
Today marks the eighth anniversary of my accident. Comparing December 3rd, 2024, with December 3rd, 2023, I can honestly say that God has radically transformed my life. Today, I no longer have seizures or experience severe spiritual warfare. I recently got my driver’s license. I continue re-learning to play violin. Although I still face severe migraines and other neurological deficits, my quality of life looks drastically different from what I could have imagined 365 days ago. But these divine interventions also beg the question, What about the suffering and uncertainty we endured during those first seven years?
From a human perspective, it would have seemed more humane for God to heal my seizures immediately, or at least shortly after they started, rather than allowing us to agonize over possible causes and cures for so long. Not to mention the social isolation we experienced due to my severe light sensitivity. Since I’m not God, I can’t say with certainty why he chose to act the way he did, but I have a few guesses:
- Exhausting our human medical options forced us to look to God alone for our “daily bread,” whether that took the form of healing, partial improvement, or just the grace to endure joyfully no matter our outward circumstances.
- Our intense suffering increased our empathy for others’ hidden hurts. Seizures are invisible unless they’re happening, and brain injury deficits and stroke fatigue are even more subtle. They may not manifest until hours after I’ve been pushed past my limits. Depending on how far I’ve been stretched, I may have to spend a day or two recovering. These “invisible” challenges increased my awareness that others might also be experiencing secret pain, whether physical or emotional.
- Those years of suffering drove home that God is both sovereign and kind, no matter how he chose to work in our lives. While we knew he could end our suffering at any time, the most straightforward path seemed like a medical intervention. However, we also knew a couple of people with seizures who were unable to find a medical solution, and eventually decided this must be God’s plan for us as well. But no matter how our earthly lives unfolded, we were still certain that God was good, kind, and for us because he’d already provided eternal salvation through Jesus’ death on the cross. The Apostle Paul writes:
“What shall we say about such wonderful things as these? If God is for us, who can ever be against us? Since he did not spare even his own Son but gave him up for us all, won’t he also give us everything else? Who dares accuse us whom God has chosen for his own? No one—for God himself has given us right standing with himself.” ~ Romans 8:31-33
The promise that God will give us “everything else” means something unique for every person’s story. In our case, we assumed “everything else” meant spiritual blessings because we’d exhausted all our medical resources. But God was only asking us to wait. It was essential for us to run out of human options so there would be no shadow of a doubt about Who accomplished my healings.
So what does the promise God will give us “everything else” mean for those who’ve lost a loved one, or are facing unemployment, or have endured severe disabilities for decades? God’s thoughts and ways are infinitely higher than ours, and if he is allowing pain in our lives, it is because there is a loving purpose that our pain is somehow his perfect tool to accomplish. If God didn’t hesitate to crush his precious Son on our behalf, then there is no good thing he would withhold from us – if that thing is what we truly need. And if he does withhold it, then there is something about our desire that he sees but we cannot.
This is the hardest lesson that Ivan and I have had to learn over the years. If I’m being honest, I haven’t learned it yet. But I hope I learn it a little bit more with each trial God allows. This quote from Hudson Taylor, a 19th century missionary to China, continues to encourage me in moments of pain and weakness:
“It does not matter how great the pressure is. What really matters is where the pressure lies – whether it comes between you and God, or whether it presses it you nearer His heart.”
Thank you all so much for praying for us and walking with us for the past eight years! We’re so grateful for your love and support, and can’t wait to see what the next year will bring!
Holding on to what God sees and not what we see is a tremendous daily struggle. Thank you for being honest by saying you’re not there yet. Our family is going through tremendous trials right now. Trusting God is a daily process. Thank you for sharing. So encouraging!!
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Thanks so much for sharing! Whatever you might be facing, I pray that God will daily increase your awareness of his presence, power, and love. Although it often feels like our trials have no end in sight, the truth is that each and every one of them have and end date that was already set before the beginning of time. I love how God describes setting boundaries for the sea, and also think it applies to the trials we face in life:
“For I locked it behind barred gates,
limiting its shores.
I said, ‘This far and no farther will you come.
Here your proud waves must stop!’” ~ Job 38:10-11
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Thank you Grace for your beautiful reply. This is Karen CORMIA – not beard technical. Not sure how that happened??Our son, Matt has pancreatic cancer and has serious side effects with chemo. He just came home from the hospital. His daughter, Sydney had her first son, born at 23 weeks @ 15 oz. Cooper Matthew is a miracle and but still in the NICU. He is almost 5 months and 6lbs. We thank the Lord every day for this miracle blessing!! Not only is Cooper their first son, our Matthew‘s first grandson and our first great grandson. Unfortunately, Cooper was re-intubated and his little lungs have not developed yet to come home. We know God has a plan, but it is very difficult to trust in Him day by day, minute by minute when we are all so weary. I know you and your entire family know how that feels. Please keep us in your prayers.🙏
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Hi Karen! Thanks so much for letting us know who was commenting..not sure why it’s showing the email address rather than the screen name all of a sudden. Wow, that sounds incredibly difficult! So much to cry out to the Lord for on behalf of two very precious lives! We didn’t realize you guys were going through all this. We’ll be praying for Matt and Cooper, and that the Lord would wrap you all in his peace as you walk with him moment by moment. He is with you!!!
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This is Samantha, and our family has been praying both for you and for the Cormias. Thank you for sharing honestly about the struggles that your trials have brought, and thank you for sharing about the many times throughout your trials that you have seen God’s hand at work. He is faithful, unchanging, and true, and he will not let go of the heart that trusts in him.
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Amen! Thanks as always for your prayers, and we are praying for them too! Such a difficult path to be walking right now. I honestly cannot imagine!
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