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On a Foundation of Faith, a Family Business Rebounds

I should have been getting ready for church that Sunday morning in May 2011. Our family never missed. But now I just couldn’t do it.

“I’m not going,” I told my husband, Mark. “I can’t say more goodbyes.” I couldn’t bear seeing any more of our former employees leave our town of Trinidad, Colorado. There was nothing I could do to ease their worry and uncertainty. It was beyond frustrating.

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I’m an artist, creative. I’m usually full of ideas. I love the challenge, the pride I feel crafting lasting, beautiful objects out of practically nothing and building a business. But this was more than I could manage. I didn’t know how to fix it.

Mark nodded. “It’s okay, Annie. Folks will understand.”

But did they? Really? We’d laid off more than 60 of our 100 employees at Danielson Designs, a custom frame and gift company. Our business had been hit hard by the economic downturn. Our workers were like family. Some of them were family.

Today the congregation was giving a send-off to a couple leaving for Pittsburgh, our former national sales manager and a buyer for our retail store. We hadn’t laid them off. Yet. They’d seen the writing on the wall. But it hurt just the same.

Mark and I were trying everything to turn the business around. We’d launched line after line of new products, even customized frames, inscribed with the customer’s own words. I knew we were as much victims of the economy as anyone.

Still, I couldn’t help but feel responsible. We’d given our employees jobs when there were none to be had, jobs that helped finance houses and cars, send kids to college, save for retirement. And for what? To see it all slip away just like that?

I shuffled into my studio, wanting to be alone. For a long time I stared out the window at the parched red earth as far as the eye could see. We hadn’t had rain in ages, as if nature itself was against us, as if the ground had died.

I ran a sheaf of colored paper through the shredder, then slowly  weaved and teased the strips over a small bowl, like a bird’s nest. At least that had been my idea. Now it just seemed like another mess.

I thought of favorite Bible verses and logged onto my computer. “God works all things together for good for those who love him,” I typed from Romans 8:28. Was that really true? These days I wondered. Still, I printed it out.

Maybe there’d be a way to work it in with the colored strips somewhere. Lord, I prayed, Mark and I thought we were following your will. But this is so hard. So many people are struggling. It really stinks.

We moved to tiny Trinidad in 1990 from southern California to be closer to family. It was an old mining town, down on its luck. We wanted to start a business, help the local economy. But what?

I’d been a product developer at a greeting cards company. Mark’s passion was woodworking. We prayed about it. One idea kept coming to us: wooden picture frames adorned with heartfelt words, like a greeting card but more permanent. We made 15 samples. I hand painted each one.

We took them to a retail gift show in Chicago. We came home with hundreds of orders! We needed employees. Lots of employees.

The rush I got hiring our first workers was like nothing I’d ever experienced, young couples dreaming of starting a life together, men laid off from the mines, women just wanting money to put food on the table and buy clothes for their kids, moms like Jami.

“I don’t know if I’m who you’re looking for,” she told me, “but I’ll work hard.” Jami learned to paint frames, struggling at first. But she’d persevered. Close to 10 years later when we opened a retail store in Trinidad it was Jami I asked to manage it.

Sales took off. Soon we had 100 employees, the biggest private employer in Trinidad. But it was more than the jobs. Our lives were so deeply intertwined with our staff, with our town.

We saw each other at the grocery store, at school concerts. We huddled together in the stands for Miners’ high school football games and worshipped beside each other at church. I’d never felt such togetherness any place I’d worked. We were a community.

Until 2008. Late that year our sales dipped—our only down month since a brief post-9/11 aftershock. I wasn’t worried. But it wasn’t just a blip. By 2009 we were in a full nosedive.

“At this rate we’ll miss payroll,” Mark muttered at the end of a particularly dismal month. “We’re going to have to let people go.”

His words stopped me cold. Let people go? How could we let anyone go in this economy? How could we lay off our friends and neighbors?

At first it was a few employees in our production department, where the frames were assembled and packed for shipping. Orders slowed even more. Month after month we cut jobs, until nearly everyone was gone in production, then sales and marketing.

Gradually the laughter and easy camaraderie ebbed until the offices seemed like a death watch.

We even laid off Mark’s 60-year-old aunt, Carol. That was the worst. Then we had to close the retail store.

The shop was empty except for Jami when I walked in that afternoon. We talked about how sales had been that week. Dead, as usual.

“Jami, you’ve done an amazing job here,” I said. “You’re creative and smart. But the business just isn’t there. We’re going to have to shut the doors.”

“I understand,” she said. “I just want to thank you for believing in me.”

We hugged, our arms trembling. It was all I could do to force back the tears. “If we ever have an opening…” I started.

“I know,” she said. “Don’t worry. I’m gonna be okay.”

I felt hollow as I drove home that night. I’d wanted to help people. To be part of making their dreams come true. Now it felt as if I’d deserted Jami, Carol, all of them.

No one was hiring, the unemployment rate in our part of Colorado was nearly 11 percent. Where could they, where could any of us, find hope?

That Sunday morning in May Mark and I were barely hanging on. We’d talked about declaring bankruptcy. But our banker was local too. A friend. He’d taken a chance on us when we had just a handful of frames. We’d decided to tough it out as long as we could.

