You Were Made for This
I’ve been reflecting more and more lately about how much God cares about us. When we hurt he hurts. Today’s episode is about how God responds to the dark times we go through, and what he models for us in relating to the hurting people in our lives. But before we begin, I’m John Certalic, and you’re listening to episode 224 of You Were Made for This, the podcast about the joy of relationships we were made for. Those that reflect the character and image of God in the unique way he made each of us. Today’s episode is an example of how this works An unwanted anniversary I’ve been...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
As I’m recording this, Christmas is almost six months away. I recall last Christmas, when I heard a few people say they wished we could have the Christmas spirit all year long. We can if we reflect the image and character of God. And I have a Christmas in July story for you today that shows us how. Welcome to episode 223 of You Were Made for This, the podcast about finding joy in being the person God created each of us to be. Namely, someone who reflects the character, image, and likeness of God in all our relationships. It’s the THIS, we were made for. ————————————...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
I’ve come to learn that relating with people through the lens of “I want to hear your story” is a great way to live. It enriches our lives in more ways than you can imagine. I started thinking more deeply about this principle when Janet and I visited William Shakespeare's hometown of Stratford-on-Avon in England. Several years later, during a trip to Savannah, Georgia, I witnessed “I want to hear your story” play out in real-time. And more recently, I saw it demonstrated in a church service, where a 20-something law school student shared a story he experienced. So that’s what I...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
You never know how an act of kindness will be remembered with fondness many decades later. It reminds us that when we are kind, it’s because God made us that way. Today’s episode is an example of how this works. Welcome to You Were Made for This But first - I’m John Certalic and you are listening to episode 221 of You Were Made for This, the podcast about reflecting the character, image, and likeness of God. It’s what enables us to enjoy being the unique person he created each of us to be. In today’s show we pick up where we left off last time in episode 220. In that episode I...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
Have you noticed how everyone seems to have a podcast these days? Most of them just don’t appeal to me. So, in 2018, I created one that does— a podcast I want to listen to and one you’ll want to listen to as well. I’m going to give you an example of what I mean shortly. Welcome to Season Nine and episode 220 But first, I’m John Certalic and you are listening to episode 220 of You Were Made for This, a podcast about … well, … stick with me and you’ll soon find out soon. It’s been quite a number of months since I recorded any new episodes on a regular basis. It’s not been...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
On that first Christmas Day, Mary treasured all its details and thought about them often. May we do the same with the Christmas story in 2024. So here's the original story told in Luke's Gospel, just as it happened: At that time the Roman emperor, Augustus, decreed that a census should be taken throughout the Roman Empire. (This was the first census taken when Quirinius was governor of Syria.) All returned to their own ancestral towns to register for this census. And because Joseph was a descendant of King David, he had to go to Bethlehem in Judea, David’s ancient home. He traveled there...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
Today’s episode, #218, brings to a close Season 8 of our You Were Made for This podcast. If you’ve been listening for any length of time, I hope you’ve come to appreciate the high value we place on the skill of listening as a way to enrich our lives. As we wrap up Season 8 today, I’m going to share a story that illustrates why it’s better to listen than to talk. But before we get into today’s episode, here’s what this podcast is all about. Welcome to You Were Made for This If you find yourself wanting more from your relationships, you’ve come to the right...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
In the past dew episodes I’ve been talking about how I tracked down my birth father and met him for the first… and last time in my life. You’ll find links to those episodes at the bottom of the show notes. Today’s show concludes this painful chapter in my life by focusing on a larger relational and spiritual principle that applies to all of us. Namely, sometimes in our difficulties God will surprise us in unusual ways to remind us he is still working for our good and for his glory. But before we get into today’s episode, here’s what this podcast is all about. Welcome to...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
Hello everyone. If you haven’t listened to episode 215, “Searching for my Birth Father,” I suggest listening to that episode before continuing with this one. Just go to . Today’s episode, #216, continues with the theme of how understanding our past helps us understand our present when we see how God began shaping us early on to find joy in being the person he created us to be. Before we get into this I need to tell you that Carol, our announcer and executive director on vacation this week. Filling in for her is the latest addition to our staff, our chaplain and family cat, Father...
info_outlineYou Were Made for This
One of the more popular topics from past episodes has been the story of Gail Rohde who was adopted as an infant, and her search as an adult for her birth mother. Then several years after finding her, she searched for her birth father - and found him, too. I’ll have links to those episodes at the bottom of the show notes. It can be a relational minefield in dealing with the dynamics of adoptees wanting to know where they’ve come from, especially when it’s been hidden from them. I have a similar story about searching for my birth father that I wrote about in my book, THEM. ...
info_outlineI’ve been reflecting more and more lately about how much God cares about us. When we hurt he hurts. Today’s episode is about how God responds to the dark times we go through, and what he models for us in relating to the hurting people in our lives.
