I haven’t come across a
single one of those promises that hinges on nutrition or exercise or any of the
usual concerns.
I still believe that those concerns are means that God routinely uses to sustain our lives. But if I were
trying to compile a list of “Biblical Tips for Better Health,” I think it would
have a whole lot less to do with consuming organic produce and joining the gym, and a
whole lot more to do with fearing God, honoring parents, befriending Lady Wisdom,
and seeking first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness.
Not a hair can fall from our heads—or a cancer cell form in our bodies—without the will of our Father in heaven. He knows what we need before we ask, which means I don't have to keep tying myself into awkward knots in attempt to keep up with all the latest cancer-dodging advice. Resting in God's care allows me to take a step back from the fears of the moment and to gain some perspective on this salutary game of Twister—and to laugh a little. And a merry heart, after all, "doeth good like a medicine."
Ultimately, our lives are not in our hands. And that truth, instead of scaring us, should allow us to loosen our kung-fu death grip on health, to step away from all those hot-off-the-presses articles about the latest cancer scare, and to quit worrying. Seriously. Quit. Worrying is bad for our health. And which of us by worrying can add a single day to his life? Rather, “Fear the Lord and depart from evil. It will be health to your flesh and marrow to your bones” (Proverbs 3:7b-8).
That right there is a ruby to keep in your pocket.
The Belly of the Whale
Just last week my husband took all the kids to a local nursing home
to bring a little joy to the lonely and afflicted. And the next day Asaph, who
is five years old, said to me, “Mom? You know that place where people go to
live until they die? I saw an old lady there who was sitting in a wheelchair.
And her teeth were out, so she pushed them back into her mouth. I said hi to
her, but she didn’t hear me.”
It’s shocking, isn’t it, son? It’s shocking that we crumble
until our legs cannot hold us. Until our teeth fall out of our mouths. Until
our ears grow numb to the voices of children yelling “Hi!” six inches from our
heads. But what’s more shocking is that we forget this about ourselves. Here in
this university town of ours, where the beautiful and the invincible spill out
of every coffee shop and swarm the halls of the shopping malls, we find that
the fresh supply of youth never dries up. We spend our days in the house of
feasting, toasting each other’s health, and checking each other’s sexy curves.
Meanwhile, life’s epilogue is lived out behind closed doors, along sterile
hallways under fluorescent lights, so that the rest of us can forget the final
pages of our story.
But not my children. My own Jonah has slept within the black
innards of the whale. He has looked death straight in the mouth and smelled its
foul breath. My own little blue-eyed five-year-old has navigated through those urine-scented hallways in the house of mourning and learned some wisdom. He has
seen our latter end.
The truth is that we are all in that place where we will live until we die. But while I will try to push that final day back as long as I can, I never want to spend so much time simply staying alive that I forget to live. As one author friend put it, “Life is meant to be spent.” And not just, I might add, on ourselves.
Long life can be a great blessing, but what good is a long shelf life if our contents are never used up before we reach our expiration date? Better to be a cheap plastic jug of grape juice cocktail—or a boring old cup of cold water, for that matter—that is poured out to quench someone's thirst, than to be a bottle of the finest Châteauneuf-du-Pape that is kept safely corked on a shelf for decades until its contents turn to vinegar.
My grandfather (who died of cancer) did not live as long as many of his peers, but he also lived more within those years than many of his peers. He learned to speak English, served in a war, raised nine children, was faithful to his wife, ran a dairy farm, felled trees (as well as a few of his fingers), worked in the church, owned a retirement home, excelled at bowling, and poured love on his dozens of grandchildren.
The truth is that we are all in that place where we will live until we die. But while I will try to push that final day back as long as I can, I never want to spend so much time simply staying alive that I forget to live. As one author friend put it, “Life is meant to be spent.” And not just, I might add, on ourselves.
Long life can be a great blessing, but what good is a long shelf life if our contents are never used up before we reach our expiration date? Better to be a cheap plastic jug of grape juice cocktail—or a boring old cup of cold water, for that matter—that is poured out to quench someone's thirst, than to be a bottle of the finest Châteauneuf-du-Pape that is kept safely corked on a shelf for decades until its contents turn to vinegar.
My grandfather (who died of cancer) did not live as long as many of his peers, but he also lived more within those years than many of his peers. He learned to speak English, served in a war, raised nine children, was faithful to his wife, ran a dairy farm, felled trees (as well as a few of his fingers), worked in the church, owned a retirement home, excelled at bowling, and poured love on his dozens of grandchildren.