I prayed for the people we let go, prayed hard. Most of the time I was afraid to ask how they were doing when I saw former employees at the grocery or downtown. I felt so guilty. We’d stopped going to football games. Now I wasn’t even going to go to church!

Would we have to leave town too? Start over again somewhere new? We’d poured our hopes and dreams into this company, this town, so certain we’d been led here. Lord, I begged, how can we just walk away?

I spent nearly the whole day that Sunday in my studio. Finally I laid the nest on my desk and went out to the living room. Through the window I saw a huge wall of dark, almost black, clouds over the mesa, boiling up like thick steam.

“Looks like a storm’s coming in,” I said. That was one good thing.

“Let’s check it out,” Mark said, grabbing my hand. We dashed out onto our covered deck. Thunder shook the entire valley. The wind whipped through our hair. Then rain came in thick sheets, an avalanche of water, drenching the earth.

Mark and I watched the magnificent fury, speechless, for nearly a half hour. At last the sun burst through the clouds, the sky a brilliant blue. The storm was over as suddenly as it had started.

Mark looked to the heavens. “Wow! That was amazing,” he said, almost reverently.

I nodded. It was an awesome display. What did it mean? That I was no more in control of the weather than I was of the economy? Lord, what do I do?

A few days later the phone rang. It was Jami. “Good news,” she said. “I have a job interview. Could you meet me for coffee afterward?”

“Sure,” I said. “I would love to.” I hadn’t heard from Jami since  the shop closed nearly six months earlier.

She was at the café waiting for me when I arrived. I searched her face, hoping for a sign of good news.

“It went really well,” she said, as if she could read my mind.

“That’s great, Jami,” I said. “I still feel awful about…”

Jami reached across the table and put her hand on my arm.

“I’m doing fine,” she said. “But that’s not why I wanted to meet. I never see you around anymore. I want to know how you’re doing. How are Mark and the kids? You guys, you’ve given me so much. I pray for you all the time, but I wish there was something more I could do. People are worried about you, Annie. We’re your friends.”

I felt a warmth, a comfort I knew was from more than her touch, and I felt a burden lift from my shoulders, a burden I’d tried to carry all by myself.

“Thanks,” I said. “You don’t know how much that means to me.” God was bringing good out of suffering, his mercies never ending. The promise of that scripture from Romans.

That June we got a call from a major gift company. “We love your frames,” the caller said. “If you’re interested we’d like to buy your company.” Two months later we closed the deal.

With the money from the sale and help from a group of angel investors, we launched Rendi, a sister company selling our customized frames through home parties.

Now in our second year our sales are growing rapidly again. We still make everything here in Trinidad, our 40-person workforce local folks, neighbors that we see at church and the grocery, out on the soccer fields.

I am so deeply grateful for what we have. I’d focused for so long on what was lost. I carried the burden of responsibility, of guilt.

Yet I was not alone, no more alone than I had been in building our business. I’d had Mark, our friends, our community, and God, who never leaves us to struggle on our own, who is always there to lift us up.

 

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Nothing but the Truth

My name is Cornelius Dupree, and I am a sex offender. I paced the narrow aisle between the bunks in my cell, going over the words in my mind, trying to force them to my lips.

Those were the words I would have to say in front of the other men in the counseling program if I wanted to get out of prison. The words that would set me free.

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Twenty-four years. That’s how long I’d been an inmate at the Coffield Unit, a maximum-security state prison in East Texas. I’d been convicted of robbing a couple at gunpoint when I was 19. I was serving a 75-year sentence.

Three times before, I’d come up for parole. Each time I had been turned down. I’d spent more of my life inside, behind bars, than I had outside, in the real world.

Now, at last, the state parole board was offering me a chance at freedom. But first I had to attend a sex-offender program and admit that I had raped the female victim.

I’d been charged with rape and robbery originally, and even though the rape charge had been dismissed, it was still in my file. If I admitted my guilt and expressed remorse, I would be released.

My fiancée, Selma, urged me to do it. So did my brother and sisters. I wanted to get out. I was tired of prison.

I wasn’t a kid anymore. I was middle-aged. I wanted to marry Selma. Get a decent job. Eat a home-cooked meal. Visit my mom’s grave. Meet my nieces and nephews. Do something good with what was left of my life.

There was one thing standing in my way. One huge thing: the truth. I hadn’t raped or robbed anyone. I was innocent.

I don’t mean that I was a squeaky-clean kid who spent all his time at church. I did go to church–I was baptized at age eight–but I can’t say I was mature in my faith or in my behavior.

In my teens I did the dumb things teenage guys in my Dallas neighborhood did back then–joyriding, drinking, smoking a little marijuana. Still, I had never been in really serious trouble.

That was why I wasn’t worried the night the cops picked me up, November 30, 1979. I was walking with Anthony Massingill, a guy I knew from the apartment complex where our families lived.

I hadn’t been planning to go out, but when he knocked on my door and asked if I wanted to go to a house party a few blocks away, I thought, Why not? I had put in a long day at work–I was a mechanic for a trailer company–and I was ready to have a little fun.

