Yesterday I wrote about how we came to buy a house at Lutheridge from a non-spiritual point of view, a more rational point of view. Today I want to write about a different angle. Let me confess from the beginning that if you told me such a story, my rational brain might not accept what you were saying.
I fell on April 15th, and I knew that I had done something
to my wrist. I thought it was likely to
be a sprain because I didn't hear any cracking sound and it didn't really hurt
too much. But I didn't go to the emergency room or go to get x-rays. I was
planning on leaving to go on a retreat in a few days, plus it was Easter
weekend, and I had a lot to do. But really, some part of me really thought I
had only sprained it.
In retrospect, if I had gone and got an x-rays before I
left, I probably wouldn't have been able to go on the retreat because I would
have needed surgery. As my sister said, if I hadn't gone on the retreat, I wouldn't
have made the comment to my pastor friend about still wanting a Lutheridge
house, and she might not have thought of me when she learned of the house
coming on the market.
is this the way God works in the world? I don't believe that
God made me trip and fall and break my wrist, so why would I believe that God
might be involved in other ways? But the pieces have fallen into place almost
effortlessly, and when that happens I do tend to believe, even as my rational
brain scoffs, that God is at work on some level. Even if I don't believe that God is at work in
my life this way, I do tend to think that a decision is the right one if it's
all coming together effortlessly--even as I admit that it may just be
coincidence. On the flip side, if things
aren't working out, I don't necessarily say, “Well God must not want it to be
this way.”
I do think that we came to have this house through a
remarkable series of events: call them
coincidences, call them God sightings, call it luck. The people selling the
house have a deep connection with my pastor friend, as do we. A certain level
of trust was already there because of these deep connections. We had seen the
house before, so we didn't feel like we needed to spend 24 hours in the car to
see the property one more time. The people selling the house wanted to sell to
someone with deep connections to the camp, which we have--my mother was a camp
counselor there during one of its earliest summers being open. And the biggest
piece of all: we had recently sold our
house in a flood zone in a hot market, so we had money to invest.
Luck, coincidence, God at work, friends looking out for us,
planning both careful and haphazard—perhaps our latest housing adventure is a
mix of them all. I am so grateful.
1 comment:
God is ALWAYS at work, there are NO coincidences.
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