Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope

A Hard and Difficult Road

Episode Summary

Hear Joni share about when she first broke her neck and how she made the Bible her meat and drink. She encourages you to do the same today.

Episode Notes

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Episode Transcription

SHAUNA: This is Shauna on Joni Eareckson Tada: Sharing Hope. Get ready to be blessed as Joni sings a beautiful old hymn, I think you will remember and if you do, be sure to sing along.

 

(Joni sings:)

Abide with me, fast falls the evening tide

When darkness deepens, Lord with me abide.

When other helpers fail and comforts flee

Help for the helpless, O abide with me

 

            Maybe you heard a little cracking in my voice, maybe some effort and maybe I was not perfect pitched, but you know what? I’m singing from a wheelchair and I’m singing it the best I can. Because I have learned to sing my way through suffering knowing that regardless the trial God is always abiding with me. And I love that. Shall I take from God’s hand his blessings, yet not welcome any pain? Shall I thank him for days of sunshine yet grumble in days of rain? Shall I love him in times of plenty but then leave him in days of drought? Shall I trust when I reap a harvest, but when winter winds blow then doubt? Oh, let your will be done in me Jesus. In your love I will abide. Oh, I long for nothing else as long as you are glorified. It is the anthem of my life; a subject I talk about often in our times together on this radio program. Yes, when following Christ, it means a hard and difficult road. True, it has its disappointments and pain, but it is a journey that has so much pleasure and so much joy in the Lord.

            Finding the joy of the Lord in suffering. Wow! That’s a big theme for me. Like Psalm 119:67 where it says, “Before I was afflicted, I went astray, but now I keep your word.” And then just a few verses later the psalmist says again, “It was for my good that I was afflicted so that I could learn your statutes.” Oh, my goodness. You know if there is one thing you and I could learn from those two short Bible verses it is this: God sends affliction to help us glorify his name. How so? Well, I can say it from a wheelchair that affliction takes away the shallowness of life and it makes us more serious about life. We learn to abide in him; we can more easily resonate; we can better understand why God’s word is so serious. 

            Just like John Piper says. He says, “There is not a single glib of page in the book of God.” Don’t you love that? There is nothing shallow; nothing superficial about the Bible and affliction teaches us that. It knocks the worldly props out from under us and forces us to rely more on God, abiding in him. You see, the Bible spends an extraordinary about of time driving home the point that we are to put our hope in God, and we are to trust in him, but if we never suffered, we would have no reason to put our hope, or our trust, in God. Hope and trust presume that you’ve got something forcing you; you’ve got something causing you to place your hope and trust in someone who can save you and that something is suffering.

            When I broke my neck, my affliction made me search the Scriptures and once I realized my quadriplegia was permanent the Bible became my meat and drink. I learned to abide in him. Oh, friend, I pray you will do the same today and may that be your song.

 

© Joni and Friends