December 11, 2007

Nathan marries Heather December 8, 2007

Nathan and Heather Blair surrounded by (clockwise) Dayna, Mark, Aaron, Josiah, Masha, and Maylee.

May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face shine upon us, that your ways may be known on earth, your salvation among all nations. Psalm 67.1,2

Twenty five years and eleven months ago a California guy with cool 'Afro' hair and a lovely Hawaiian girl heard their pastor read this Psalm during their wedding in Hilo, Hawaii. In the years following they dwelt in the smile of God's face as they shared His salvation among the nations. Three sons were born during their eight years in Africa - grew during their seven years in Hawaii - and matured during their nine years in Central Asia. Last weekend the guy – now with a diminishing amount of white hair – spoke these same words of blessing for their first born son and his bride.

May the peoples praise you, O God; may all the peoples praise you. Psalm 67.3

We rejoice in the smile of our gracious King! What a joy to see Nathan and Heather proclaim their love for Jesus and one another. Family and friends gathered from far and wide – even Masha and Maylee from Kazakhstan – to support the happy couple. While we shiver in Oregon, we envy them in the sun and surf on their Hawaiian honeymoon.

May the nations be glad and sing for joy, for you rule the peoples justly and guide the nations of the earth. Psalm 67.4.

In God's good providence we've seen Him praised among many nations in 2007. Central Asia, Southeast Asia, North America, and the islands of the Pacific. Jesus rules and reigns and His Kingdom advances. We have so enjoyed your rich fellowship and warm hospitality. Several years passed since we'd been with many friends and churches. What a joy to know that through those years you have faithfully upheld us before Him who rules and guides with justice. Mahalo nui loa! (Thank you very much!) As we enter 2008 we affirm the promise of this Psalm. No matter what – He rules! The challenges we face within our world, our churches, our families, and even in our bodies are part of His Sovereign plan – working for our good, achieving His glory.

God will bless us, and all the ends of the earth will fear him. Psalm 67.7

How could the Psalmist write with such confidence? Because in the fullness of time the blessing of God came in the babe of Bethlehem. The gracious face of God was revealed in Jesus our Emmanuel. Through Him we have received one blessing after another. Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord. So we wish you His blessing this 'Advent' (Latin for 'come'). Our wish comes in the strong confidence of Him who came, has come, and will come again!

After we share Christmas and the New Year with family, we leave for another term of Kingdom service in Kazakhstan on 10 January 2008. We ask for your prayers and continued support. The door of opportunity remains open for us in Central Asia. We have been given an unique privilege to help equip and encourage young Christian leaders to plant and grow His Church in lands where few know Him. It is always hard to leave the comfort of family and friends here. What a kick it's been to ride the waves in the Pacific, graze In & Out (over graze I'm afraid!), and cheer the University of Hawaii through their first undefeated football season! But what a greater kick to see ALL the nations rejoice and sing for joy in Him. Someday we'll gather with them all around His glorious throne...wow! That will be BIG Screen and HIGH DEFINITION big time.

Yours in our Advent King,
Mark and Dayna Blair
Our Mobile
541 - 743 – 6837

Our Blog

http://blairstan.blogspot.com/

Our Mission
Pioneers - 10123 William Carey Drive - Orlando, FL 32832 - USA
http://www.pioneers.org/

Our Ministries
International Christian Fellowship
http://www.icf.nursat.kz/
Tien Shan School
http://www.tienshanschool.org

