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Wounds

Before God can use you in a huge way, first you need a really good wound. Or in the words of A.W. Tozer, “It is doubtful whether God can bless a man greatly until He has hurt him deeply”.

That’s the reason few are lining up for a dose of what I’d call “real Christianity”, but happily accept a more user-friendly version. But that “Jesus-lite” is decaf, fat-free, and devoid of the power to really change a life.

If you really want God to work through you to bring healing to others, get ready to embrace His cross and welcome suffering. Wounds are God’s training camp, His 101 courses, before you can move onto anything else.

Few people ever make it through that course with a passing grade. Most just repeat the class for the entirety of their lives, always “playing it safe” trying to avoid the very pain that following Christ demands.

Wounds are important to God because they strip you of your personal power, your self-sufficiency. That limp God gave Jacob required that he lean on something just to get around. Likewise, the limp life leaves you with demands you lean on God. It’s no longer a choice to depend on God’s grace; you simply can’t function without Him. Which is exactly where He wants you.

“Good”, you say. “Already been through the grinder, got the wound. Glad I’ve already got that over with!”

One more detail…the wounds keep coming, because we forget so, so very easily. We never stop trying to move away from weakness and on to “the Victorious Christian Life” those TV preachers always tell us about. But there’s no victory without a battle, and you can’t make it through many fights without some kind of wound. The wounds keep our hearts tender toward the struggles of others, and keep us leaning on Jesus.

For our family, the biggest wound recently came in the form of a little foster boy we’ll call “Danny”.

We weren’t really looking to adopt again, not at this point in our lives. Our two little girls were 8 and 9 at the time, and we already had grandkids just a few years behind them. I’ll already be attending my kids’ graduation ceremonies using one of those walkers with the tennis balls on the legs. But unlike our adopted girls who we’ve raised since birth, Danny had already known a tough life.

Danny’s biological mom abandoned him at 6 months. The boy eventually came to live with his dad, who suffered from schizophrenia and lived with him in a tent in the woods. Then after being passed around to other relatives, welcoming him in our family was a bit like letting a feral animal into your home. Literally.

Sometimes when he would get mad at us, he would relieve himself somewhere inside the house but not in the bathroom. It became a game for us. First, you’d smell something. Then after a search you’d find it, either in a closet or around some corner. It was like a Scavenger Hunt, but one that meant winning came with lots of paper towels and cleaning supplies. At least that was better than the screaming and hitting when you told him no about most anything.

But in the back of our minds we knew if we didn’t eventually adopt him, he’d go back to a group home like the one where my wife found him. Another foster parent had showed her a photo of a 6 year-old boy who’d been thrown in a facility for teenage boys nearby. If ever there was a recipe for potential abuse, a little boy in the midst of troubled teens was it. So my wife tracked him down and got him placed in our home. So please don’t ever tell us the foster system is “broken”. What happens to many kids in the system should be criminal.

We had to do lots of soul searching about whether to adopt Danny. You ask yourself how it may negatively impact your kids, because it most certainly will. Before his morning medication has taken effect, it’s like having a drunken little man spreading havoc through the house. He simply couldn’t control himself. My girls just sat quietly as I’d try to help him take all his meds and get ready for school. They automatically got less attention with Danny around.

The other thing floating around your brain is that, at first, you don’t feel the same affection for him that you do for the other two. Maybe that’s too honest, but anyone who says they feel for a new child the same as one they’ve raised from birth is lying. We were always careful to give him the exact same privileges as the other two, but the feelings were different. And that makes you wonder if adopting him is the right thing.

But that’s when God reminds you that real love was never a feeling, it’s a commitment. So you repeatedly do the “actions of affection”, trusting that one day soon the feelings will come too.

Danny had never known what prayer was before he came to live with us. Now I prayed with him every night before bed. When my girls mentioned Jesus, he asked who they were talking about. But after a few months, he asked me every night to pray with him. If he had trouble falling asleep, he’d ask me to pray again.

When Danny was himself, he was incredibly caring. I fell one time on a hike with him, and I swear he wanted to carry me back down the hill himself. But when he got angry, he could lose all control and become violent, towards me and my wife. The first few times he lashed out, I’d tell him if he did it again, we would probably need to send him back to the group home. But then, somewhere around the fourth month he was with us, something shifted in my heart. I stopped threatening to send him back, even though he was still just a foster child. Something was different now, and the feelings were starting to follow my actions.