Halfway there we passed a couple of parked police cars. Officers jumped out and stopped and frisked us. I didn’t have anything on me, but they found a bag of marijuana and a gun on Massingill. I had no idea he was carrying either.

The cops put us in their car and took us downtown to the county jail for booking. I was upset but not worried. I hadn’t done anything wrong, after all. I thought it wouldn’t take long for the police to figure that out and let me go.

Massingill and I were brought to the courthouse next door to be arraigned. That was the first time I heard the charges against us. Aggravated rape and aggravated robbery. I almost jumped up and shouted, “What?!” I was shocked.

Marijuana possession and carrying a concealed weapon, I could’ve understood, considering what Massingill had on him. But rape and robbery…where did that come from?

The prosecutor told the judge that one week earlier, in the vicinity of where we’d been picked up, two men matching our description had carjacked a couple at gunpoint, robbing them and raping the woman. She had picked our pictures out of a photo lineup.

I was taken back to the county jail and put in a cell with seven other guys awaiting trial. I still wasn’t all that concerned. I’d watched Perry Mason, and I believed in the justice system. I believed that you were innocent until proven guilty. I believed that the truth would come out in court.

My mom, though, was worried. I could see it in her eyes, even though she tried to be strong. She talked about scraping together money to hire a good attorney for me.

“I don’t want you putting up your life savings for that,” I said. My parents weren’t well off. “They’re going to find out I’m the wrong guy and let me go.”

I spent months in the county lockup before my case finally went to trial. I was assigned an overworked public defender, who talked to me for maybe 20 minutes total. DNA testing wasn’t available back then, in 1980. No conclusions could be drawn from the physical evidence collected from the victim.

There was no other real evidence. The prosecution’s case was based on eyewitness identification, and that was hardly rock solid. I’d never seen either victim until they took the stand, but both testified that I’d robbed them.

The man, however, hadn’t been able to pick out my picture in the earlier photo lineup. The woman mistakenly identified a photo of Massingill as me even though I was right there in the courtroom for her to compare my face to the picture.

I thought I had a good chance of being acquitted. The jury came back after barely an hour. The foreman stood and read the verdict: “Guilty.”

The judge followed the jury’s recommendation and sentenced me to 75 years. I heard my mom gasp. I went numb. Everything sounded tinny and far away, like I was in the middle of a strange dream that had no connection to reality.

Reality set in awful quick in prison. At night I lay in my cell on my hard bunk, my mind running. Seventy-five years. Under Texas law, I had to serve at least a third of my sentence before I could be paroled.

That was 25 years. I would be 44 then. My mom and dad might not be alive by the time I got out. I might never get married or buy my own house or have a family. I might not make it out alive myself.

I’d believed in the justice system, and the system let me down. You know I didn’t commit those crimes! I railed at God. Why am I here? I felt betrayed.

My first years at Coffield, I walked around angry. A guy looked at me the wrong way, I’d get right in his face. “You got a problem with me?” I’d snarl. Maybe because I was smaller than a lot of the other inmates, maybe because I was young and foolish, I felt like I had to establish myself.

As I got into my thirties, I realized I had a choice: let bitterness swallow me, or use my time well. I had nothing but time, after all. I would do the best I could with it. I stayed out of trouble. I worked on the Coffield farm, picking vegetables and cotton, cutting grass.

When I wasn’t in the fields, I was in the prison law library, looking up cases that were similar to mine and citing them when I filed petitions to have my case reheard. Each time my appeals were denied.

That might have brought me down if I hadn’t met Selma. She was a corrections officer. She had such a godly way about her that I felt being in her presence made me a better person.

She didn’t want anything to do with me at first–she was planning to be a warden, and I was on the other side. But we started talking. I told her my story and she came to believe in me. She even quit her job so we could be together without any conflict of interest.

Selma’s strong faith inspired me to deepen my own relationship with God. I went to chapel, talked to God, tried to understand what his plan for me was. I prepared for the day I might finally get out.

I took classes–some, like African studies, to expand my mind; others, like meat cutting and air-conditioning and refrigeration mechanics, to expand my skills so that I could get a job after prison.

I can’t say my heart didn’t get heavy at times. When my mom’s health failed and I didn’t get a chance to say goodbye to her before she died. When DNA testing became readily available but the state turned down my petition to have it used in my case. When I came up for early parole–I’d earned time off my sentence for good behavior–only to be denied.

I knew my refusal to admit guilt was a big part of it, but I couldn’t bring myself to say I’d committed terrible crimes when I’d done nothing of the kind. It seemed like every door to freedom was closing for me.

That’s why when the parole board made its offer in 2004–the sex-offender program–I gave it serious consideration. “Just do it,” my brother said. “Don’t you think you’ve given up enough of your life? It’s time for you to come home.”

Selma said, “It’ll be okay. The people who love you know the truth. God knows the truth.”

I agreed to try the program. A counselor led the group and told us everything that was said in our meetings was confidential. The first few sessions, I just listened to the other inmates. And the more I heard, the more horrified I felt. What these guys admitted to doing, to their own children…it was sickening.

At the fourth session, the counselor told me that in order to complete the program, I would need to write down what I’d done and read it aloud to the group. If I didn’t participate, my parole would be denied.