Our Mailing Address
Blair - 190 Ululani Street - Hilo, Hawaii 96720

October 17, 2007

Hawaii News Autumn 2007

Aloha from Hilo, Hawaii!
We are very thankful for your continued support and prayers. God is Good!
After four years away, we are very glad to be home in Hawaii for a couple months. It is a joy to reunite with family, friends, and churches here. Not to mention all the good food and the amazing beauty of this place. We are thankful for good health and ability to take advantage of hiking in the Volcanoes National Park and swimming in the clear blue sea. If it sounds like we have missed this place…you’re right! (Our Mobile 541 - 743 – 6837 until January)
Life has not been all play here in Paradise. We are privileged to be sharing in our supporting churches on Sundays and meet with friends interested in our mission work during the week. We have been invited to share in classes and chapels in some of the Christian schools in the area. Also, Mark is teaching a ten week Bible study on the Book of Revelation on Wednesday nights.
And now we have a blog! Thanks to a new friend in Southern California. http://blairstan.blogspot.com/
News from Kazakhstan is good. Tien Shan School is off to a good beginning of their academic year. Praise the Lord for providing all their staff. Please keep the building project they have recently undertaken in your prayers. A great friend is serving as Interim Pastor of the International Christian Fellowship in Almaty. Please keep him and his wife in your prayers as they lead that ministry in our absence. When we left in June four other elders also left as their terms of service in Almaty ended. But we hear good reports of how the Lord has been raising up others to serve and lead. We miss our church family there and look forward to being with them again in January. (Health tests are good!)
All three of our sons are in Eugene, Oregon. Josiah has joined Aaron at Lane Community College in order to work toward his degree. Masha and Maylee are back in Almaty. Nathan and Heather are both working and planning their wedding. They’re also both quite involved in ministry through their church there. Please open the attachment on this letter regarding Nathan’s ministry project for Mongolia.
September 23 - Puna Congregational Christian Church, Keaau, HISeptember 30 - Kalahikiola Congregational Church, Kohala, Hawaii
October 7 – Trinity Community Assembly of God, Hilo, Hawaii
October 14 - Central Kona Union Church, Kealakekua, Hawaii
October 21 - Mokuaikaua Congregational Church, Kailua-Kona, Hawaii
October 28 - Hawaii Kai UCC, Hawaii Kai, Oahu
November 4 – Living Waters Assembly of God, Hilo
November 11 - Waipuna Chapel, Kula, Maui
November 18 - Wailuku Union Church, Wailuku, Maui
November 25 - North Shore Christian Church, Kauai
December 2 - Fly Honolulu to Portland, ORDecember 8 - Nathan Blair weds Heather Madison in Eugene, ORJanuary 10, 2008 - Fly from Portland, OR to Beijing - en route to Kazakhstan
Yours in Him who Reigns,Mark and Dayna BlairOur Mobile541 - 743 - 6837Our MissionPioneers - 10123 William Carey Drive - Orlando, FL 32832 - USAhttp://www.pioneers.org/Our MinistriesInternational Christian Fellowship http://www.icf.nursat.kz/Tien Shan School tienshan@pactec.kzOur Mailing AddressBlair - 190 Ululani Street - Hilo, Hawaii 96720

July 29, 2007

Back in Action - July 2007

Greetings from Southern California,

We are so thankful for your prayers and encouragement. Due to our nomadic lifestyle these days we have not been able to get out an email update until now.

We praise the Lord for again extending His healing hand through skilled surgeons! Mark walked out of the hospital the day after back surgery on July 10 (for herniated disc). Best of all the intense pain which he had in his leg for several months prior is 95 % gone. He still needs to avoid ‘B.L.T.’ - bending, lifting, and twisting - which means that Dayna is getting ‘buff’ arms from carrying our luggage! Pray for her back now!

It has been a blessing to catch up with family, friends, and supporting churches here. It has been a strong encouragement to meet those who have so faithfully kept us before the Lord. As you can see from our schedule below, we will be traveling quite a bit in the month ahead. We appreciate your continued prayers for recuperation, safety, and most of all that we would be a blessing to those who have so blessed us.

This week we shared in Mark’s hometown of La Canada, California. The local paper ran the article below -

Kazakhstan missionary Mark Blair to speak at La Canada Presbyterian Church
A life-changing experience at a Crescenta-Canada Family YMCA camp set Mark Blair on a journey halfway around the world, from Catalina Island to the Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan.
Blair, a 1973 graduate of Crescenta Valley High School, is a Christian missionary in Kazakhstan with wife Dayna. He will talk of his work Sunday morning (July 29) while preaching the sermon at all three of La Canada Presbyterian Church’s worship services -- 7:55, 9:25 and 10:55. The church supports the ministry work of the two.
Blair says his spiritual journey began when he was in high school and attended a summer camp on Catalina Island. “It was through the YMCA camp when I heard the Gospel at Camp Fox that I became a Christian,” he said.
After attending Glendale College, he got a degree from Covenant College in Tennessee and began a life of missionary service, working in Uganda, serving as a church pastor in Hawaii, and then, in 1998, moving on to Kazakhstan.
It was an obscure posting -- until Hollywood trained one of its spotlights on the country last year. “When we meet people, often the first thing they say is, ‘Oh, yes, I know about Kazakhstan from the Borat movie,’ “ Blair said. “It’s an entry point for conversation, I guess. It kind of put the place on the map.”
Blair and Dayna had been crisscrossing that map for years before then. He trains and equips national church leaders, and is pastor at the International Christian Fellowship in Almaty. She teaches at Tien Shan School.
It can be challenging work. “Kazakhstan is a very secular place,” Blair said. “It’s Islamic, but not devoutly Muslim -- more secular Muslim. It has a history of 70 years of Soviet atheism. Most people really don’t think much about God and don’t have any religious practices, so initially they don’t seem very interested in spiritual things, but at the same time they’re searching for something deeper in their lives.
“Right now there’s something of an economic boom with the oil and a lot of money coming in. So there’s a lot of materialism. It’s not long before people realize that that doesn’t give them a lot of deep satisfaction, so it opens up a spiritual search.”
La Canada Presbyterian Church is at 626 Foothill Blvd. For information, visit www.lacanadapc.org.

