Sunday, August 18, 2013

A crash,an airbourne baby and an Angel

Week of August 18
 
We are driving home from lunch after church in a driving rain, As usual I’m sitting in the back seat of our van beside our six-month old baby, Rachel. She is strapped in her rear facing car seat and is having a serious crying episode.

After several minutes of trying to comfort her, I realize that she has a very soiled diaper. No wonder she is screaming. I said to my husband, Bob, who is driving, “Brace Yourself, I’m taking her out of her car seat for a minute to change her diaper.”

I place  her on the carpeted floor and change her diaper and remove her stained pants. I think I was still leaning over tying the dirty items in a publix plastic bag when I hear Bob yell, “WATCH Out!”

Our van is T-boned, hit right in the back seat drivers side door. The impact busts out the window beside me and sends our van spinning in the middle of the intersection (Bahia Vista and McIntosh. Rd.)

“Oh my God,” we are in a wreck and Rachael is not in her car seat. Glass is raining over both of us. All I see is little Rachael in mid-air seemingly suspended there for a moment, her bright blue eyes looking right into mine. And then wooosh…she sails out the window…floating like a frizbee through the rain…across that intersection landing in a puddle, on her bottom, screaming and crying.

I am screaming, “my baby, my baby.” My sweet Bob, who doesn’t know Rachael has been ejected, turns around to see about us only to find me stuck in my seat  yelling and pointing across the road screaming, “Go get her, please. Go get her.”

A kind man in a light blue sweater, who sees the accident, gets out of his car to help. He cautions about  not picking her up. Try telling  a daddy he can’t pick up his crying  baby who has been thrown 30 feet through the air, landing in a puddle  inches from the metal base of  a utility pole.

Bob says he knew she was “whole” when he put his hands under her to lift her into his arms. The kind man in the blue sweater, holds a  poncho from sea world over Bob and baby and walks them back as I crawl over the front seat and out of the van.

The ambulance arrives with the EMT’s who see our baby  bleeding from the mouth, strap her on a back board and take us all to Sarasota Memorial Hospital. Several tests are made while we wait three hours for the storm to pass so that Bay Flight can air lift her to All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg.  Only patient and flight crew can go in the helicopter so our pastors drive us to St. Pete.

There are four days of MRI’s, C scans and other tests. Everyone is amazed there are no broken bones, internal hemoraging. The bleeding from her mouth turned out to be a small glass cut. Doctors and specialist kept coming in and out of Rachel’s room, all amazed and totally not accepting that she is really ok. They all keep telling us that when someone is thrown from a spinning vehicle the ending is always sad, severe injury or death.

Yes, finally everyone agrees. This is a miracle.

Bob and I are so thankful that our baby was not seriously injured and following checkups have confirmed she is 100% fine. She truly was touched by an angel. When we share her story people can not help themselves from wanting to touch her.

She is now ten-years-old and we look at every day as a true gift. Thank you for reading Rachel’s story and pass it on. Choose to live your life today to the fullest. Brace yourself and live today with passion.

Dundie Crisp                                                                
Sarasota Fl.
PS Moms always have your child buckled up!
 
                                                                 

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Does God really care?

Week of August 11, 2013

Remember "Brian's Birdies", the story told by a three year old who was crushed under a garage door.
He miraculously recovers. He tells his mom he saw "birdies" flying around that day while 
 he watched a little boy being put into an ambulance.

I've heard several accounts from adults who have had God experiences during a crisis. After hearing these reports and my own moment of being comforted by God in my hours of need I know that God really does care about us. All we have to do is call upon him. The scripture you read next happened to me exactly as written.

"You shall call and the Lord will answer: You shall cry out, and He will say, Here I am."
(Isaiah 58:9)

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Led by the Holy Spirit


 
Week of August 4
 

Some people think I'm a stodgy, cranky, Yankee. Well, they are right-but that's how God restored me. I wasn't always so conservative.

 

I spent the sixties and seventies searching through drugs, radical politics, rebellion and anger. I spent my adolescence as a ski-bum, working on a

riverboat and looking for extremes. I rode motorcycles and did every reckless thing to excess. I believed that life was just an existential malaise of meaningless, random events and if there was no reason to life, I thought I would at least make it

exciting. I fought the system, institutions and all the things my generation rejected. I joined the SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) and I was tear gassed more than once. I tried a lot of things to fill that God-shaped vacuum at my center, but nothing fit. Atheism was my religion. Nothing meant anything in light of death.

 

Then  things I couldn't explain began to happen. I bought a Bible and actually began reading it. God was laying the groundwork.  

 

When I decided to get married, I chose the church to which my family had belonged for centuries- First Church of Christ, Wethersfield. In order to be married there my fiancée and I had to join. The church  preaches the Word of God in the Spirit.

 

My fiancée's relatives, who are from a long line of Christian evangelists in China, were praying for me. So were the faithful at First Church. I believe all these prayers prompted God to save me.

