Hey Everyone,
This is something I have been thinking about a lot lately.
When I was growing up, I considered my "hometown" to be Chicago, just because it was the largest city within range. I was actually a small-town girl who actually didn't live very close to Chicago at all, but it was a landmark everyone knew, and I have been to several of its major museums and sites. One afternoon many years ago, I was trying to get out of the middle of the city and back home. It was the biggest, craziest traffic I had ever encountered in my life, and I was praying the entire time, all the while gripping the steering wheel in white-knuckled fear. This was long before the days of GPS, so I was using instructions I had plotted and written out with a paper map. I was desperately trying to find Lakeshore Drive, because I remembered my parents saying, "If you can find Lakeshore Drive, you can find your way home."
"All" I had to do was find this seemingly elusive street through dozens of stoplights so packed that you have to stop right in the middle of cross lanes when the lights turn red, and a dinnertime rush-hour traffic jam that had you moving an inch at a time. But eventually God helped me find it, and I finally was able to make my way back home, along with a normal blood pressure.
Years later, I was driving through another large city on a major highway, when I suddently a bottleneck traffic jam -- what usually took me 10 minutes to whizz by took an hour and a half. The whole time I was thinking, "I survived Chicago... God will get me through this, too."
"Getting through Chicago" then became my metaphor for the toughest of life circumstances I found myself in. When I was in a very unpleasant job situation, I would pray, "Lord, please let this be my Chicago." In other words, "Please let this be the worst it's going to get for awhile, and please show me the path to get on to find my way home again. Please remind me that you got me through just when I thought it couldn't get any worse, and I know you will do it again. Thank you!"
I'm at a point in life right now where I know I am going to be facing a few more inevitable "Chicago Moments", so in order to prepare for them (and following examples we are given in the Bible,) I try to remind myself of the other hard times God has gotten me through, as reassurance that this time will be no different.
But I have to admit that I still feel anxious, because even when God does show us how to "find Lakeshore Drive" (the path we have to follow to "go home", or even just endure,) it is usually far from easy.
There are tough decisions that must be made, people and places that must be left behind, changes that have to be made that might make things worse in some ways and better in others.
I'm always trying to tell myself, "God got me through Chicago, He will get me through this," but I also keep praying that He would keep strengthening my faith.
What about you?
* What are some of your "Chicago Moments" -- the times God got you through, that you tuck away as a reminder in even tougher times that He will come through once again?
* How does remembering God's goodness to you in the past help you cope with an uncertain future?
* If you still suffer from doubts and fears, what does God lead you to do (along with regular study and prayer) that helps to calm your heart?
This is something I have been thinking about a lot lately.
When I was growing up, I considered my "hometown" to be Chicago, just because it was the largest city within range. I was actually a small-town girl who actually didn't live very close to Chicago at all, but it was a landmark everyone knew, and I have been to several of its major museums and sites. One afternoon many years ago, I was trying to get out of the middle of the city and back home. It was the biggest, craziest traffic I had ever encountered in my life, and I was praying the entire time, all the while gripping the steering wheel in white-knuckled fear. This was long before the days of GPS, so I was using instructions I had plotted and written out with a paper map. I was desperately trying to find Lakeshore Drive, because I remembered my parents saying, "If you can find Lakeshore Drive, you can find your way home."
"All" I had to do was find this seemingly elusive street through dozens of stoplights so packed that you have to stop right in the middle of cross lanes when the lights turn red, and a dinnertime rush-hour traffic jam that had you moving an inch at a time. But eventually God helped me find it, and I finally was able to make my way back home, along with a normal blood pressure.
Years later, I was driving through another large city on a major highway, when I suddently a bottleneck traffic jam -- what usually took me 10 minutes to whizz by took an hour and a half. The whole time I was thinking, "I survived Chicago... God will get me through this, too."
"Getting through Chicago" then became my metaphor for the toughest of life circumstances I found myself in. When I was in a very unpleasant job situation, I would pray, "Lord, please let this be my Chicago." In other words, "Please let this be the worst it's going to get for awhile, and please show me the path to get on to find my way home again. Please remind me that you got me through just when I thought it couldn't get any worse, and I know you will do it again. Thank you!"
I'm at a point in life right now where I know I am going to be facing a few more inevitable "Chicago Moments", so in order to prepare for them (and following examples we are given in the Bible,) I try to remind myself of the other hard times God has gotten me through, as reassurance that this time will be no different.
But I have to admit that I still feel anxious, because even when God does show us how to "find Lakeshore Drive" (the path we have to follow to "go home", or even just endure,) it is usually far from easy.
There are tough decisions that must be made, people and places that must be left behind, changes that have to be made that might make things worse in some ways and better in others.
I'm always trying to tell myself, "God got me through Chicago, He will get me through this," but I also keep praying that He would keep strengthening my faith.
What about you?
* What are some of your "Chicago Moments" -- the times God got you through, that you tuck away as a reminder in even tougher times that He will come through once again?
* How does remembering God's goodness to you in the past help you cope with an uncertain future?
* If you still suffer from doubts and fears, what does God lead you to do (along with regular study and prayer) that helps to calm your heart?
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