July 29 La Canada Presbyterian Church
August 5 Meadowlark Community Church, San Marcos, CA
August 7 - Begin drive from Southern California back up to Eugene, Oregon
August 17 - Fly from Portland, OR to Philadelphia, PA
August 19 - Grace Bible Fellowship Church, Harrisburg, PA
August 26 - Maple Glen Bible Fellowship Church (near Philadelphia, PA)
August 27 - Fly Philadelphia back to Oregon
August 31 - Fly Portland, OR to Hilo, Hawaii
September 2 - Hilo Missionary Church, Hilo, HI
September 9 - Waimea Assemby of God, Kamuela, HI
September 16 and 23 - Puna Congregational Christian Church, Keaau, HI
Open for other meetings in Hawaii
December 2 - Fly Honolulu to Portland, OR
December 8 - Nathan Blair weds Heather Madison in Eugene, OR
January 10, 2008 - Fly Portland, OR to Beijing - en route to Kazakhstan

Yours in His Living Hope,
Mark and Dayna Blair
Our Mobile
541 - 743 - 6837

Our Mission
Pioneers - 10123 William Carey Drive - Orlando, FL 32832 - USA
http://www.pioneers.org/

Our Ministries
International Christian Fellowship http://www.icf.nursat.kz/
Tien Shan School tienshan@pactec.kz

Our Mailing Address
Blair - 190 Ululani Street - Hilo, Hawaii 96720

July 11, 2007

Don't Waste Your Cancer - great thoughts!

http://www.desiringgod.org/ResourceLibrary/TasteAndSee/ByDate/2006/1776_Dont_Waste_Your_Cancer/

Don't Waste Your Cancer


By John Piper February 15, 2006

[Editor's Note: Our friend, David Powlison, of the Christian Counseling and Education Foundation, who also was recently diagnosed with prostate cancer, has added some helpful expansions to John Piper’s ten points. Indented paragraphs beginning with "DP:" are written by David Powlison.]
I write this on the eve of prostate surgery. I believe in God’s power to heal—by miracle and by medicine. I believe it is right and good to pray for both kinds of healing. Cancer is not wasted when it is healed by God. He gets the glory and that is why cancer exists. So not to pray for healing may waste your cancer. But healing is not God’s plan for everyone. And there are many other ways to waste your cancer. I am praying for myself and for you that we will not waste this pain.
DP: I (David Powlison) add these reflections on John Piper’s words the morning after receiving news that I have been diagnosed with prostate cancer (March 3, 2006). The ten main points and first paragraphs are his; the second paragraphs are mine.