When I was about Asaph’s age, my grandfather used to do a trick in which he brushed his teeth and whistled at the same time.
I thought it was hilarious—him holding his dentures and toothbrush in his mangled fingers, while a
merry tune played on his wrinkled lips.
When my own teeth fall out, I hope it will make my little grandchildren laugh. And I hope to be laughing with them.
When my own teeth fall out, I hope it will make my little grandchildren laugh. And I hope to be laughing with them.
Manna in the Wilderness
In the early days of Jonah's treatment, I parked in the Children's hospital garage next to an SUV that had the words "CHILDHOOD CANCER SUCKS!" scrawled in gold paint across the back windows. And I don't disagree.
I have watched my son vomiting for hours, writhing in pain while his hair falls out and his wide eyes plead for a relief that is far from coming. But for the record, you need to know that cancer is not the worst thing that can happen to you. In fact, we have gained so much from this experience already that we may one day look back and see that cancer was the actually one of the best things that ever happened to us. And even in the hardest stages of his treatment, Jonah has discovered that a life-threatening illness is not without its perks.
I have watched my son vomiting for hours, writhing in pain while his hair falls out and his wide eyes plead for a relief that is far from coming. But for the record, you need to know that cancer is not the worst thing that can happen to you. In fact, we have gained so much from this experience already that we may one day look back and see that cancer was the actually one of the best things that ever happened to us. And even in the hardest stages of his treatment, Jonah has discovered that a life-threatening illness is not without its perks.
Just last weekend, Jonah was invited to throw the first pitch at a
Spokane Indians baseball game, escorted onto the field by Super Bowl MVP Mark
Rypien. Jonah has been in the dugout and on the field to shake hands with
Seattle Mariners. He’s had a movie star come to visit him. He has heaps of books and toys and crafts and cards and even an iPad thanks to the
kindness of those who heard of his plight. And now, through the Make-A-Wish
foundation, he’s in the process of planning a dream vacation to
Hawaii—something we could never afford to do with him otherwise. So much love,
joy, peace, and just plain fun have come his way on account of his cancer that
one of our other boys once said, “Aw, man! I wish I had cancer.”
The Children’s Hospital has also done such a great job of creating a welcoming environment for these sick kids that all our boys clamor for the chance to go along with Jonah for his appointments. Jonah himself sometimes laments that his days of staying overnight at the hospital are over. He loves all the nurses and the one-on-one attention from parents and grandparents. His memories of cancer have been so well seasoned with blessings that he has more than once told us he wishes he could start his treatment all over again. And he is no masochist. This was simply the best-worst year of his life.
The Children’s Hospital has also done such a great job of creating a welcoming environment for these sick kids that all our boys clamor for the chance to go along with Jonah for his appointments. Jonah himself sometimes laments that his days of staying overnight at the hospital are over. He loves all the nurses and the one-on-one attention from parents and grandparents. His memories of cancer have been so well seasoned with blessings that he has more than once told us he wishes he could start his treatment all over again. And he is no masochist. This was simply the best-worst year of his life.
Power Made Perfect in Weakness
This has, without question, been the most difficult
year of our lives. My son has life-threatening disease. But do I wish this had never happened? Do I wish I could
erase the last twelve months and start them fresh and clean and cancer-free? I
hesitate. But strange as it sounds, I don't.
I have had people tell me that they just don’t think they
could do what we’ve done; that they couldn’t handle facing childhood cancer;
that it would simply be too hard. And I suppose the expected reply would be, "Oh, no, of course you could! You're a strong person. You could handle it if you had to." Well, maybe it's that stiff-upper-lip DNA of mine, but I'm not always a good cheerleader. In fact, what I generally say is, “Yeah you’re right. It is too
hard. You couldn’t do it.”
The reason I say that, however, is that I can’t do it either. I can’t handle it. Not me. Not our family carrying all this trouble on our own strength. We didn’t do it. We didn’t handle it—at least not in some kind of stoical, self-sufficient, inner-strength, “No thanks, I’m fine” kind of way.
The reason I say that, however, is that I can’t do it either. I can’t handle it. Not me. Not our family carrying all this trouble on our own strength. We didn’t do it. We didn’t handle it—at least not in some kind of stoical, self-sufficient, inner-strength, “No thanks, I’m fine” kind of way.