Now after an outburst, I just wrapped my arms around him and told him he was our little boy now, no matter what. I whispered in his ear how no little boy on earth was loved anymore than he was. And I actually meant it

That’s when the wound cut the deepest.

His violence kept being a problem, and we suspected that some of his medication wasn’t right. We talked to his therapists, who said he probably needed some longer term care. They needed to see how he responded to certain medications in order to find that balance between helping him control his anger and just doping him up like a zombie.

So we kept asking our case worker for extended treatment for him. But they said treatment facilities were hard to come by, and basically dismissed our pleas for help. They said when he got violent, just call the police to come out. I guess they thought this would put the fear of God in him. The officers did their best to lecture him and tell him to mind us. We appreciated them trying, but Danny couldn’t stop himself. He had too much trauma from years of neglect, not to mention what brain chemistry he may have inherited naturally from his father.

While we kept begging for help, we kept battling Danny most every day. Our lives were constant chaos. Finally, after repeated trips to the emergency room to try to get him sent for treatment, our case worker decided she’d had enough. Since we’d brought Danny with us from Florida when we moved to Tennessee, the case worker figured he should be Florida’s problem, not hers. So we got a call one day that Danny was to be sent back to Florida, and that we had no say in it. He would be put on a plane and sent back in the care of the Florida foster system.

We knew what that would mean. They would first try to place him in some homes, where he would act out so much that those families would send him back. Eventually, he would be tossed back in to some group home where he would get little personal care. We wanted him to be part of our family, but now he’d be thrown back into the system we were trying to save him from, and his illness would never be properly treated. Most foster homes or state children’s homes won’t touch a kid like Danny. If they are deemed “problem kids”, they are placed, and then replaced, and finally forgotten.

Danny was sent back to Florida in May of 2024, and we’ve spent the entire next year trying to get him back. From the thousands of dollars we spent on attorneys, all we got was the knowledge that we had the right to contest Danny’s removal from our home. Only our case worker had told us we had no say in the matter, and now it was past their deadline to be heard. As far as we can tell, we’ve run out of options now.

With only a few shining exceptions, people have not been helpful to us in dealing with Danny’s loss. They don’t understand why we aren’t relieved that he’s gone, as if fate cut us a break. But frankly, most of them don’t understand why we took him in the first place. They seem to think we’re foolish to tip over our lives for a child that isn’t “our own flesh and blood”, as if a child has value only if he comes from your body. They wonder if we’re being crazy to love this way, but we think we are just loving Him like Jesus would.

We wonder if you say Jesus really lives inside you, why don’t you love like Jesus did?

I see Danny’s picture every day and evening in the revolving photos on a digital monitor in our bedroom. With each one, my heart aches anew. Each time, I say a prayer, asking God to find a way to send him back. The feelings I’d once worried wouldn’t come for Danny are now effectively killing me, twice a day, every single day. Sometimes, when I think of him scared and alone, my body actually aches physically for the desire to hug him and protect him again.

We’ve moved houses now since Danny left. But in our new home, there’s a room still set up for him if he ever comes back. My daughter Gracie protects it like a shrine, shouting at any friend who would dare touch any of the toys. No child has ever been so absent, yet so loved.

As I write this, it has been a year and four months since Danny was removed. Though foster care has cut us off from all communication with him, we actually tracked him down once a few months ago and called into a facility where he was staying. A kind worker there let us speak to him on a video call. We all told him quickly how much we loved him, that we were desperately trying to get him back, that we hadn’t forgotten him. We wanted him to know he wasn’t just abandoned. It seemed to please him, and he smiled. But he also seemed to be doped up pretty heavily. That’s what they do to kids like Danny, to keep them docile. But as he talked to us those brief few moments, I took a screenshot of his face. I keep it on my phone to look at, when I can bare to.

That ache I feel every day reminds me of how strong God’s love must be if it’s greater than what I feel for Danny. The love of the Father for the Prodigal Son, as he looks over the horizon every single day and hopes his boy will run down his street toward home again. That ache is my great wound right now, and it reminds me how wounds were so important to Jesus, He kept them as a permanent part of Himself.