1. You will waste your cancer if you do not believe it is designed for you by God.

It will not do to say that God only uses our cancer but does not design it. What God permits, he permits for a reason. And that reason is his design. If God foresees molecular developments becoming cancer, he can stop it or not. If he does not, he has a purpose. Since he is infinitely wise, it is right to call this purpose a design. Satan is real and causes many pleasures and pains. But he is not ultimate. So when he strikes Job with boils (Job 2:7), Job attributes it ultimately to God (2:10) and the inspired writer agrees: “They . . . comforted him for all the evil that the Lord had brought upon him” (Job 42:11). If you don’t believe your cancer is designed for you by God, you will waste it.
DP: Recognizing his designing hand does not make you stoic or dishonest or artificially buoyant. Instead, the reality of God’s design elicits and channels your honest outcry to your one true Savior. God’s design invites honest speech, rather than silencing us into resignation. Consider the honesty of the Psalms, of King Hezekiah (Isaiah 38), of Habakkuk 3. These people are bluntly, believingly honest because they know that God is God and set their hopes in him. Psalm 28 teaches you passionate, direct prayer to God. He must hear you. He will hear you. He will continue to work in you and your situation. This outcry comes from your sense of need for help (28:1-2). Then name your particular troubles to God (28:3-5). You are free to personalize with your own particulars. Often in life’s ‘various trials’ (James 1:2), what you face does not exactly map on to the particulars that David or Jesus faced – but the dynamic of faith is the same. Having cast your cares on him who cares for you, then voice your joy (28:6-7): the God-given peace that is beyond understanding. Finally, because faith always works out into love, your personal need and joy will branch out into loving concern for others (28:8-9). Illness can sharpen your awareness of how thoroughly God has already and always been at work in every detail of your life.

2. You will waste your cancer if you believe it is a curse and not a gift.

“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1). “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us” (Galatians 3:13). “There is no enchantment against Jacob, no divination against Israel” (Numbers 23:23). “The Lord God is a sun and shield; the Lord bestows favor and honor. No good thing does he withhold from those who walk uprightly” (Psalm 84:11).
DP: The blessing comes in what God does for us, with us, through us. He brings his great and merciful redemption onto the stage of the curse. Your cancer, in itself, is one of those 10,000 ‘shadows of death’ (Psalm 23:4) that come upon each of us: all the threats, losses, pains, incompletion, disappointment, evils. But in his beloved children, our Father works a most kind good through our most grievous losses: sometimes healing and restoring the body (temporarily, until the resurrection of the dead to eternal life), always sustaining and teaching us that we might know and love him more simply. In the testing ground of evils, your faith becomes deep and real, and your love becomes purposeful and wise: James 1:2-5, 1 Peter 1:3-9, Romans 5:1-5, Romans 8:18-39.

3. You will waste your cancer if you seek comfort from your odds rather than from God.

The design of God in your cancer is not to train you in the rationalistic, human calculation of odds. The world gets comfort from their odds. Not Christians. Some count their chariots (percentages of survival) and some count their horses (side effects of treatment), but we trust in the name of the Lord our God (Psalm 20:7). God’s design is clear from 2 Corinthians 1:9, “We felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead.” The aim of God in your cancer (among a thousand other good things) is to knock props out from under our hearts so that we rely utterly on him.
DP: God himself is your comfort. He gives himself. The hymn “Be Still My Soul” (by Katerina von Schlegel) reckons the odds the right way: we are 100% certain to suffer, and Christ is 100% certain to meet us, to come for us, comfort us, and restore love’s purest joys. The hymn “How Firm a Foundation” reckons the odds the same way: you are 100% certain to pass through grave distresses, and your Savior is 100% certain to “be with you, your troubles to bless, and sanctify to you your deepest distress.” With God, you aren’t playing percentages, but living within certainties.

4. You will waste your cancer if you refuse to think about death.

We will all die, if Jesus postpones his return. Not to think about what it will be like to leave this life and meet God is folly. Ecclesiastes 7:2 says, “It is better to go to the house of mourning [a funeral] than to go to the house of feasting, for this is the end of all mankind, and the living will lay it to heart.” How can you lay it to heart if you won’t think about it? Psalm 90:12 says, “Teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom.” Numbering your days means thinking about how few there are and that they will end. How will you get a heart of wisdom if you refuse to think about this? What a waste, if we do not think about death.
DP: Paul describes the Holy Spirit is the unseen, inner ‘downpayment’ on the certainty of life. By faith, the Lord gives a sweet taste of the face-to-face reality of eternal life in the presence of our God and Christ. We might also say that cancer is one ‘downpayment’ on inevitable death, giving one bad taste of the reality of of our mortality. Cancer is a signpost pointing to something far bigger: the last enemy that you must face. But Christ has defeated this last enemy: 1 Corinthians 15. Death is swallowed up in victory. Cancer is merely one of the enemy’s scouting parties, out on patrol. It has no final power if you are a child of the resurrection, so you can look it in the eye.