 

The Holy Spirit began to move.  It was as though the Bible had been written solely for me. Every time I opened it, the passage I read spoke directly to my needs. Every church bulletin, letter or post card from church seemed to minister to me as though I was the only person for whom it had been written. Sermons seemed prepared just for me as did the worship. And I saw the Holy Spirit in people's faces at every church event. Jesus was everywhere.

 

One night I even had a dream that one of the pastors at the church told me "you will receive a message from your shoe." My cat awakened me, I got up, and went about dressing quietly. I remembered the dream and looked down at my shoes but there was no message. I did notice my suit was wrinkled and changed into another, which was a different color than the first one. Now I had to change my shoe to match my suit. As I was leaving the house I noticed a sticky note stuck to the heel of my shoe. On the note was a Bible verse. " I am the Vine, you are the branches, abide with me."

 

I've been to the peaks and struggled with valleys. I've had doubts and downs and faith and ups.  God is slowly and I must say, painfully at times, remaking me in His Son’s image.

 

I know God is at work in me, both to will and to work for His good pleasure. He is crucifying my fleshly ways, as I learn to be led by the Spirit.

 

I am confident of this, "that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus." (Philippians 1:6 NIV)

 

Jesus Christ saved me from myself. Praise God.

 
Leigh Standish

Wethersfield, Connecticut.

 
Copywright Thanks Be, First Church of Christ,

Wethersfield, Connecticut.
reprinted with permission

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

God and a Rag Doll


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Week of July 22

 

One morning before leaving for high school, God put it on my heart that I was going to be in a car accident that day. I told my older sister who urged me not to go to school.

 

I told her I had to go today because if I was absent or late one more day I was risking being expelled. Besides I had stayed up late finishing the hair on my Raggedy Ann Doll for my Home Economics class that had to be turned in this morning in order to get credit.

 

My friend Robin drove up in her Riviera at the usual time. While my sister kept telling me not to tempt fate by going to school, I prayed over the car asking God for his protection. When I got into the car with my books and Raggedy Ann doll I noticed a St. Christopher Medal hanging from the rear view mirror. It hadn’t been there before.

 

“Who gave you the medal Robin, your mother?”

 
“My  grandmother.”

 
That’s neat I thought, we can use all the protection possible, especially today. Everything went well until we entered the Natchez Highway and Robin speeded up. We hit a patch of black ice and slid off the highway and smashed onto a cement irrigation box that propelled the car backwards. We flipped completely over three times before coming to a stop right side up. I passed out. I came too with Robin yelling my name.

 
I was crunched up against the mangled door and window that was shattered and bowed from the impact. Wedged between my head and the window was the Raggedy Ann Doll. The hair of the doll was caught at the top of the window and the doll acted as cushion for me preventing serious injury.

 
Robin and I crawled out of the car and ran off to the first house we could see to call our parents. When we returned to the car a state trooper was standing by our wreck. He said when he saw the damage and nobody in the car he thought our bodies had already been taken to the morgue. He told us we shouldn’t have left the scene of an accident.

 
Our parents arrived and they drove us to school but nobody ever said anything about being late that day.

 
Colleen Jorgenson
 Veradale, Washington

Saturday, July 13, 2013

"God,give me a sign"

Week of July 14, 2013
 

“Some of you are feeling pretty low right now but believe me you will feel a lot better in six weeks.”

 

I heard him loud and clear. I wanted this six-week Divorce Recovery Workshop at my church to be over now so I could feel better. The instructor was right about one thing. I was feeling lower than a reptile slithering in the mud. I hoped he was right about feeling better in six weeks. All I could do now was hold onto that hope.

 

My marriage of seven years wasn’t officially over yet but it had ended a long time ago. Drugs and alcohol had taken their toll. I had been the one to sober up first but all I got for my effort was more verbal abuse from a husband that blamed everything on me,. He continued to medicate himself while I felt a constant ache of loneliness and the pain from the yelling and nightly name calling. There seemed to be no end. Somebody had to end this madness. I moved out and filed for divorce.

 

I told all this to my Divorce Recovery small group. Each person in the group got to share their situation. We all listened to each other with compassion. I felt particularly sorry for the gals with young children. At least I didn’t have that problem. A childhood disease had left me barren. I didn’t think I could ever feel good about that but I was thankful now that I didn’t have to go through this with a child too.

 

The group and our facilitator became my support base for the next several weeks. We helped each other deal with the grieving over the loss of an intimate relationship and to focus on what we had to do to become a whole person again. That meant we had to let go of the anger and the blame in order to begin the healing process. The group was there for me the night my divorce became official by court order. I was glad to be with them and not alone in my apartment.

 

The instructor was right. I did feel better on “graduation night” from the workshop and there were plenty of tears and hugs and brownies. Our group exchanged phone numbers before leaving. The high I felt at the end of the workshop came crashing down a week later when I lost my high salaried marketing position. The corporation just eliminated the entire department.