Ever notice how even when sporting His perfected body after the Resurrection, Jesus still said to Thomas, “Put your hands in my wounds”? Even in His glorified state, He wasn’t willing to let go of the wounds.

That’s because it’s the wounds that prove how deep your love really is.

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Our dream house was a 120-year old 3-story Victorian home. It was just a few blocks away from one of the loveliest parks in the city and the same distance from the church I pastored. I could literally walk to work, and did so on many mornings. How convenient!

Unlike the other brick houses that lined the streets nearby, this one was painted light yellow and stood apart from the rest. Plaster reliefs of baby angels wrapped around the base of the house. They represented the children of the original owners, making the structure even more unique. It also had a three-car garage at the back of it. Few houses in this older section of town had one as large, and many people resorted to parking on the street. But not us! On just an average salary, we had bought one of the nicest places to live in the area. 

I had always dreamed of owning a Victorian home. I had performed the role of Prof. Henry Higgins from the musical My Fair Lady right before we moved to our new city. So I was primed to live the life of the English gentleman, sipping tea in my beautiful old house. I loved the old wood, the stained glass windows, and our “penthouse suite” for my wife and me on the top floor. We’d be sequestered away from the noise of our little girls playing below us. It all seemed so ideal.

But it turned out to be anything but ideal. Our “Golden House”, as our little girls came to call it, was not so golden. In fact, our dream house almost killed us, quite literally. 

One afternoon I got a call at the church. It was Dawn, my wife, and she was sobbing hysterically. Finally I was able to make out enough of her words to understand what was happening.

“I fell…come home!”

Almost 20 years ago, my wife had been in a bad car accident that crushed her right leg. That ankle couldn’t turn at all. So as I ran the 5 blocks to my home, I knew what had happened.

When I got to the house, I found Dawn in the basement. She was headed to the washer and drier there, and had misjudged a step going down. She hit the concrete floor hard.

After getting her to the hospital, thankfully we learned nothing had been broken. However, that would be just the first of several falls for Dawn down those steps. We eventually moved the washer and drier up to the second floor, which helped a little. But the bottom line was a three-story house with narrow stairways were not meant for a woman who had challenges with mobility.

I also learned having your bedroom on the third-floor is not a good idea for a chubby guy in his mid-50s. There were a few days I wondered if I’d still be alive by the time I reached the top floor. Though I began on the stairway to the bedroom, I might end up on the stairway to heaven…

Then there was the city. Dawn and I always loved culture, restaurants, theater and all the things a great city has to offer. So living there, we felt like kids in a candy store. There was always some new restaurant to explore, always a show playing somewhere, and interesting people living all around us. It seemed ideal.

Except for crime. And taxes. Many cities are big on those, and ours was no exception. We had both in abundance.

One of our regular nightly diversions was watching the notifications on our community’s “Next Door App” alert us to all the recent shootings and hold-ups around us. One of us would hear gunshots, and I’d watch for the posts to pop up. I’d then calculate how close it was to our home. Many were within just a few blocks, some just down the street. 

We would occasionally get notices of some tax we hadn’t paid. Usually, we neglected to pay because the city had neglected to ever send a bill. Then one day, you get a notice you’re being sent to a collections agency, even though you still hadn’t received a bill yourself. 

Once we got a bill for trash pick-up. We were confused because we paid a refuse bill on time every month. But a lady on the phone informed us what we had paid was in fact only the garbage bill. There was completely different bill that was a tax for just having trash pick up available to us in the city. This bill was paying for the “possibility” our trash might be picked up. No kidding.

I’m sure they’re still probably working on a way to collect a tax on our taxes. 

All of this added together was a painful lesson on the difference between perception and reality. After we first moved to that city and were still living in an apartment, I walked down those very streets and fantasized about how wonderful living there would be. When we found the Golden House, we rejoiced and basically cried out, “Here, take our money” to the realtor. 

But the view from the outside of a situation is always much different from the inside. Nothing is ever quite what you expect…with houses, or with life.

The problem with so many of the things we want is it’s too often based on an illusion. We think a thing, a person, or a situation will bring happiness. But happiness is never found in those things outside of us.

Real happiness only happens from the inside out.