“You’re going to have to stand up and say, ‘My name is Cornelius Dupree and I am a sex offender. This is what I did….’”

Now I paced my cell, mentally rehearsing those words. I tried to speak them aloud. I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t admit to something I didn’t do.

I got on my knees on the cold concrete floor. “Lord, if this door is closing for me, you must have a reason. You know the truth, and the truth matters. I trust you to release me when I’m ready.”

A shiver went through me and I got to my feet, feeling oddly unburdened.

My parole was denied. And because I wouldn’t participate in the sex-offender program, I was no longer considered a model prisoner. All the time I’d earned off my sentence was revoked.

That was the cost of holding on to the truth. But I don’t regret my decision. It’s what allowed me to hold on tighter to God.

Finally, on July 22, 2010, I was released on parole. I didn’t have to say I’d committed robbery or rape. By then I had served enough of my sentence–30 years–that by law, the state had to let me go.

I walked out the prison gate into Selma’s arms. We hugged and kissed and then we stood there in the parking lot and prayed, “Thank you, God, for this moment.” We got married right away.

The Innocence Project had been working on my case, and got permission for a forensics lab to compare my DNA with the evidence from the victim’s rape kit.

Eight days after my release, the results came back. They were conclusive: My DNA did not match either of the two male samples in evidence. I was innocent.

A Dallas judge overturned my conviction in January 2011, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals fully exonerated me two months later. It was gratifying to finally have people know the truth.

But really, my soul had been released of its burden years earlier, that day in my cell when I said, “Lord, I trust you,” the words that set me free.

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Mysterious Ways: Wash and Learn

Two months after my husband graduated school and started a new job, I gave birth to our first child. We had very little money and at times we had none at all.

The days went by and I eked out this and eked out that. Then one morning after I’d gathered up the baby’s laundry, I found I’d run out of detergent. Our monthly paycheck wasn’t due till the end of the week, and we barely had enough money left for our food needs, never mind soap, but I had to have clean diapers for my baby! It was one of those little frustrations that wells up to blimp-size discouragement.

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“Oh, Lord, you know I need soap. I pray that my folks send me money—soon.” My parents periodically sent a small check. They were the only source I could think of.

I heard a noise at the door. Could it be the mail carrier? Somehow I actually expected God would answer me that quickly. I glanced out the window, but no mailman. It must have been the wind rattling the screen.

I went on with my housework. I kept crying out to the Lord. “What will I do about these diapers? Oh, Lord, what will I do?”

Then suddenly I felt prompted to go to the front door. Perhaps the carrier had come and I’d missed seeing him. Perhaps a check…

I opened the door. Hanging on the handle was a plastic sack containing a sample box of a new detergent!

What did I learn about prayer that day? That God not only answers prayers, but has his own way of chiding a too-frantic housewife. Isaiah 65:24 says, “While they are still talking to me about their needs, I will go ahead and answer their prayers.”

My Soup Kitchen Prayer

Saturdays, when I can, I volunteer at our church’s soup kitchen. It’s an amazing operation. Volunteers prep all day on Friday, preparing the hot meal, and then a host of angels descend on the parish house on Saturday morning to get ready for our guests.

People cut fresh bread, toss salads, cook peas and beans, set up tables, pour water, make coffee, arrange cookies, slice pies, fold napkins and set out the warming trays on the buffet table.

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When I arrive there is usually a line of guests waiting for the feast. And it is a feast, a meal any of us would be proud to serve in our homes. But we’re doing it in a church, a place where we remember how Jesus said we would find Him in the least of these.

I don’t want to brag. I’m sure we could do so much more as a community of faith. The needs are so great. Fortunately, though, we’re not alone. We’re always grateful to be able to refer our guests to other soup kitchens and food pantries throughout town serving the needy.

When they come in, we’re busier than busy. I usually work the floor, putting down place settings, wiping tables, throwing away the trash. “Morning…welcome…thanks for coming…We’ll see you next week,” I mutter.

We serve about 200 people every Saturday. It seems like a minor miracle. We don’t advertise. We depend on word of mouth. One morning on my way to the Saturday Kitchen, as we call it, I passed a pan handler.

I dug in my pocket to give him a buck, then remembered. “Come to the soup kitchen at the church down the block. A free hot meal. It’s delicious.” How glad I was to see the guy sitting at one of the tables later that day.

But before any of the serving gets started, before we open the doors, before we dish out the food, we volunteers gather together in a circle, hold hands and have a moment of prayer.

Whenever I’m asked to lead the prayer, here are the words I use. “We thank You, Lord, for the opportunity to serve these guests. May we see You in them and may they see You in us.”

I’m not sure how that prayer is answered week after week. I suspect I’ll never fully know. But I hold that prayer close.

After all, we celebrate a God who made Himself a servant first of all. Serving like this is a good place to start. 

My Prayer to Find a Job

My employer’s words struck terror in my heart: “I’m sorry, Jock, but we have to let you go. We’ve got to downsize to stay afloat.” Just like that, my 14-year career with a marketing agency was over. The chances of my finding another good job at age 51 were minuscule. How would I support my wife and four-year-old son?

