Test of Faith

CancerWhen a life-crisis comes, it can test a person’s faith. Such is the case with the crisis of Mary’s cancer diagnosis 5 days ago. The Bible tells us, “You will have trouble.” (John 16:33) And yet when it comes, we’re never prepared.

Or are we?

In that same verse Jesus is talking, and just before his warning that we’ll all have troubles, he says that even while we’re in the midst of them, he wants us to experience his deep inner peace. He says he makes “his glorious power” available to us to produce endurance and that we’ll be given as much as we need. (Colossians 1:11)

Even though Mary hasn’t known about her cancer for very long, I’ve glimpsed that “glorious power” at work within her already. I look back at texts from Saturday, that long, frustrating day she and Bervin spent in the emergency room, and see how she was suffering: high fever, a bad belly ache, and the sudden onset of jaundice.

CT machine

As doctors began a string of tests and hinted at what might be wrong, Mary sensed the day wasn’t going to end well. The two of us were texting off and on, and midday she wrote, “Don’t worry. Just keep praying.”

 

As the diagnosis came closer, she knew it was more than just a bad case of the flu but wrote, “‘Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice.’ I’m glad God is near.”

Between those words I could hear the Lord’s strength growing within her and knew he was preparing her for what was ahead. Three hours later she texted, “The Lord is near.”

Hours after that, just after she and Bervin had heard the words “pancreatic cancer,” she texted this: “I’m sorry for how this will affect you and yours as I walk down the same road as Nate. I know this is hard all around, but amazingly I’ve been at peace all day.”

Those were the words of a woman who had been supernaturally prepared by God to stand strong even in the face of cancer. One of Mary’s last texts on that awful day, coming after the diagnosis and well after midnight, was, “God is good.”

God is good.How can someone who’s just been told she has cancer actually believe God is good? The only reasonable answer is that he had personally prepared her ahead of time by strengthening her faith in him. Though she may not have felt it while it was happening, it was. She has always trusted God to do what was best, so he readied her for Saturday’s events.

That’s not to say Mary’s “trouble” isn’t going to be hard. The enemy of faith, the devil, is going to do all he can to make her miserable and shake her trust in God, but I believe he’s going to be sorely disappointed. This faith-test is only going to polish her into brightly shining faith-gold.

“I have set the Lord always before me; because he is at my right hand, I shall not be shaken.” (Psalm 16:8)

Words from Mary

After 4 days in the hospital, last night my sister Mary got her greatest wish: to go home. Nobody likes the plasticized pillows or the unending interruptions. (…like the nurse who came in to take more blood: “Good morning!” she said in a cheery voice, flipping on the lights. It was 4:00 AM.)

The function of Mary’s stay was to complete a battery of tests so her team of doctors could make an accurate analysis and recommend treatment. Next week she’ll receive the news, whether good, bad, or somewhere in between.

???????????????????????????????Last night I promised we would hear from Mary today, and below are excerpts from a letter she wrote on Sunday, letting it be known for the first time she had cancer:

Last week I experienced three days of mysterious high fevers.  When I saw a doctor on Saturday, he sent us to the emergency room for tests.  It was a huge shock to [husband] Berv and me, and it will be a shock to you, to learn I have been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.  The testing will enable them to stage the cancer.

As we learn more, I’ll pass it on to you.  Margaret has offered her blog to share any updates, and God has led me to say yes. If there are specific prayer requests, you’ll find them there too.

Having to tell my [7] children what I’ve just told you was the most difficult thing I’ve ever done. No mother wants to cause her children pain. But Scripture promises great spiritual gain can result from suffering, and that is my hope and prayer. Please pray for my children, children-in-law, grandchildren, and for Bervin, who is holding up as well as can be expected, trying to stay strong for all of us. But he is understandably sad and upset.