There’s an old fashioned Bible word for this foolishness: covetousness. The prohibition against coveting is actually the 10th and final commandment. It’s easily skimmed over in favor of the more R-rated commandments against murder or adultery. Simply wanting your neighbors stuff as opposed to stealing it or killing for it seems like no big deal in comparison.

But coveting is like a powerful drug. The addict never gets enough. Once he gets that one thing he’s obsessed over, he’s disappointed to realize it doesn’t fulfill his needs and he moves on to something more. The new car he’d wanted all his life now sits in the garage most days. She can’t even remember why she bought that purse now. That’s how coveting works: whatever you get, it’s never enough. You’re always left wanting something else, and even more addicted to your desires.

Whatever my eyes desired I did not keep from them. I did not withhold my heart from any pleasure, for my heart rejoiced in all my labor; And this was my reward from all my labor. Then I looked on all the works that my hands had done and on the labor in which I had toiled; And indeed all was vanity and grasping for the wind. There was no profit under the sun. - Ecclesiastes 2:10-11

Take care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions. - Luke 12:15

There was nothing wrong with us wanting a house. But it was very wrong of me to think that it would bring us so much happiness on its own. The ideal life and fulfillment I was expecting from a house was unreasonable. 

That kind of happiness only comes from God’s address, not mine.

Inevitably, we become like kids on the day after Christmas. We’ve opened every package, played with every toy, and we’re already bored with them. The newness wore off in a day, all because we were expecting too much from them to begin with.

Most homes stop being dream houses the minute we walk into them. Reality inevitably sets in, and the “house porn” on the realtor’s website is now just a bunch of plaster and dry wall. 

We finally made it out of our dream house before it killed us. No, we didn't run screaming from it in the middle of the night like in the Shining or the Amityville Horror. When we left, it did take quite a bite out of our finances, and we had to sell for quite a bit less than we'd paid. But the wound was worth it for the lesson we learned.

We’re in a new place now, in a much smaller city. We’re renting a little one-story house we’re hoping to buy soon. We're in a little neighborhood where we hardly ever lock our front door. It's pretty boring compared to city life, but that’s just fine with me.

I’ve discovered what really makes a “dream house”. The dream is not the house, it’s the people you put in it. Regardless of the size or location, those people are what makes life worthwhile. 

Everything else is just a dream. And all that glitters is not a golden house.

Our dream house was a 120-year old 3-story Victorian home. It was just a few blocks away from one of the loveliest parks in the city and the same distance from the church I pastored. I could literally walk to work, and did so on many mornings. How convenient!

Unlike the other brick houses that lined the streets nearby, this one was painted light yellow and stood apart from the rest. Plaster reliefs of baby angels wrapped around the base of the house. They represented the children of the original owners, making the structure even more unique. It also had a three-car garage at the back of it. Few houses in this older section of town had one as large, and many people resorted to parking on the street. But not us! On just an average salary, we had bought one of the nicest places to live in the area. 

I had always dreamed of owning a Victorian home. I had performed the role of Prof. Henry Higgins from the musical My Fair Lady right before we moved to our new city. So I was primed to live the life of the English gentleman, sipping tea in my beautiful old house. I loved the old wood, the stained glass windows, and our “penthouse suite” for my wife and me on the top floor. We’d be sequestered away from the noise of our little girls playing below us. It all seemed so ideal.

But it turned out to be anything but ideal. Our “Golden House”, as our little girls came to call it, was not so golden. In fact, our dream house almost killed us, quite literally. 

One afternoon I got a call at the church. It was Dawn, my wife, and she was sobbing hysterically. Finally I was able to make out enough of her words to understand what was happening.

“I fell…come home!”

Almost 20 years ago, my wife had been in a bad car accident that crushed her right leg. That ankle couldn’t turn at all. So as I ran the 5 blocks to my home, I knew what had happened.

When I got to the house, I found Dawn in the basement. She was headed to the washer and drier there, and had misjudged a step going down. She hit the concrete floor hard.

After getting her to the hospital, thankfully we learned nothing had been broken. However, that would be just the first of several falls for Dawn down those steps. We eventually moved the washer and drier up to the second floor, which helped a little. But the bottom line was a three-story house with narrow stairways were not meant for a woman who had challenges with mobility.