Panicked, I prayed, “Lord, please lead me to a job.” Then I signed up for unemployment and scoured the want ads. I called everyone I knew. One woman I interviewed with asked, “Could you do a freelance assignment for us?” I agreed, thinking it might get my foot in the door.

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When a former colleague begged, “Look, you have to help us with these projects! We’ll bring you in as a consultant,” I jumped at the chance for work.

After three months, I still hadn’t landed a full-time job. Freelance work kept coming in, though, so I couldn’t complain, especially since I was able to take “time off” to chaperone my son’s preschool field trips.

One day my wife said, “I don’t think you need to collect unemployment anymore.” I stared at her. “What do you mean?” I started to protest. She pointed to the long list of consulting assignments I had scheduled. Then I realized, Hey, I’m doing all right!

Two years later, I’m still working from home—and loving it. Never in my wildest dreams had I imagined myself making a living freelancing. But God had, and he’s led me to not just a job, but to one good job after another.

Letting God Do His Work as We Do Ours

Someone recently told me that God answers prayers in one of three ways: yes, no, or not now. I objected, saying that even if that’s true, it sounds as if we’re going to know what His answer is. In my experience, most answers to prayer are unknown and unseen. I’m okay with that.

For example, one of my favorite prayers for my kids is, “May their lives give glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit.”

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Let’s say God says yes to this prayer. There are lots of ways that could play out. One would be the obvious way; my kids do something big and grand for the sake of Jesus, and I know about it and so do you. Frankly, this rarely happens, mainly because very few people are asked to do the big, showy stuff.

Read More: The Voice from the Woods

A more likely scenario is that in the course of a conversation, one of my kids says something quietly faith-affirming to a friend, and I never hear about it. Do I need to? No. It’s enough that it happened.

Or perhaps one of my teens is helpful to a stranger, and that little act of kindness plays out in ways that not even my child knows about. I think this happens all the time.

Make a mental list of the things someone else said or did that changed your life for the better, and ask yourself if the other people involved would even recall that interaction. Probably not.

Giving glory to God is often a matter of living out our faith so fully that others see light even when we don’t know it’s shining through us.

And then there’s yet another way God might say yes to my prayer. What if one of my kids suffers terribly, and others come to know God better through the way they (and I) handle that suffering? This happens. I know it does.

Most of God’s work happens quietly, changing hearts and minds and lives in ways we can’t see. There’s a mercy in that, in a “do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing” (Matthew 6:3) kind of way.

For if I knew how all my prayers were answered, my knowledge could easily get twisted into a weird kind of pride in how good my relationship is with the Lord. It’s better to simply ask for good things, and let God do what He wants with my petitions. He is wiser and more insightful than I am, anyway. And that is enough. 

Learning to Trust God

I’ve been stressing a bit lately. Maybe more than a bit. Since the beginning of the year, it seems like we’ve had an unending merry-go-round of things to deal with—and it’s felt like someone keeps making the ride go faster.

My husband and I have both been dealing with health issues, and we’ve had many weeks with two and three medical appointments. (I told Paul we need a new kind of social life!) Our family business has been extra busy, and there was that fun mountain of tax stuff to conquer. Add in being on faculty at several conferences, multiple business trips and a plethora of writing responsibilities, and it’s been hectic.

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And did I mention that I’m also on deadline for two books? That’s where the real stress has come in. It’s hard to be creative when life is that stressful, especially when you’re worried about your spouse’s health.

I know we’re supposed to trust God, and I’ve tried. I’ve really have. But I want to be real with you, so I’m being honest. At times it’s just been hard to trust. I suspect many of you will understand.

These are the times that will bring you to your knees. And that’s where I’ve been, especially as the May 1 deadline for my books looms. My co-author and I had finished the majority of God Glimpses from the Jewelry Box so it only took about a month to finish and polish it.

But every time I’d sit down to work on the second book, God Glimpses from the Toolbox, it was like my brain had gone AWOL. Panic ensued.

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My prayer when writing all of my books has been, “God I want the words that You want on the pages. Will You send them to me?” But the whole time we were polishing the first book, the story ideas weren’t coming for the second one . . . and my trust in Him was wavering.

I’d spent weeks thinking (agonizing actually), trying to come up with stories. Blank. Nada. Nothing. But you know what happened the day after we finished the first book? At a time when I wasn’t even thinking about it, the inspiration for the first story came. I wrote that chapter. And then, as I wasn’t thinking about it again, the idea for the second story arrived.

That’s happened with every chapter. The idea has arrived just as it’s needed. It brought tears to my eyes this week as I realized that God was answering my prayers—and sending the stories that He wanted on the pages of my book.

It’s been a valuable lesson in learning to trust Him. You see, I thought nothing was happening. But God knew He didn’t need to send the stories until it was time for me to work on them.

What trust lessons are you learning today? The God who never fails us is worthy of that trust.

Joel Osteen: God Is Answering Your Prayers

One of the best prayers that we could ever pray is “God, not my will, but your will be done.” If you will stay open to his direction, and follow your heart, God will protect you.

“It seems like God never answers my prayers,” someone may say. “He never does what I want.”    

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Maybe God is answering your prayers; he’s simply saying no. Or maybe he’s saying it’s not the right time. Or maybe he’s saying, “I’m not going to remove that obstacle until you change your attitude and quit complaining about it.” Make some simple adjustments, and you will see things begin to improve.