 

I was devastated. During all the trials of the divorce I had poured myself into the job and had relied on the steady income to keep me independent. Now what would I do? How would I keep the apartment once the severance pay ran out? I went into depression. It got worse as the weeks went by and I couldn’t find another position within the corporation or a like paying job in the city.

 

 I was at or nearing the bottom of my depression pit when a friend from the divorce group called. She asked me how I was doing and I told her. She invited me to he son’s sixth birthday party that afternoon and I at first declined. But she insisted and I thought maybe it would cheer me up.

 

The party was outside in the yard. It was a mistake to be there. The children playing and the mother’s talking about kids and families depressed me more. When they were occupied with a pin the tail on the donkey game I slipped into the house. I wandered into the living room and all of a sudden the tears gushed out and I was shaking uncontrollably.  I cried out to the Lord. With my head bowed and my hand gripping the fireplace mantle I said, “Lord are you there? Let me know. Give me a sign or something that I can know you can hear me… that I matter.”

 

The tears subsided and the shakes stopped. I lifted my head slowly and there in front of me above the mantle I saw through moist eyes a framed copy of “Footprints.”
 
Mary Beth Darling
Portland Oregon

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Sherry's Angel


 Week of July 7

 

On a Monday on my lunch hour, I had an appointment to see a doctor at the hospital.  I was bleeding and worried.  All alone and trying to be strong, I ventured to the hospital and before I entered I picked up my Bible that I always carry in the car and read a scripture. 

 

Upon walking into the waiting room I heard God say to me, "Go speak to that man, He is an Angel." 

 

I looked up and saw a man sitting in a wheelchair. His arm was propped up in a brace, and his leg was emaciated but stabilized with a series of halos around it.  I approached him.  

 

His kind eyes looked into my soul, and they took me backwards as he really saw into me.  I said hello and he replied hello.  I asked if he would walk again and he said yes.  Then I asked if he knew that JESUS could heal him. He enthusiastically said YES as if letting me know that I understood and was good to point that out. 

 

So I said my name is Sherry while reaching out to shake his hand, to which he paused and shook my hand and said, "I’m Angel."  I said really?  "Yes," he said. 

 

Then I went upstairs to my doctor and learned all would be OK. When I was walking out I noticed Angel was still there.

 

I went back and let him know that God told me to talk to him, and that he was an Angel. All he said was, "oh," yet never denied it.  Then curiosity got me and I asked how this happened, to which he responded, "an accident.”  Well I said nice to meet you and God bless you Angel.

 

The footnote to this story is years later I was meeting with the Hospital Administrator on business and told him the story.  He said it was peculiar, as the entrance where he sat was an outpatient entrance, and they never let anyone sit there for long.  He had been there for over a half hour.

 

Sherry Sargent

Batavia, Ohio

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

God can provide a car



A Grandmother’s Vision

 

 

 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 



Week of July 1



 
I was 24, single, and living in the Chicago area. I was working at a dead-end job and in debt. In an attempt to get a handle on my spending I attended a Good $ense Finance course at my church, Willow Creek in Barrington, Illinois.I volunteered for Willow’s cars program, where volunteers repair used donated vehicles and make them available for single moms. I like working on engines and besides my old Honda was on its last legs and I hoped to get some tips on how to keep it running. About this time I received in the mail a promotion from my credit union informing me that I was preapproved for a car loan up to $7500. That set the wheels turning in my head. I figured if I were going to seek a better job I would need a better car. Armed with my loan approval letter, I drove off to a used car dealer. I showed the flyer to the salesman and off we went into the car lot. Funny how every car he showed me was on sale for $7500.That week at church I shared my excitement about buying a car with my Good $ense teacher. I told him about the $7500 loan and I showed him a particular car that I had found in Auto Trader.He was friendly but firm in his reaction. "God does not want you to go further in debt, "Why don't you trust God for the car."

His words, while spoken kindly, hit me like a cold shower. I bristled but admitted I had agreed not to take out any more loans. At the Good $ense course I had developed a spending plan which was designed to help me live within my income and to pay down existing debt. We were told good stewardship of the resources we have honors God. When I returned home I threw the Auto Trader in the trash. I would trust God.

 

 The following Saturday I was working with other volunteers in the cars program. I mentioned to the chief mechanic how the transmission on my old Honda was slipping and that I was having a hard time getting out of second gear. I told him I didn't have any money  right now and I wondered if he could help me fix my aging wreck.  I was surprised when he didn't ask any questions but just motioned me to follow him. We went to the back of the lot and he stopped at an old rusted 12-year-old Buick station wagon.

 

"It’s not pretty," he said, “and it is too far gone to give to a single mother to transport her kids. But it runs, has reasonably good tires and the transmission still works. Why don't you drive it home?" God provided. I ended up driving that Buick for nearly two years until I could afford to buy a better car.

 

Peter Buchan

Chicago, Illinois