I also learned having your bedroom on the third-floor is not a good idea for a chubby guy in his mid-50s. There were a few days I wondered if I’d still be alive by the time I reached the top floor. Though I began on the stairway to the bedroom, I might end up on the stairway to heaven…

Then there was the city. Dawn and I always loved culture, restaurants, theater and all the things a great city has to offer. So living there, we felt like kids in a candy store. There was always some new restaurant to explore, always a show playing somewhere, and interesting people living all around us. It seemed ideal.

Except for crime. And taxes. Many cities are big on those, and ours was no exception. We had both in abundance.

One of our regular nightly diversions was watching the notifications on our community’s “Next Door App” alert us to all the recent shootings and hold-ups around us. One of us would hear gunshots, and I’d watch for the posts to pop up. I’d then calculate how close it was to our home. Many were within just a few blocks, some just down the street. 

We would occasionally get notices of some tax we hadn’t paid. Usually, we neglected to pay because the city had neglected to ever send a bill. Then one day, you get a notice you’re being sent to a collections agency, even though you still hadn’t received a bill yourself. 

Once we got a bill for trash pick-up. We were confused because we paid a refuse bill on time every month. But a lady on the phone informed us what we had paid was in fact only the garbage bill. There was completely different bill that was a tax for just having trash pick up available to us in the city. This bill was paying for the “possibility” our trash might be picked up. No kidding.

I’m sure they’re still probably working on a way to collect a tax on our taxes. 

All of this added together was a painful lesson on the difference between perception and reality. After we first moved to that city and were still living in an apartment, I walked down those very streets and fantasized about how wonderful living there would be. When we found the Golden House, we rejoiced and basically cried out, “Here, take our money” to the realtor. 

But the view from the outside of a situation is always much different from the inside. Nothing is ever quite what you expect…with houses, or with life.

The problem with so many of the things we want is it’s too often based on an illusion. We think a thing, a person, or a situation will bring happiness. But happiness is never found in those things outside of us.

Real happiness only happens from the inside out.

There’s an old fashioned Bible word for this foolishness: covetousness. The prohibition against coveting is actually the 10th and final commandment. It’s easily skimmed over in favor of the more R-rated commandments against murder or adultery. Simply wanting your neighbors stuff as opposed to stealing it or killing for it seems like no big deal in comparison.

But coveting is like a powerful drug. The addict never gets enough. Once he gets that one thing he’s obsessed over, he’s disappointed to realize it doesn’t fulfill his needs and he moves on to something more. The new car he’d wanted all his life now sits in the garage most days. She can’t even remember why she bought that purse now. That’s how coveting works: whatever you get, it’s never enough. You’re always left wanting something else, and even more addicted to your desires.

Whatever my eyes desired I did not keep from them. I did not withhold my heart from any pleasure, for my heart rejoiced in all my labor; And this was my reward from all my labor. Then I looked on all the works that my hands had done and on the labor in which I had toiled; And indeed all was vanity and grasping for the wind. There was no profit under the sun. - Ecclesiastes 2:10-11

Take care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions. - Luke 12:15

There was nothing wrong with us wanting a house. But it was very wrong of me to think that it would bring us so much happiness on its own. The ideal life and fulfillment I was expecting from a house was unreasonable. 

That kind of happiness only comes from God’s address, not mine.

Inevitably, we become like kids on the day after Christmas. We’ve opened every package, played with every toy, and we’re already bored with them. The newness wore off in a day, all because we were expecting too much from them to begin with.

Most homes stop being dream houses the minute we walk into them. Reality inevitably sets in, and the “house porn” on the realtor’s website is now just a bunch of plaster and dry wall. 

We finally made it out of our dream house before it killed us. No, we didn't run screaming from it in the middle of the night like in the Shining or the Amityville Horror. When we left, it did take quite a bite out of our finances, and we had to sell for quite a bit less than we'd paid. But the wound was worth it for the lesson we learned.

We’re in a new place now, in a much smaller city. We’re renting a little one-story house we’re hoping to buy soon. We're in a little neighborhood where we hardly ever lock our front door. It's pretty boring compared to city life, but that’s just fine with me.

I’ve discovered what really makes a “dream house”. The dream is not the house, it’s the people you put in it. Regardless of the size or location, those people are what makes life worthwhile. 

Everything else is just a dream. And all that glitters is not a golden house.