???????????????????????????????Today Margaret brought me a beautiful beach stone, the most beautiful one I’ve ever seen. On it was inscribed Psalm 71:3. This afternoon six year old [grandson] Beck read it for us. “Be to me a Rock of habitation, to which I may continually come.  Thou art my Rock and my Fortress…my confidence from my youth.”  I know, without doubt, God will never leave me or forsake me, and I’m clinging to Him and His Word to carry me all the way through.

Thanking the Lord for you, 

Mary

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On Saturday when we heard the words “pancreatic cancer,” we all jumped to a radical conclusion: that Mary would follow the same path Nate did. (He died 42 days after diagnosis.) But with great joy we’re now believing we were wrong about that. Mary’s cancer is a very rare pancreatic, occurring less than 10% of the time. In cases like hers, surgery has been known to extend a person’s life for quite a while.

In the mean time, Mary is setting the example by not worrying about tomorrow, because just as Jesus said,

“Don’t worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring its own worries. Today’s trouble is enough for today.” (Matthew 6:34)

Sister-Advantage

Tonight this blog post is taking the first step on a long and possibly difficult journey. The day after Valentines Day, we as an extended family learned that my sister Mary had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. This discovery was like a sledge hammer to the chest, especially since Nate died of that very thing 4 years ago.

But before I share the details of these last pain-filled days, I’d like to begin on a positive note. So I’m posting a blog about Mary written in happier times, 3 years ago. Then tomorrow, we’ll hear from Mary herself, about her new diagnosis.

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Extra effortMy sister Mary and I were born 20 months apart. She’s older… and much wiser. Mary’s been my leader and defender since I was born, and I don’t deserve her.

For example, she’s given her last two Fridays to me as a painting partner at the cottage, priming and then semi-glossing the woodwork around all my new windows. In the process she also accomplished the thankless job of painting our “Harry Potter Closet,” the hard-to-reach cubbyhole under the stairs. But painting the underside of steps while lying on her stomach and twisting her neck upward was no problem for Mary. “I’d love to do it,” she said.

And that’s her, always saying, “I’d love to do it.”

Coffee MugYears ago one of my friends gave me a coffee mug that says, “No, I can’t bring 4 dozen cookies. Next question?” I love my mug and quickly related to its sentiment. Mary, however, probably wouldn’t be able to drink from it. She’d rather bake the cookies.

Mom once told me, “Next to your father, Mary is the most Christ-like person I know.” She was right. Mary’s always thinking one step ahead of the rest of us. For instance, she keeps my calendar commitments in her head along with her own, hoping she can help. She’ll say, “Do you have a ride to the airport on the 5th? If not, I’ll take you.” I’m thinking, “Where am I going on the 5th?” and she’s already arranging transportation. But that’s Mary, the biblical poster child for putting the interests of another ahead of her own.

M & MAs little girls we were polar opposites. She was quiet; I was boisterous. She was careful; I was sloppy. She obeyed the rules; I tested them. Yet somehow our relationship grew into a strong friendship that’s only gotten stronger with the decades. I’m continually learning from her sterling example and will never catch up.

When Nate had his cancer, she and I often left the house briefly to have prayer times in her car. When I held back tears at the cottage to spare children and grandchildren, beach walks with Mary were my safe times to open the flood gates. When Nate died, Mary was there, as she had been for days leading up to that. And in the 15 months since I’ve become a widow, she’s driven from Chicago to Michigan every Thursday to spend several days cheering and fortifying her grieving sister.

Best of all, though, is our relationship as sisters-in-the-Lord. Mary knows her Bible (because she reads it through each year), and I often ask, “Where is that one verse about…?” She knows. As a Bible study leader she studies Scripture intently and has, in the process, become more and more like its Author. As Mom said, Christ-like.

Beach bumsToday after cleaning her paint brush and pulling on her boots she said, “What are you planning to blog about tonight?”

I said, “You.”

“Oh no. You shouldn’t.”

But of course, I knew she’d say that.

“She had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet listening to what he said.” (Luke 10:39)