God’s Grace Is Enough


So, I got a call Friday night that went something like this; “Hi, I’m so-and-so and I work at the wall-climbing place. I’m with your daughter Catie, and she fell off the wall from about 20 feet. We’re pretty sure she broke her leg and not sure about her head or back, but I have to go right now because the ambulance just showed up.”

Okay… so what do you do with that? I managed to find out which hospital they were taking her to before we hung up. After catching my breath, I got my shoes on as Carolyn was returning from the grocery store, shot out an email prayer request, got in the car and we headed to Wisconsin.

After arriving at the hospital, we found Catie in the emergency room getting x-rays. The pain from moving her legs around trying to get an x-ray made it oblivious something was seriously wrong. The hospital she was in was not able to work with her, so they transferred her to a trauma hospital in Milwaukee. A few hours later, it’s 2AM, and we find out the good news; her head, neck, and spine appear to be fine, but she has shattered both ankles and broken her right leg.

Saturday morning she went into surgery. Originally it was supposed to be a two-part surgery, one to fix her ankles and a second to fix her broken leg, and she was looking at two weeks in the hospital. Six hours into her surgery, the doctor called us in the waiting room and said he was going to be able to finish all the work at one time. It’s funny what kind of things you can get excited about!

She has several pins, screws and plates in her right leg, but her left leg was the worst. They had to remove a lot of bone and cartilage from her left ankle and do a lot of reconstruction; this ankle will be the most problem moving forward. Saturday night was a pain ridden night and no one got any sleep, although I probably pulled down the most 🙂 Sunday she did better with the pain meds, we ran home for showers and clean clothes, got back and we will stay with her Sunday evening.

Catie is sleeping well right now, I’m catching up on a few emails, and Carolyn and I are getting ready to settle into our chairs for the night. I’m not sure what Monday and Tuesday will bring, or when she will come home. The doctor is thinking sooner than later, but she can’t feel her toes right now and they are watching that.

She won’t be able to put any weight on her feet for 3 or 4 months, and then will require physical therapy after that. Recovery is going to be long and require a lot of full-time care, so we will bring her home to Illinois with us. There are still a lot of blanks to fill in and we continue to more through hour by hour, but have really experienced God’s love and guiding hand through this experience. We are so thankful for the outpouring of prayers and support, and are looking toward God for His leading.

My eyes are getting heavy, so it’s time for bed. A good friend of Catie’s gave her this verse this evening; I think I’ll clam it too: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness. Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.” ~ 2 Corinthians 12:9

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Discipleship: The Invitation is the definition


Put 10 people in a room and ask them what the purpose of the church is, and they will almost assuredly quickly agree it is to make disciples. Ask the same 10 people to define what a disciple looks like, and most assuredly you will have a lengthy discussion with a painstaking attempt at finding agreement!

Interesting enough, even in my own thinking, it can be difficult to narrow down an idea. I can think of multiple passages in the New Testament where Jesus identifies characteristics of a disciple, as with Luke 9:23-24, or in the Old Testament with examples like Moses, who in Deuteronomy 30:15-20 posed to the people of Israel to “choose life.”

A definition can be difficult to narrow down, but in Matthew 4:19, Jesus extends an invitation in which I find three clear characteristics. Jesus says, “Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” What would Jesus expect to see in a disciple:

  • One: Knows and obeys Christ (Come, follow me)
  • Two: Reflects a Christ honoring life of transformation (I will make you)
  • Three: Is committed to the mission of Christ (Fishers of men)

There are a lot of definitions out there, but I find a clarity in this passage that is both refreshing and worthy of self-scrutiny.

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