I thank God that he didn’t answer some of my prayers, because sometimes what I thought was the best for me wasn’t the best at all. Nevertheless, if you push and manipulate, trying to make things happen, God will sometimes let you have your way—and you will have to learn his lessons the hard way.

I’ve seen people jump into a relationship or a business deal that they didn’t feel good about, but they wanted it so badly. God is a gentleman. If you insist, he will back off and let you do things your way. Most of the time when we do that, though, we end up settling for second best.

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If events are not happening as quickly as you would like, or if you are not seeing circumstances change in your favor, open your grip on the situation; relax and learn to trust God.

Know this: God is on your side. He is not trying to hold you back. Nobody wants you to fulfill your destiny more than Almighty God. Nobody wants you to see your dreams come to pass any more than he does. He put the dream in your heart in the first place. Let him lead you and guide you.

I believe one of the best prayers that we could ever pray is “God, not my will, but your will be done.” I pray it in some form every day: “God, open up the right doors and close the wrong doors.” If you will stay open to His direction, and follow your heart, God will protect you.

It says in Proverbs, “If you acknowledge God in all your ways, He will direct your paths.” One translation says, “He’ll crown your efforts with success.”

Not long ago, some of our staff members and I were flying to another city aboard a small airplane. The aircraft had only one seat on each side of the aisle. After we took off, I wanted to get my tray table out so I could make some notes. The tray table on this particular plane came right out of the side, beneath my window.

There was a little sign that said “pull,” so I pulled, but I couldn’t get it open. It was stuck. My friend Johnny was sitting across the aisle, so I looked over at his tray table, which he had pulled out with ease, and his window looked exactly like mine. I went back to work, trying to extricate my table, yanking on it even harder. I thought, I’m going to get this tray table out if it’s the last thing I ever do!

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I tugged and pulled, and it still wouldn’t come out. About that time, Johnny came over and started pulling on the table release, and he couldn’t get it out either. One of our other staff members tried as well. Nothing happened.

Finally, I sat down across the aisle in a different seat. That’s when I looked up and noticed right above that window where we had been pulling was a little sign in big bold letters. It read, “No tray table this seat. Emergency exit only.”

I said, “Dear God, thank you for not letting me have my way. Thank you for not opening up that door.” Thank goodness the people who designed that plane knew there’d be people like me on board. They put a latch up top, where you had to use both hands to open the emergency door. Otherwise, pulling that latch may indeed have been one of the last things that I ever did!

Thank God, he knows what’s best for us. Thank God that he’s merciful and he doesn’t always give us our way.

I’ve learned that when my prayers aren’t being answered, or when things aren’t happening as fast as I would like, that either means that God is protecting me from danger up ahead, it’s not the right time, or God has something better in store.

The first year I went away to college, I applied for a job at the university television studio. The school owned a large, well-known production facility, and I’d always wanted to be a part of it. Television production was my passion.

The first week of school, I met with the production manager in charge of all the cameramen and hiring all the assistants. At that point, I had several years of camera experience under my belt.

The production manager went out of his way to be kind to me. He took a couple of hours to show me around, and we seemed to really hit if off. When it came time for me to leave, he said, “Joel, I’ll call you later this week and I’ll let you know about the job.”

That week went by, and I didn’t hear from him. The next week, nothing. The following week, still no word. Finally, I called him, and he was always either busy or out of town. It was the strangest thing: I didn’t think I would have any problem getting that job, but the door simply wasn’t opening.

Worse yet, I wanted it so badly, but I could see it just wasn’t meant to be. Finally, I accepted it and embraced the thought, No big deal. I’m just going to let it go.

In retrospect, I now realize that if I had taken that position, I probably would not have returned to Lakewood Church to start a television outreach. I know my personality. I would have been so caught up in the excitement and I would have loved it so much, I’m sure I just would have stayed right there at the university TV station.

But God knows what’s best for us. Although that job looked great to me at the time, I didn’t know where God was taking me. I didn’t know what he had in store. Had I remained there, I would have missed what God wanted me to do at Lakewood, and you would probably not be reading this.

Too often, we’re shortsighted. We can see only a little ways down the road, and even then we see through a glass dimly. God, though, can see the big picture. He knows when something is going to be a dead end. He knows when someone is going to be a distraction that will hinder us from our destiny.

Some of the things you may be frustrated about right now, 10 years from now you will look back at and thank God for not answering that prayer the way you wanted or for not opening up that door. You may not be able to see it right now, but that’s what faith is all about.

Why don’t you trust God? Believe that he has you in the palm of his hand and know that when it comes time for God to open a door, no man can keep it shut. No obstacle is too high. Your enemies may be powerful, but our God is all-powerful.

When God says it’s time to promote you, you are going to be promoted. The good news is that your promotion will not be one second late. Suddenly, God can turn any situation around. Suddenly, God can cause a door to open. All it takes is one touch of God’s favor.

Jesus on the Subway

I’d been thinking for a couple of days about what it means to pray with Jesus and pray to Jesus. If you think about it, we do both. We pray to Jesus, but Jesus also prays with us as we pray. 

