Tag Archives: Suzie Eller

Encouragement for Today – Thank You, Dad – SUZIE ELLER

Suzie Eller

“A father to the fatherless, a defender of widows, is God in his holy dwelling.” Psalm 68:5 (NIV)

Moments after I stopped by my parents’ house, my dad clutched his chest.

Knowing the hospital was close, my mom and I helped him to the car. I pressed hard on the gas pedal, keeping an eye on the man who reclined in the passenger seat as I raced toward the nearby emergency room.

The news was not good. Doctors said his heart was badly damaged, and open-heart surgery was the only option.

Doctors scheduled the procedure for the next day. Since I lived in another city, I drove home to gather my things before returning the next morning for a long stay.

The sun crept over the horizon as I drove westward to be with my parents during my dad’s surgery. Visits were strictly limited, and my time with my dad was to be an hour before he would go in to the operating room.

When I arrived, a nurse informed me that my dad wasn’t in his room.

I rushed up the stairs to the surgical floor waiting room. “They took him back a half hour ago, Suzie,” my brother said. “It happened so quickly we just barely got to see him.” I buried my head in my brother’s chest and wept.

My dad was in surgery with his chest split open … and I didn’t get to say thank you.

Thank you for taking the place of our biological father who should have loved those tiny girls but for whatever reason didn’t.

Thank you for taking two little girls who didn’t have a father and making them your own.

Thank you for never seeing us in a different light than my brothers and sister who were born later.

Thank you for rejoicing that you won the prize another failed to claim.

When I was younger I didn’t always appreciate this gift. I loved the man I called Dad, but often wondered about the other one. Did I look like him? Where was he? Did he think of me? What might it be like if I had my biological father in my life?

As an adult, and as a parent, I saw it differently. Being a dad isn’t always tied to DNA.

One man was there at my conception, but another took the more difficult path. He went to work every day. He showed up at events. He disciplined and loved me, watched me graduate and marry. He took the name “Papaw” as he embraced my children.

I know not every woman who grew up without a biological father’s love has this type of experience. But all of us can know the love of God as our heavenly Father.

Psalm 68:5 describes God as “a father to the fatherless.” It’s a theme woven throughout Scripture from beginning to end. Our God loves orphans and rescues the abandoned. This is a work close to His heart.

Later that evening, after Dad’s surgery, I sat in the shadows with the rhythmic swish of the respirator the only sound in the room. I silently offered up gratitude.

First, because my dad had made it through the surgery.

Second, because this man partnered with God’s heartbeat when he stepped in to love two little girls without a daddy.

I leaned over the bed and whispered the words I could no longer hold back: “Thank you, Dad.”

And thank You, God, for loving me with a perfect Father’s love.

Dear Lord, thank You for loving me as a Heavenly Father. Thank You for bringing people into my life who partnered with You in that love. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

TRUTH FOR TODAY:

Matthew 25:35-36, “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me.” (ESV)

James 2:15-17, “Dear friends, do you think you’ll get anywhere in this if you learn all the right words but never do anything? Does merely talking about faith indicate that a person really has it?” (The Message)

 

Encouragement for Today – Jumping Out of Airplanes – Suzie Eller

Suzie Eller

“But Jesus said, ‘You feed them.'” Luke 9:13a (NLT)

Each Wednesday, a few women come through my door. They bring with them stories of past addiction, abuse, childhood dysfunction, and second and third chances.

They also bring friendship. Laughter. Honesty. A heart for more.

One week we went around the kitchen table and shared five things that described us. Not five things from the past, or five things we see in the mirror. But five things that described who we are as changed, Jesus-filled women of faith.

When it was my turn, I shared three of my five things: I am kind. I am loved by God. I am an adventurer …

As I listed number three, I also casually mentioned how one day I’d love to jump out of a plane. Before I could move on, the conversation erupted.

Jump out of a plane? Why? That’s crazy!

Our study took a quick detour. After several minutes, I realized our discussion had taken a God-turn as these women began sharing their deepest fears, such as: taking a healthy risk within a relationship; believing they were capable to lead others; going on a mission trip (which requires flying). Even riding a ride at an amusement park.

Events and people from their past had convinced most of these women they were not intended to live adventurously, but rather to be limited by their past and fears. Did Jesus’ disciples feel that way too?

In Luke 9, the disciples approached Jesus with a big problem. The crowd was massive. They were in an isolated area, and there was no food.

The disciples wanted the people sent away.

Instead, Jesus turned to them and said, “You feed them.”

It made perfect sense for the disciples to ask Jesus to send the crowd away. In the natural, there simply wasn’t enough food. In the natural, they were accustomed to Jesus taking charge. In the natural, they were faced with a crowd of 5,000 men accompanied by women and children, bringing the total to more than 20,000 people.

“You feed them” was a call to step out of the natural and into the supernatural. It was a jump-out-of-the-airplane faith moment.

Jesus wasn’t asking them to do it in their own power. John 15:5b says, “apart from me you can do nothing” (NIV). Jesus was letting them know He was prepared to do a lot with the little they had to offer.

I asked the women in my home what it might look like if they were to respond to Jesus’ call to adventure.

One said she’d ride rides with me if we went to an amusement park.

Another expressed she was willing to open her heart to loving others, even if they were still a work in progress.

Another, who has never been on an airplane and is scared of them, is a recovering addict who desires nothing more than to tell others about Jesus. She said, “I would be afraid, but if God told me to go on a mission trip, I’d get on an airplane because my God would be there with me.”

I wanted to dance in joy! Something significant was taking place. For no matter how small the adventures might seem to others, God could do big things with each of us.

Have the words of others or your past put limitations on you?

Have they caused you to fear, or to think that Jesus can’t use you because of your story?

Does it seem too hard, or too big?

“You do it.”

That’s Jesus, putting His vote of confidence in you, knowing He can supply all your needs.

It’s a call to move from walking in the natural to believing in the supernatural. To learn things about yourself that God has known all along, and to watch the miracle of faith unfold in your heart.

Father, thank You for seeing beyond my fears, beyond my broken places, to the real me underneath. You see a strong woman of faith and a trusting child of God. Today, I trust that I can do all things through You, and with Your help. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

TRUTH FOR TODAY:
Ephesians 3:20, “Now all glory to God, who is able, through His mighty power at work within us, to accomplish infinitely more than we might ask or think.” (NLT)

Isaiah 43:18, “Forget about what’s happened; don’t keep going over old history. Be alert, be present. I’m about to do something brand-new.” (MSG)

RELATED RESOURCES:
Suzie Eller’s newest book speaks hope into the hurts of your past: The Mended Heart.

Visit Suzie’s blog and join her in The Mended Heart online Bible study and download the first chapter for free.