When Your Faith Looks Weak
Two weeks ago, I had to go to labor and delivery.
I was sitting down eating dinner when all of a sudden I felt
pain creep into my lower abdomen. And then I contracted. The pain increased and
I contracted again. I grabbed a glass of water, took to our recliner, and put
my feet up. The pain got so strong there were tears welling up in my eyes. And
then I contracted again. 3 times in less than twenty minutes. I called labor
and delivery and, yes, they wanted me to come in.
As I am describing the pain to the nurse, I can feel the
panic—that familiar fear. Oh, no, no, no,
not again. It can’t be going wrong again. Tears of emotion joined the tears
of pain.
I told my husband I needed to go in and we got the kids into
the car.
Somewhere in the midst of the hustle to the car, the fear, the
texts for prayer, there’s the still voice:
Amanda,
I’m here. It’s okay.
And I just knew He was and it was.
Sometimes, I worry that somewhere in the losses and trials
of the past two years, my faith has become fragile. When loss happens to you, it
becomes more than just a statistic, a sadness that might happen to one in every four
women; it becomes your reality. You are no longer untouchable. When the losses
roll in one after another, you feel vulnerable—maybe even doomed to despair.
This pregnancy has been emotionally and physically hard. It’s
like I am holding my breath waiting to breathe again. The further along I get,
the more it feels like breathing might be safe, but crampy pains and a few
contractions and it’s like I am being brought back to that hot June afternoon,
pacing the living room, hearing the doctor speak my devastation into the phone,
“I am really sorry, Amanda, but there isn’t life in there. There was never even
a heartbeat.”
My short stint at Labor and Delivery showed me something
though. As much as the initial sight of hard circumstances might have brought
on fear, as real as loss might be to me… faith isn’t built in the absence of hard. The
Amanda of 2 years ago didn’t have greater faith because she didn’t
automatically imagine the worst at the first sign of difficulty. The Amanda of
today doesn’t have a weaker faith because loss has touched her life.
When God said, “I’m here and it’s okay,” during my brief but
very real contraction storm, I believed Him.
I knew He was with me, because I still remember some ten
months ago when I faced the darkest night, when my faith might have looked the
weakest. I was dagger spittin’ mad at God. I hurled the ugliest words I could
find in my vocabulary, and I shook my fists to the heavens and demanded and He
tell me why. And even there, God was with me. You guys, there were miracles,
abundant grace, ways that God whispered to my soul, “Yes, you are walking
through the storm, but I am still with you. And I see you. And I hurt with you.
And I will not let you go.”
Can I be honest and tell you that I have struggled with
thinking that maybe I am somehow less of a Christian because of those moments
where my faith looked so weak. And because after walking through 4 miscarriages
in 14 months, it just doesn’t take much for me to experience panic at the onset
of crampy pains.
Here’s what I am learning and maybe it needs to be said for
all of us who have ever struggled with doubt or at some point found ourselves
unable to respond with absolute trust in God’s plan when we have faced unexplainable
loss:
I think sometimes we act as though faith is a thing that we
need to hold close, protect. We refuse to expose faith to the storms for fear
it might get beaten down, and we choose to tread water instead.
But faith isn’t for
treading water. Faith is for walking on the water.
Faith is for the places that don’t make sense. Faith is for
the times when Christian cliché band-aides just can’t patch the brokenness inside
you. Faith is for the storm. Faith is for the gaps. Faith is for when you could
drown in the depths of places unexplainable.
Faith is this very real, Jesus-walking-with-you, in the mess.
Faith doesn’t need
you to protect it. Faith is your
protection. There’s a reason why it’s called the “shield of faith.”
I have been turning over this passage: “Fixing our eyes on
Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith…” Hebrews 12:2. Jesus is the
author and perfecter of our faith. Not me.
Friends, I have learned that real faith doesn’t understand.
Real faith doesn’t always see the outcome. Real faith is clinging to God,
sometimes even wrestling with God, and refusing to let go of Him. Real faith is being curious enough to walk
out into the storm to see if God really means to never let you go.
By the time I got to the hospital, checked in and hooked up
to the monitors, I can’t even tell you the peace I felt.
The very minute the monitor started reading the rapid whoosh whoosh whoosh of the baby’s
heartbeat, the baby began to kick and punch and roll. The baby kicked strong
and close to the monitor. Each kick startled the nurse and me, even
hurt our ears: whoosh whoosh KAPOW!
The nurse laughed and turned the monitor’s sound way down, “I don’t think we
need to hear the heartbeat anymore, clearly your little one is just fine in
there.”
Those deafening sounds felt like Grace. They were the final
proof of what God had whispered into my heart when the pain was still intense,
when the contractions were still coming. Thing was, I believed God’s words long
before I had the proof.
Because I have walked with Him through storms before.
Friends, faith doesn’t get beaten down in the storms… faith
is a thing that grows in storms.
By Grace,
Amanda Conquers