Monday, July 29, 2019

Magnifying Christ: A Personal Testimony



According to my earnest expectation and my hope, that in nothing I shall be ashamed, but that with all boldness, as always, so now also Christ shall be magnified in my body, whether it be by life, or by death.
Philippians 1:20



As a teenager, I attended a youth meeting in my hometown. Ron Reily was one of the preachers. He preached on Philippians 1:20 and how magnifying Christ should be the ultimate goal of a Christian’s life. As I remember, he emphasized that anything that God allows in a Christian’s life, even death, would magnify Christ if the Christian trusted God and was surrendered to Him. After that meeting, I chose Philippians 1:20 as my life verse, my creed from the Bible on how I would attempt to live my life with God’s help. Little did I know how God would use this verse to convict and change my life.

In nursing school, this verse helped me through many rough days of clinical, classes, and working in the Dining Services. I had a small sticky note taped to my nursing clipboard that said, “Magnify Christ, Phil. 1:20.” It reminded me of my goal, my life’s purpose to know Christ and to bring Him glory.

August or September 2010. I was driving home from the library, where I had just finished putting in applications for RN positions and creating/updating my Facebook. I had put my life’s verse in the about me section and I think had written something about how I wanted to magnify Christ, no matter what. Well, just outside of the small town in which the library was located, my car sputtered to a stop and would not keep running. This was a frequent occurrence that usually resolved after a few minutes of letting the car just sit. But that day, I was frustrated. I hit my steering wheel as I sat on the shoulder of the road and angrily asked God “Why?!” Why did I have such a stupid car, that shut off randomly? Why couldn’t I find a nursing job, everyone said, “If you had at least one year of experience,” or “If you had a lower level of education.” I think that I may have even asked God why he didn’t allow me to find a husband in college. Then it was as if the Holy Spirit nudged me and said, “What did you just write on Facebook? You said you wanted to magnify Christ no matter what? What if you have this old car because you are to magnify Christ by your reaction when it breaks down? What if you don’t have a nursing job yet because you are to magnify Christ as you wait for Me? You said you wanted to magnify Christ, but you just failed.” I repented right there of my attitude and told God I would accept His will in even the smallest details of my life and with His help, magnify Christ through them. If only I had learned my lesson.

December 2010. On December 7, I woke up early in the morning vomiting. I thought that I had contracted a stomach virus from eating at a buffet for a ladies Christmas party the night before. I had been feeling bad for several weeks. Sometime before Thanksgiving, I had gotten a cold or mild flu and had not been feeling well since. I was tired all the time, had an almost constant headache, a raised rash on my hands and feet, and was drinking a lot of liquid for my “dry throat”.  As the day went on, my vomiting became worse; I was unable to keep anything down. In the evening, I began to have a severe sharp stabbing abdominal pain and I was unable to breath normally. That’s when my mother drove me to the emergency room. At the emergency room, someone checked my blood sugar and it was over 500. I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes and admitted to the ICU in Diabetic Ketoacidosis. I was in the hospital for almost three days. I thought that I would die very soon; I had never known or heard of a type 1 diabetic who was healthy in their 30’s. I have met many since then. I also knew that I could no longer do what I thought what God had called me to do- be a missionary nurse/linguist in the jungles of Papua New Guinea. That crushed me. I knew in my heart that it must not have been God’s will for me to be a missionary nurse in the jungle, and I wish that I had the attitude that this diagnosis of type 1 diabetes was something that Christ could use to magnify Himself through me… But I did not.

I spent the next several months begging God every day to heal me so that I could go on to do what I desired to do. I knew He was powerful enough. I knew such a miracle would surely glorify God. I wanted to die because I had lost my purpose for living. You see, somewhere I had changed my purpose of living from knowing and magnifying Christ to serving Him on the mission field. I remember wishing someone would crash into my car and send me to heaven where I would no longer be sick or heart broken. I don’t know if others knew that I was struggling so, I tried to hide it. I tried to have a good attitude. I continued serving God in the bus ministry, nursery, teaching Sunday school, and going on soul winning visitation. I eventually accepted my diabetes as God’s will and stopped begging Him to heal me. I tried my hardest to magnify Christ in my life, but something was wrong. I didn’t have joy, sure I was happy sometimes, but what I could have done on the mission field was constantly in the back of my mind. I wasn’t getting much out of my devotions, it was often hard to pray. This continued until July of 2013.

July 2013. The director of the singles ministry at my church was planning a trip to St. Petersburg, FL for a singles conference that was taking place the first week of July. He and his wife asked if I would like to go even though I was not a member of the Singles Sunday School class. I decided that I would, because I knew that I needed some spiritual refreshing. The first day, I was alone in one of the hallways of the church looking at their world missions map. Two girls walked by and I overheard them comment about how they could never be missionaries because they didn’t want to give up the luxuries of living in America. I remember being so angry at them for not wanting to give up the pleasures of American life when so many were dying and going to hell without ever hearing the gospel. That night, I opened up to my singles director’s wife and told her my frustrations of how so many young adults could go to the mission field, to unreached peoples, but didn’t want to. And how I didn’t understand why God would take the ability to go to PNG away from me, who wanted to go so badly. That night I realized that I really wasn’t mad at those girls; I was mad at God because I didn’t understand why He had allowed me to develop type 1 diabetes. Wednesday of that week was July 3, my twenty fifth birthday. The first preacher that night preached a message that was God’s birthday present to me. He preached about how God led them about, from Exodus 13:17-18. God may lead us in ways that make no sense to us, in a way that was about, but it was for our good and we just needed to trust Him. That message led me to repent from my anger and lack of trust in God, and truly trust that He knows best, even when it makes no sense. I got my heart right with God that night, and decided again to trust God with everything in my life.

Have I always completely trusted God since that point? I wish that I could say yes, but I can’t. But God has been so gracious and merciful in forgiving me for my lack of trust in Him. You see, I must trust God in life, death, or anything in between to work through my life to magnify Himself, whether it makes sense or not. Please don’t think I’m sharing this to brag about how much I trust God. If you read this, you know that I can struggle a lot in that department. I share this to show how gracious God is to lead us back to trusting and magnifying Him when we are stubborn and think we know best. If you are a Christian, God can use anything to magnify Himself through you, whether it be a broken down car, a life changing medical diagnosis, the death of a dream, or a job search. You just need to trust Him completely. There is no better place to be than to be exactly where God wants you, Magnifying Christ in life, in death, or anything in between.

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