5. You will waste your cancer if you think that “beating” cancer means staying alive rather than cherishing Christ.

Satan’s and God’s designs in your cancer are not the same. Satan designs to destroy your love for Christ. God designs to deepen your love for Christ. Cancer does not win if you die. It wins if you fail to cherish Christ. God’s design is to wean you off the breast of the world and feast you on the sufficiency of Christ. It is meant to help you say and feel, “I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” And to know that therefore, “To live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 3:8; 1:21).
DP: Cherishing Christ expresses the two core activities of faith: dire need and utter joy. Many psalms cry out in a ‘minor key’: we cherish our Savior by needing him to save us from real troubles, real sins, real sufferings, real anguish. Many psalms sing out in a ‘major key’: we cherish our Savior by delighting in him, loving him, thanking him for all his benefits to us, rejoicing that his salvation is the weightiest thing in the world and that he gets last say. And many psalms start out in one key and end up in the other. Cherishing Christ is not monochromatic; you live the whole spectrum of human experience with him. To ‘beat’ cancer is to live knowing how your Father has compassion on his beloved child, because he knows your frame, that you are but dust. Jesus Christ is the way, the truth, and the life. To live is to know him, whom to know is to love.

6. You will waste your cancer if you spend too much time reading about cancer and not enough time reading about God.

It is not wrong to know about cancer. Ignorance is not a virtue. But the lure to know more and more and the lack of zeal to know God more and more is symptomatic of unbelief. Cancer is meant to waken us to the reality of God. It is meant to put feeling and force behind the command, “Let us know; let us press on to know the Lord” (Hosea 6:3). It is meant to waken us to the truth of Daniel 11:32, “The people who know their God shall stand firm and take action.” It is meant to make unshakable, indestructible oak trees out of us: “His delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night. He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does, he prospers” (Psalm 1:2). What a waste of cancer if we read day and night about cancer and not about God.
DP: What is so for your reading is also true for your conversations with others. Other people will often express their care and concern by inquiring about your health. That’s good, but the conversation easily gets stuck there. So tell them openly about your sickness, seeking their prayers and counsel, but then change the direction of the conversation by telling them what your God is doing to faithfully sustain you with 10,000 mercies. Robert Murray McCheyne wisely said, “For every one look at your sins, take ten looks at Christ.” He was countering our tendency to reverse that 10:1 ratio by brooding over our failings and forgetting the Lord of mercy. What McCheyne says about our sins we can also apply to our sufferings. For every one sentence you say to others about your cancer, say ten sentences about your God, and your hope, and what he is teaching you, and the small blessings of each day. For every hour you spend researching or discussing your cancer, spend 10 hours researching and discussing and serving your Lord. Relate all that you are learning about cancer back to him and his purposes, and you won’t become obsessed.

7. You will waste your cancer if you let it drive you into solitude instead of deepen your relationships with manifest affection.

When Epaphroditus brought the gifts to Paul sent by the Philippian church he became ill and almost died. Paul tells the Philippians, “He has been longing for you all and has been distressed because you heard that he was ill” (Philippians 2:26-27). What an amazing response! It does not say they were distressed that he was ill, but that he was distressed because they heard he was ill. That is the kind of heart God is aiming to create with cancer: a deeply affectionate, caring heart for people. Don’t waste your cancer by retreating into yourself.
DP: Our culture is terrified of facing death. It is obsessed with medicine. It idolizes youth, health and energy. It tries to hide any signs of weakness or imperfection. You will bring huge blessing to others by living openly, believingly and lovingly within your weaknesses. Paradoxically, moving out into relationships when you are hurting and weak will actually strengthen others. ‘One anothering’ is a two-way street of generous giving and grateful receiving. Your need gives others an opportunity to love. And since love is always God’s highest purpose in you, too, you will learn his finest and most joyous lessons as you find small ways to express concern for others even when you are most weak. A great, life-threatening weakness can prove amazingly freeing. Nothing is left for you to do except to be loved by God and others, and to love God and others.