The old hymn “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” puts it this way: “Can we find a friend so faithful/Who will all our sorrows share?/Jesus knows our every weakness,/Take it to the Lord in prayer.”

Jesus is that best friend with whom we can share whatever is on our mind. After all, he knows our every weakness, but he is also God’s Son answering and hearing our prayers. 

Both he and God make their home in us through prayer. “Whoever loves me will keep my word,” Jesus says, “and we’ll come to them and make our home with them” (John 14:23). 

I was thinking of all this as I was getting ready to sing that very hymn, “What a Friend We Have in Jesus” in a project I’ve been carrying out recently, 60SongsIn60Days, singing a song a day and posting it online. 

I printed out the words and practiced them to myself, sitting at my desk, going out to get lunch, running an errand, all the while thinking of the words “…what a privilege to carry/Everything to God in prayer!”

Even when a song is familiar, it takes me a while to get the lyrics in my head so I can sing them without looking at a piece of paper.

In the afternoon I went down to the subway platform, the J and Z trains, where the acoustics are nice, and waited for the trains to go by so it would get quiet.

Then I started singing into my phone. I try not to pay too much attention to people walking by. Just hope they don’t make too much noise that will be picked up on my cell phone. (These are all “song selfies.”)

Halfway through the hymn, I found myself scrambling in my head for a lyric. Then someone started whistling on the platform. That noise is going to ruin the song, I thought. 

But no. Whoever was whistling was whistling the hymn right along with me, right on key, guiding me, harmonizing, making music with me.

I finished up and called out, “Who was whistling?” I looked around. A guy in a yellowish shirt at the end of the platform waved his hand. “You were great,” I said. “Thank you.”

What a friend we have in Jesus? He sends these people in our lives, other friends, dear ones, family members, loved ones, who stick with us, guide us, help us, sustain us.

And sometimes they are complete strangers, appearing out of nowhere, making God’s music with us.

Here, if you watch closely, you can see the man in the yellowish shirt walk by me, and then on the second verse you can hear him whistle. Sweet. 

I’ve Been Praying for You

I’ll start by warning you that you might want to grab a tissue for this one. I’ve watched this video 8-10 times and I’ve cried every time I’ve seen it.

WTVR in Richmond, Virginia, shared this wonderful story that originated with a Facebook video by Becky Miller. The Texas mom posted about her daughter, Bailey, who had been paralyzed for 11 days from the waist down—and there were no answers as to why.

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Just to set the scene for you, on the day this video was taken, Bailey was waiting on her favorite nurse, and she had a big surprise for her—Bailey had started walking that day.

Nurses are special, and my family has been blessed by some awesome ones during our hospital visits and at our doctor’s offices. The story would have been precious just with Bailey’s surprise and the nurse’s shock—but it’s what the nurse says that really starts the tears for me.

After grabbing Bailey in a giant hug, she cries, “Thank you, Lord! Oh my God, thank you, Lord! Oh, Jesus, thank you!”

And then with deep emotion she says the words that grab my heart every time, “Oh, I’ve been praying for you.”

What a precious gift for her patients. And that made me think of something: It doesn’t matter what occupation we have, or if we’re retired or still in school, we can all give others the gift of praying for them.

I think one of the things I love most about this story is that this precious nurse is just overflowing with Jesus—and it splashed onto the life of her patient.

At the end of the conversation between the nurse and young Bailey, the nurse says, “See there! I told you. Just keep on praying.”

Sweet friends, let’s follow her example. Let’s ask God to put five people on our hearts. Take some time and pray for them, and then pick up the phone or send a Facebook message or a text and tell them, “I’ve been praying for you.”

Let’s splash Jesus into the lives of those around us.

Dear Father, thank you for this precious nurse and for answering her prayers for Bailey. Help me to remember to pray for others and let them see You in me. Amen. 

Inspired to Go the Distance

That Saturday morning I slept in. Not like I had anything to get up for anyway. But I was staying at my sister’s and she had other ideas.

“Come on,” Kristina said, rousting me out of bed. “We’re going for a run.”

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We’d both been runners growing up. I was on the cross-country and track teams in high school, though I wasn’t fast enough to race at the college level at Notre Dame. Still, I ran regularly and completed my first marathon senior year.

But I hadn’t laced up my running shoes in two years. First it was because I didn’t have time. I was a newlywed and new at my job as an insurance claims adjuster.

Lately it was because I didn’t have the interest or the energy. All the air went out of me when my mother died two months earlier, in October 2006, after a long battle with cancer. A week later, my wife told me she was going to file for divorce. It felt like my life had come to a complete standstill.

I went to work every day, but I was just going through the motions. People worried about me. My dad, my sister, my brother, friends. “You’ve got to pick yourself back up,” they urged.

I tried to reboot my life. I got a transfer from Chicago to our Washington, D.C., office. Kristina lived in the area and I could stay with her while I worked things out.

“Let’s go,” Kristina repeated. “I’ve got this six-mile route.”

I groaned. “I don’t feel like it.”

“You know running is the best way to clear your head,” she said.

Those six miles were brutal. Kristina led us across the George Mason Memorial Bridge into Washington, then down through the city and around the National Mall. Around the halfway mark, gasping for breath, I lifted my eyes to the heavens. Lord, please help me get through this.

