God in Uncertain Times

An Ode to All We Do Not Know

This morning I thought back to one year ago.

I started the day at my desk after some Bible reading and prayer. Worked my job. Enjoyed a sense of self-determination and well-being. At 1, I left to meet a client.

By 3:30, I was in the back of a rescue, torn and bleeding with injuries that would take months to heal. Wounds that still ache after a long day of writing. An attack that continues to ripple through my life with consequences and still uncertain outcomes.

There was another morning, years back.

It was a Sunday and I worshipped with my church family—sitting behind a couple I enjoyed but only sort of knew. I thought about asking them to dinner some time.

By evening, we got word that the husband’s small plane had crashed. He had received a greater invitation—to a table awaiting all who believe, but he wouldn’t be invited to mine. That opportunity exploded on a wide, green airfield.

Life is uncertain and don’t we hate that! I know I’m not alone.

We can all think back. To the week in 2020 before we went into lockdown. To a month in early 2022 when most of us would struggle to find Ukraine on a map. To the decision that changed everything or the phone call that came in the night or the announcement that arrived out of the blue.

Why? Why? Why? When our souls long for certainty, safety, and peace does God leave us to lives where we can be blindsided?

I believe there were generations who handled this better than we do. Generations, cultures, and personalities better equipped to navigate uncertainty. People living under expansive starry skies, dependent on weather and community and favorable crops just to survive a winter—who understood their own frailty, their smallness against the universe, the fragility of existence that is like a warm breath in the cold air. People who embraced humility as the truth rather than as a spiritual exercise requiring supernatural imagination.

We are the most narcissistic generation I imagine that has ever walked the earth.

Believing we can see, predict, plan, chart, determine, and decide all our ways to eliminate risk, fear, loss, and everything we don’t want to enter our carefully mapped lives.

Perhaps because we stare at screens rather than stars and see ourselves reflected there, larger than we truly are. We live surrounded by mirrors, images, and control panels so we gauge that we have greater control than we do—mastery over our worlds and the ones we create.

So, rather than cling to God in grateful dependence, we resent Him when life breaks in and reminds us we belong to the breakable, easily obliterated human race like every generation before us. Rather than hit our knees and ask for help, we shake our fists and rebuild our towers, determined that next time the flood waters won’t reach our heights.

We are a stingy generation. A people struggling to schedule God into our days, collapsing at night with only the fleeting memory of intending to read His Word, speak His name, or exhale a prayer. We determine tomorrow will be the day but right now, we deserve a break—this drink, this workout, this episode, this update. Right now, we must be informed, of course, and rested and fed and relieved.

Stingy toward God but generous toward ourselves in ways we don’t even see because our narcissistic certainty has blinded us to the collapse of our own perspectives inward.

Jesus told a parable about us once:

“Someone in the crowd said to him, “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me.” But he said to him, “Man, who made me a judge or arbitrator over you?” And he said to them, “Take care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” And he told them a parable, saying, “The land of a rich man produced plentifully, and he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I have nowhere to store my crops?’ And he said, ‘I will do this: I will tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, “Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.”’ But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you, and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is the one who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God.” Luke 12:13-21 ESV

I detest the uncertainty of life and yet, I see the hidden gift of it, too. I don’t know where I’ll end up later today. Perhaps disaster will revisit my life or perhaps I’ll cook dinner and watch a show. Remembering that I wasn’t prepared last year, but God saw me through, reminds me to be rich toward God today.

Not to lay up plans and choices like a hoarded treasure I can count on to keep me warm but to lean into God, knowing He sees what’s coming and is present there as He is now.

There lies a gift in all we do not know. It strips us down to all we can know. We can know Him—and He is enough.
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11 Comments

    The Conversation

  1. John Seither says:

    I am so sorry about the dog attack. I remember it well and prayed for you. Thank you for being so generous with sharing through your writing. I see Bob H. is your agent. My wife Marci is also represented by Bob. I have yet to meet him but I read what he writes and am a big fan not only of his writing (I am partial to weird humor) but of his “matter of fact , no-nonsense” approach to the business of writing. An elderly aunt of mine once told me that it was the grace of God that kept us from knowing the future. She said if we were able to see it, none of us would have the courage to go through it. That has stayed with me as I have lived the many trials that have been ordained for me and my family. Testing produces endurance and Christlike character. That is so easy to say and write, but living it takes us to the brink of cowardice at best. The many assurances of future grace and glory we have in the word of God is the only thing that keeps me on the path. Not just on the path but proceeding through it all with peace and joy in the midst of trials. I will leave you with one of my favorites memory passages:
    “He will swallow death for all time. And the Lord God will wipe tears from all faces. And He will remove the reproach of His people from all the earth. For the Lord has spoken. And it will be said in that day, “This is our God for whom we have waited that He might save us. This is the Lord for whom we have waited, let us rejoice and be glad in His salvation.” Isa. 25: 8-9

  2. I share your love of both Marci and Bob! Am also a huge admirer of Bob’s writing and attitude, as well as your wife’s spirit and heart. Thanks for weighing in!

  3. Barbara Gold says:

    Wow Lori , this is one of your most powerful writings yet . I am no stranger to significant life disasters , but still , I need to read this reminder everyday . It cuts right through so much of the confusion today . Thank you for your keen insight and amazing ability to put that into words .

  4. Maureen says:

    “Perhaps because we stare at screens rather than stars and see ourselves reflected there, larger than we truly are.”

    Oh this is so true, dear, insightful friend. Thank you for these wise words that pierce to the soul.

    So much to chew on here. I can tell you— I know today was hard, but God used the pain of the past year(s) to enable you to touch hearts through your poignant words.
    Thank you.

  5. Mark says:

    “We are the most narcissistic generation I imagine that has ever walked the earth.“

    For some reason, I take that line personally, Lori.

    It’s true, of course. . . but only because we are the current generation that walks the earth.

    It was true of the generation before us, and it will be true of the generation after us.

    It was true of every man and woman since Adam and Eve . . . everyone . . . except Jesus Christ.

  6. Deb Kreyssig says:

    Amen Lori!
    In the words of John the Baptist, “I must decrease that He might increase.” John 3:30

  7. Jim Klock says:

    Thank you so very much! “He is enough”…God has been whispering that phrase in my ear for years now. Your blog today touched my heart.

  8. Clarice James says:

    Well put, Lori, as usual. And so needed. Thank you.

  9. Tammy Breeding says:

    I am so sorry that you had to experience the dog attack, and are still living with the consequences.

    This is just what I needed to read at this point in my life. I didn’t know it, but I had carefully “built larger barns” and told myself that I was protected from adversity…..until adversity paid me a visit! I have been riding the train of the stages of grief, have just arrived at the acceptance stop. I am getting off here, to go look at the stars…

    Thank you.

  10. Anonymous says:

    I’m so sorry for what you went through. I’ll pray for your continued healing. I know that our Good Shepherd will see us through as we follow Him. He knows the way since He is The Way. I love that the early believers were called followers of “The Way”