Rather, we were helpless. We were weak in the knees. We had to take
it sitting down. But God was our strength. We were neck-deep in trouble. But He is
a very present help in trouble. We were faced with the fear of death. But our comfort is that we belong, even in death, to our faithful savior, Jesus Christ. This year was God’s work. This
year was also—through all that our friends and family and churches did to carry
our burden—your work. And having seen
with my own eyes the unfailing mercy and goodness of God, I am no longer afraid.
It’s been one year since Jonah's
diagnosis—when the battle for his life began—and we have seen our prayers
answered again and again. After a summer full of baseball and swimming and bike riding and lacrosse, he started
school with his class last week, and he visits the hospital only once a month.
His hair, his color, and his laughter are back. But the fight for his life is not over; we are facing
the Last Enemy, even now. My child may die.
Even after a year, I still can hardly bring myself to say those words aloud,
and my throat aches if I try.
This
has been a year of testing, but this has also been a year in which all
those abstract truths that we have always believed truly put on flesh.
God's power is made perfect in our weakness. God is our refuge and
strength. This is why my knees
are steady. This is why that terrible weight is gone.
You have dealt well with your servant,
O Lord, according to your word.
Teach me good judgment and knowledge,
for I believe in your commandments.
Before I was afflicted I went astray,
but now I keep your word.
You are good and do good;
teach me your statutes. (Ps 119:65-68)
O Lord, according to your word.
Teach me good judgment and knowledge,
for I believe in your commandments.
Before I was afflicted I went astray,
but now I keep your word.
You are good and do good;
teach me your statutes. (Ps 119:65-68)
14 comments:
Thank you. Wise and true and beautiful in every way.
I love your writing style. Have you ever considered publishing Jonah's story in book form?If so, you can contact me at books@deovolente.net
What an incredible testimony, Hannah. Thanks be to God.
We have seven children waiting for us in heaven, and I spend a good portion of my time ministering to other bereaved mamas online, and I often say to them, "you're right, you can't do it ~ and neither could I"... your words hit familiar chords for me. Different story, but written by the same Author, and I too would not trade my story. Has it been completely awful to bury seven children? Yes! But would I change it if I could? Take a deep breath: no, I wouldn't.
Thanks for sharing your joy, and the strength of Christ with us. Thanks for sharing your weakness.
A friend just sent me your blog, Hanna, and I'm so thankful she shared...and that you shared!!
Our oldest grandson, Everett, was diagnosed with ALL on 8-8-12, one day before his 9th birthday. Thank you for your openness as it's helped me to walk in my daughter's shoes in a new and deeper way.
God bless you and your family in the years ahead...
Hanna, I can't read your blog with a dry eye! It will be five years this October when we got the news that our precious blue eyed Lizzie had ALL. When I read your blog a thousand things coming rushing back to me. We love you all so much and pray for you often. Thank you for your beautiful, honest and faithful testimony. Tell Jonah that we are so proud of him!
Hannah,
Thank you
Thank you for sharing your story.
Jonah with the Goldberg Variations is a great picture. I know he can spend years and years pouring over them and never exhaust their delight, and I'm hopeful he will.
Thank you, Hannah, for crafting such a real and beautiful picture of God's grace. God uses deep pain to show us the very depths of His love and it is a wonderful thing when we can thank Him for the journey.
Jill Farris
www.generationalwomanhood.wordpress.com
Thank you for your words of truth. I shared this with a close relative who is struggling with cancer and was able to pray for this person, finally. Now we pray that God will take this article, those prayers, and grow them into fruitfulness, salvation, and freedom. I will try to connect to receive your updates regularly.
Thank-you for your wonderful article. We have a few things in common, one of my five sons! (no daughters)was also diagnosed with cancer. He underwent surgery at S.H. in 2010 and recieved 60 weeks of treatment from 2011-2012. He also threw the first pitch for a baseball game but it was for Gonzaga's team. Maybe we'll run into you at one of the boy's follow-up appoinments.
-Heidi F.
What an incredible testimony. Thank you so much for sharing it. God bless you!
I read this again today after visiting with you in person yesterday, Hannah, and once again am so blessed and so humbled to receive grace from your road, to be washed around my feet along my own road. Thank you, and may grace be yours in abundance.
Thank you for this. My daughter was just diagnosed with juvenile arthritis last week. So many of your thoughts on health are exactly what God is teaching me right now as I wrestle my own mama fears. Thank you for glorifying him!!
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