I staggered on and finished the run. Maybe I had some fight in me after all.

I started running five days a week. Not far, just a few miles each time. But enough that my body began to respond. Sometimes Kristina and I ran together. She could tell I was feeling better, but like any big sister, she still worried.

She was thrilled when I entered the National Marathon in D.C. the following spring. Among the race sponsors was an organization that raised money for cancer research.

“I’m doing this for Mom,” I told Kristina. “I want to help raise money for cancer research.”

“Let me be the first to write you a check,” she said.

I finished in three hours, 26 minutes, a decent time. But that didn’t explain why I was glowing on the inside. I’d raised nearly two thousand dollars for cancer research. Kristina was waiting for me at the finish line. “You okay?” she asked.

“I can’t tell you how great I feel,” I said, a smile unfolding across my face. I just wanted to keep running.

I left the insurance business and found a part-time job at a running store. The rest of the time, I trained. I ran the Country Music Marathon, the Marine Corps Marathon, the Walt Disney World Marathon. The Boston Marathon.

I signed up for a new challenge: a 100-mile ultramarathon in Texas. No matter how well-conditioned you are, you’ll get to a point in these extreme endurance races where you think, I can’t go another step. You see other people passing you, and you wonder, How on earth are they pushing on?

I hit that point at mile 35. There I was, on a lonely country trail, nothing but scrub brush and mesquite around me. Every part of my body screamed. It hurt just to take in a single breath. Out of reflex more than anything, I started praying.

I can’t explain what happened next. It was like my entire being shifted. My aching legs, my raw feet, my constricted breathing…I let that all go and focused my thoughts, my energy, on praying.

I said prayers in my mother’s memory. I asked for strength to move on with my life, for blessings for family and friends, for a dozen different things. Next thing I knew, I was crossing the finish line.

I’d been praying so intently, I forgot about time! I forgot about the pain my body was in. I even forgot about the sadness that had shadowed me for months. It was just me and God and the road ahead.

By the time I completed my second ultramarathon, in February 2010, I’d made up my mind what to do next: run across the country, the whole country, from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic. Sounds crazy, I know. But I prayed about it and it felt right. Really.

I quit my job, took my savings and moved in with an aunt and uncle in Arizona, and began intensive training. I researched the equipment I’d need and plotted out a route.

I decided to use a jogging stroller to hold my sleeping bag and tent, first-aid supplies, water and food. I picked towns where I wanted to stop, then figured out how to get from one place to the next. I chose Oceanside, California, as my starting point.

I had family in Phoenix and Oklahoma City. South Bend, Indiana, was home to Notre Dame. Kristina and my brother, Dave, lived in Alexandria, Virginia. Two teammates from Holmdel High School in New Jersey would join me for a short stretch there. I’d drop by Sayville, New York, where a friend owned a runners’ shop.

I planned to finish at Smith Point, New York, a journey of 3,700 miles.

I needed something to run for. I thought about collecting donations for a cause, but I wouldn’t be able to raise enough to make a significant difference.

Praying for myself and for family and friends carried me through an ultramarathon, but that was only 100 miles. I’d run out of things and people to pray for before I crossed California.

That’s when it hit me. What if I collect prayer requests along the way? From people all over the world, through Facebook? I can pray while I run. Prayers for others will be my fuel.

That was my intention as I hit the road in Oceanside on January 20 last year. But 160 miles later, in the Imperial Sand Dunes, all I could think was, I’ll never make it out of this desert. The sun blazed. My feet felt like they were being barbecued on the superheated highway.

The jogging stroller I was pushing felt like a Mack truck. The landscape was desolate—cactus, scrub brush, sand. I could barely bend my left leg, but I knew if I stopped to rest, it would lock up.

The desert stretched ahead for another 75 miles. I pushed on. An 18-wheeler roared by, practically blowing me off the road. I shook my head, trying to clear my thoughts.

I fired up my cell phone and checked my Facebook page. It had been a full day since I’d spoken to anyone. Right now I could use a little inspiration from a friend. Instead, I found dozens and dozens of messages from strangers. Each one was a prayer request.

They came from across the U.S. and all over the world: Poland, Italy, El Salvador, Spain, France, Australia, Indonesia, Chile, Panama. People asked that I pray for them to find jobs, for ailing loved ones, for the birth of a healthy baby.

One struck close to home. A man in Canada wrote, “Please pray that I might have strength to survive my failing marriage.”

I put my right hand on my heart and began to pray. I prayed for the Canadian man, for an Italian woman whose mother had cancer, for everyone who had sent their requests my way. Lord, let them know your peace, I prayed.

My own pain and worries, everything that had been weighing me down the past few years, fell away. It was like mile 35 in that first ultramarathon, only deeper, more intense. Just me and God and the peace and joy that only he can bring.

I never again doubted that I would complete my cross-country run. It took from January 20 to May 20. Afterward, I returned to Arizona, where I now split my time working at a running store and working with third graders as a teacher’s assistant.

Of course I’m still running. And praying. And looking forward to the road ahead.

Don't miss Jeff's narrated slideshow featuring images from his cross-country adventure.

 

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