8. You will waste your cancer if you grieve as those who have no hope.

Paul used this phrase in relation to those whose loved ones had died: “We do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope” (1 Thessalonians 4:13). There is a grief at death. Even for the believer who dies, there is temporary loss—loss of body, and loss of loved ones here, and loss of earthly ministry. But the grief is different—it is permeated with hope. “We would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8). Don’t waste your cancer grieving as those who don’t have this hope.
DP: Show the world this different way of grieving. Paul said that he would have had “grief upon grief” if his friend Epaphroditus had died. He had been grieving, feeling the painful weight of his friend’s illness. He would have doubly grieved if his friend had died. But this loving, honest, God-oriented grief coexisted with “rejoice always” and “the peace of God that passes understanding” and “showing a genuine concern for your welfare.” How on earth can heartache coexist with love, joy, peace, and an indestructible sense of life purpose? In the inner logic of faith, this makes perfect sense. In fact, because you have hope, you may feel the sufferings of this life more keenly: grief upon grief. In contrast, the grieving that has no hope often chooses denial or escape or busyness because it can’t face reality without becoming distraught. In Christ, you know what’s at stake, and so you keenly feel the wrong of this fallen world. You don’t take pain and death for granted. You love what is good, and hate what is evil. After all, you follow in the image of “a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief.” But this Jesus chose his cross willingly “for the joy set before him.” He lived and died in hopes that all come true. His pain was not muted by denial or medication, nor was it tainted with despair, fear, or thrashing about for any straw of hope that might change his circumstances. Jesus’ final promises overflow with the gladness of solid hope amid sorrows: “My joy will be in you, and your joy will be made full. Your grief will be turned to joy. No one will take your joy away from you. Ask, and you will receive, so that your joy will be made full. These things I speak in the world, so that they may have my joy made full in themselves” (selection from John 15-17).

9. You will waste your cancer if you treat sin as casually as before.

Are your besetting sins as attractive as they were before you had cancer? If so you are wasting your cancer. Cancer is designed to destroy the appetite for sin. Pride, greed, lust, hatred, unforgiveness, impatience, laziness, procrastination—all these are the adversaries that cancer is meant to attack. Don’t just think of battling against cancer. Also think of battling with cancer. All these things are worse enemies than cancer. Don’t waste the power of cancer to crush these foes. Let the presence of eternity make the sins of time look as futile as they really are. “What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses or forfeits himself?” (Luke 9:25).
DP: Suffering really is meant to wean you from sin and strengthen your faith. If you are God-less, then suffering magnifies sin. Will you become more bitter, despairing, addictive, fearful, frenzied, avoidant, sentimental, godless in how you go about life? Will you pretend it’s business as usual? Will you come to terms with death, on your terms? But if you are God’s, then suffering in Christ’s hands will change you, always slowly, sometimes quickly. You come to terms with life and death on his terms. He will gentle you, purify you, cleanse you of vanities. He will make you need him and love him. He rearranges your priorities, so first things come first more often. He will walk with you. Of course you’ll fail at times, perhaps seized by irritability or brooding, escapism or fears. But he will always pick you up when you stumble. Your inner enemy – a moral cancer 10,000 times more deadly than your physical cancer – will be dying as you continue seeking and finding your Savior: “For your name’s sake, O Lord, pardon my iniquity, for it is very great. Who is the man who fears the Lord? He will instruct him in the way he should choose” (Psalm 25).

10. You will waste your cancer if you fail to use it as a means of witness to the truth and glory of Christ.

Christians are never anywhere by divine accident. There are reasons for why we wind up where we do. Consider what Jesus said about painful, unplanned circumstances: “They will lay their hands on you and persecute you, delivering you up to the synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and governors for my name’s sake. This will be your opportunity to bear witness” (Luke 21:12 -13). So it is with cancer. This will be an opportunity to bear witness. Christ is infinitely worthy. Here is a golden opportunity to show that he is worth more than life. Don’t waste it.
DP: Jesus is your life. He is the man before whom every knee will bow. He has defeated death once for all. He will finish what he has begun. Let your light so shine as you live in him, by him, through him, for him. One of the church’s ancient hymns puts it this way: “Christ be with me, Christ within me, Christ behind me, Christ before me, Christ beside me, Christ to win me, Christ to comfort and restore me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me, Christ in quiet, Christ in danger, Christ in hearts of all that love me, Christ in mouth of friend and stranger” (from “I bind unto myself the name”). In your cancer, you will need your brothers and sisters to witness to the truth and glory of Christ, to walk with you, to live out their faith beside you, to love you. And you can do same with them and with all others, becoming the heart that loves with the love of Christ, the mouth filled with hope to both friends and strangers.
Remember you are not left alone. You will have the help you need. “My God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19).
Pastor John