But before we begin, I’m John Certalic, and you’re listening to episode 224 of You Were Made for This, the podcast about the joy of relationships we were made for. Those that reflect the character and image of God in the unique way he made each of us. Today’s episode is an example of how this works
An unwanted anniversary
I’ve been reading through the Book of Psalms in the Old Testament this summer, and the other day I came across a passage that jumped out at me as if to say, You’ll want to pay more attention to this one. It deserves your attention. You're going to want to reflect on this more than normal.
Here’s the passage, just one verse, Psalm 56:8
You keep track of all my sorrows.
You have collected all my tears in your bottle
You have recorded each one in your book. NLT
The first thing I thought of as I read this verse is my friend, Martin. This Friday, two days from now, is the fifth anniversary of the death of his wife, Suzanne.
Martin and Suzanne were missionaries, first in China, then in Germany where Martin is from. I got to know both of them when Janet and I served at a missionary conference put on by their sending agency. When they left the mission filled to move to the States to care for Suzanne’s mother in Chicago, we got together several times and continued our friendship.
It was shocking to get a text from Martin one evening that his his beloved wife, and our friend, had died from a brain aneurysm. She was only 53. I devoted several podcast episodes about the aftermath of this terrible event in Martin’s life. You can hear more of the details if you go to the end of the show notes where you’ll find links to those episodes. Numbers 071 and 072.
An Old Testament example of how God cares
For today, though, I can’t shake Psalm 56:8 and how it relates to what Martin went through, and continues to go through, because that’s how grief works. In the midst of the awful things King David went through, he still had a deep appreciation for God’s empathic character.
David brings his relationship with God into his circumstances in this verse. Three sentences that all begin with “You.”
Each “You” is a specific statement of how God is at work in David’s life. Each “You” is followed by a distinct and compassionate verb phrase: keeping track of all David’s sorrows, collecting all his tears in a bottle, and recording each sorrow in a book.
I don’t know about you, but when I’m going through a rough patch, I want God to fix things, to put ab end my problems. Instead, we see in in the example of David that he doesn’t ask God to fix things for him. Rather, he is content knowing that God is right there with us in the midst of what we’re
dealing with. He’s there not simply as an observer, but as an active and empathetic participant with us.
God cares enough to keep tears out of heaven
What strikes me most in this passage from Psalms is the bottle in which God stores all of David’s tears. This, of course, is poetic and figurative language used to describe God’s awareness and understanding of the pain we go through in life.
And while the bottle God is using to collect our tears may be overflowing at times, this same bottle is empty once we get to heaven. Revelation 21 tells us there are no tears in heaven. What a comforting thought, this is - God emptying the bottle that contained all the tears we shed on earth.
Another element to how God cares
There’s another point to this verse in Psalms that I find interesting and instructive in relating with the “Martins” in our life. I know you have them, people like Martin who have suffered great loss.
It starts with recognizing and reminding ourselves that we are all created with the image and likeness of God backed into each of us. He enables us to manifest his character through the qualities he used to make us the unique person we are so that we can care for people in ways that God cares.
What a privilege!
For example, in Psalm 56 when David describes God as one who keeps track of our sorrows, collects tears, and records them in a book, there are some clues as to what we can do to help people. These 3 actions of God are all about acknowledging and remembering what people hav gone through or are going through now.
And this is something WE can do for people . We can acknowledge and remember what our friends have experienced, even years after the fact. After Suzanne died, I recorded the date of her death in my computer’s calendar, and set it to repeat on the same day in years to come. I didn’t want to forget the day. I do this for other losses my friends have suffered.
It reminds me to contact my friends and let them know I remember them and am thinking about them and what they have lost. Text, phone call, card, email, or even a visit. It almost doesn’t matter what form it takes. It’s just to connect with them to let them know I haven’t forgotten the awful pain they’ve experienced. There is so much power in the simple act of letting people know you remember.
Closing
Well that’s what I have for you today. I hope your thinking was stimulated by today’s episode to remember that God’s purpose in our lives isn’t always to fix things for us. Instead he uses our difficulties to reveal his kindness compassion, and love.
And more than this, remember that we can do the same thing for the people in our life going through struggles and loss. Because we were made for this!
Now before I go call Martin by the end of the week to let him know I still remember his loss, here’s Psalm 56:8 one more time with its wonderful truths about God we can cling to:
You keep track of all my sorrows.
You have collected all my tears in your bottle.
You have recorded each one in your book.
I’d love to hear your thoughts or reactions to today’s episode. Just go to the show notes for today’s program at JohnCertalic.com, then scroll down to the end to the “Leave a comment” box.
Finally, remember to spread a little relational sunshine around the people you meet this week. Spark some joy for them. And I’ll see you again next time. Goodbye for now.
Other episodes or resources related to today’s shows
071: How to Help a Grieving Friend
072: What I Learned From a Grieving Friend
Most recent prior episode
223: A Christmas in July Story
All past and future episodes can be found at JohnCertalic.com