When something bad, frustrating or painful happens in your life, consider that it may be the exact thing you need to progress or move forward.
Several weeks ago, we were having a round-up at our cattle ranch in Mexico. Because we had so many cattle to move that day, every horse we could spare was saddled up. Just as everyone was about to begin riding, one of our cowboys became angry about something and quit, which was frustrating for my husband Elbert. “Why did he have to quit today!” He needed every single horse and skilled rider to accomplish the day’s task!
Elbert hadn’t planned on riding that day but because of this sudden vacancy, he was obligated to ride for the next 5 hours. By the end of the long and bouncy horseback ride, he experienced disconcerting symptoms that, long story short, cued him to go to a hospital. It was discovered that he had a cancerous tumor in his bladder, which required surgery. So, here’s the bottom line, IF the cowboy hadn’t quit at that critical time, then Elbert wouldn’t have learned he had cancer until who knows how much later when the tumor would have become a lot more serious. As it happened, the surgery revealed that the tumor was only a first stage cancer, and fairly easy to treat. What seemed like a frustrating negative event was actually a blessing!
Turns out, that this is a common formula in our lives; a formula that the Lord uses to move us forward. If certain painful or challenging things happen, and we learn what they are orchestrated to teach us, then the purpose and rewards will be manifest.
From Tragedy to Destiny
In 1985, my friends Rex Lowe and his wife Pat, were driving down the road near a South African township, and were slowing down for a stoplight. They saw scores of small children who had piles of rocks in front of them, and on cue from an adult, began throwing them at Rex’s car. One young girl picked up a stone as big as Pat’s head and hurled it through the passenger side window, smashing the glass into a thousand pieces, knocking her unconscious, and causing her to bleed profusely. Rex raced to get them out of that very dangerous neighborhood and on to the hospital. Pat was revived, but doctors spent many hours plucking glass shards out of her skull.
Some months later, Rex, who was a contractor, went to a Lion’s Club meeting where they were discussing a request from city council to build an orphanage. They asked whether his company could help out. Rex readily agreed, but when he visited the selected site for the orphanage, he saw that this was the very spot where he and Pat had been so savagely attacked by children only a few months before. The trauma of that memory was painful, but gradually it dawned on him that the Lord was trying to give him an opportunity to stretch.
He and Pat decided that a meaningful way of forgiving those children was to contribute Rex’s time and labor for the orphanage at no cost, with the desire and prayer that some good would come of it. The orphanage is still there and the work he donated has served the needs of hundreds of orphans over these many years. It was a “curse” that turned into a great blessing for them and for the orphans.
Who Would You Be?
Think back to a time of suffering in your own life. Reflect on all the good that came of it. Who would you be without that experience? Would you really want to erase all the growth and clarity that you achieved because of that trial?
Why?
What are you going through right now? What is the Lord making of you? What traits are you gaining? More patience? More spirituality? Are you being prepared for something? If you’re in a hard place, consider that something spectacular may be just around the corner that you are being especially groomed for.
We often wonder why bad things happen. On a grand scale, this is exactly the misfortune, trial, or catastrophe we need to give us experience and wisdom in order to do what we were born to do. Or, on a small scale, it may simply be the tender mercy to discover the next step we should take. Whichever way it is, the “curse” may actually be the blessing. If we look at life this way, then we will be blessed.