These Anxious Humans

Said the Robin to the Sparrow, 

“I should really like to know

Why these anxious human beings

Rush about and worry so.”

.

Said the Sparrow to the Robin, 

“Friend, I think that it must be

That they have no heavenly Father

Such as cares for you and me.”

Philip Howard

Motherhood has revealed in what my heart rests, and it is not what I thought. 

I find that my world is suddenly full–full of love and meaning; full of new worries and fears; and full of laundry piles and bursting diaper pails. As I care for my son, embracing all the new tasks and responsibilities, rest seems a fantasy. 

In this new world of motherhood, I can’t simply wait for the weekend or the arrival of “the next stage”. This new world strips away all imitations of rest to clearly show the reality of who was always there. I am learning to be buoyed by God and the rest He is ready to provide. 

My natural inclination each morning is to begin accomplishing tasks, instead of beginning in God’s presence. I choose to worry instead of casting my anxiety on Him. I pray most for sleep, instead of a heart that will seek His strength moment by moment. The flow of my days no longer has that self-validating pattern: work hard then rest. Mothers work hard and–even if in moments of relaxing–ever anticipate their baby waking and needing. Feeling the constant pull of chores half done and a racing mind are not outworkings of a woman who knows God’s love and trusts Him completely.

I realize that my old life’s pattern of productivity, organization, and crossing off the to-do list…to be rewarded with relaxation, only gave me a facade of rest. Motherhood is work never done. Motherhood is caring for a person’s body and soul. The weight of that can not be diminished by crossing it off a list. Motherhood laughs at self-sufficiency. Motherhood has shown me that to rest, I need to remember God’s love and I need to love and trust God first. 

I am learning that for my life to be one that trusts my God, I must be disciplined to remember what He has done and then surrender my days to Him. The love that pulls me to my child must only be an echo of the love that pulls me to my God. My heart quickly forgets that God is my greatest treasure. He cares about every detail – the hiccups in my days (and nights) and stressors I encounter are not a surprise to Him. When I am too tired, too emotionally depleted, and trying to care for my baby through tear-flooded eyes, he is there. All the good I want for my son pales in comparison to the good God wants for him and the good that God has already done. When I stop to think, there is nothing more beautiful, freeing, and restful than to surrender my exhaustion and anxieties to Him.

I am also learning to surrender the outcomes. Some babies cry more, sleep less, and all babies require our time and drastically change what we accomplish. Rest doesn’t come when the dishes are done, the baby is [finally] in bed or occupied enough for some sips of coffee. I am not meant to feel satisfied in the parenting wins or depressed by my feelings of parental incompetence. This great privilege of stewarding a life for God must bring us to Him. 

Elisabeth Elliot wrote: 

“He leads us right on, right through, right up to the threshold of Heaven. He does not say ever ‘Here it is.’ He says only “Here am I. fear not.” 

We can rest today and all of our tomorrows because God is faithful to complete His work in us. We can be certain of his love because Jesus went to the cross for us. He has held nothing back and His work for us is still happening when my kitchen is messy and it’s all I can manage just to feed my baby. He isn’t limited when I climb into bed and feel like I didn’t do enough. God simply wants my obedience to love my family through the strength and rest He is ready to give.

We see evidence of God’s care for us, not only in our salvation but in details of creation. Jesus himself reminds us of his provision: 

“Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? And which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life? And why are you anxious about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? Therefore do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.” (Matthew 6:15-32, ESV).

When I am tormented by the “what-ifs” and “should-haves” for my son, I can rest. God gave His son for mine to provide a way for eternity. No matter future joys or tragedies, God is present for the details of our lives. 

We rest because God is working and He loves us. 

“Are not five sparrows sold for two pennies? And not one of them is forgotten before God. why, even the hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear not, you are of more value than many sparrows” (Luke 12:5-7).


“Thou hast made us for thyself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it finds its rest in thee.”

Saint Augustine

COVID Storms & Human Sandcastles

“Therefore everyone who hears these words of Mine and acts on them, may be compared to a wise man who built his house on the rock. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and slammed against that house; and yet it did not fall, for it had been founded on the rock. Everyone who hears these words of Mine and does not act on them, will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. The rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and slammed against that house; and it fell—and great was its fall.” ~Matthew 7:24-27


I am struck by how eerie our town’s main street has become. I still anticipate cars cruising past and the aroma of fine food and coffee, even though shops have been shuttered for weeks. I miss stopping at the local bookstore and seeing people smiling over meals. The bustling life is now confined to individual homes, where anxiety is stifling and loneliness rampant. Emotions flux with the reported cases, the new deaths; possible hopes of new medications or plasma of recovered patients; but followed by the lack of ventilators and other supplies. The media strives to highlight chaos and concern, to provide the greatest shock, to draw the most attention, to sell their product of daily novelty.

In his book, Disruptive Witness, Alan Noble writes:

“…death comes for us all, and all around us we see its work in decay, violence, evil, sickness, and suffering. The weight of this cross pressure is too much for most of us to bear, so we have outsourced the burden of death to specialists: doctors, nurses, paramedics, law enforcement, fire departments, soldiers, and the like. We obsessively fight death, we push the sick and elderly to the margins of society, we quarantine the dying, we turn our fear of death into a quasicosmic war against global suffering.”

Not only is our distracted busyness failing to deny the reality of death, but healthcare workers – no stranger to death – confront the fact they are not impervious to illness themselves. And for many, we have no place to outsource the burden. 

In contradiction to expectations for modern medicine, local and national leaders are foregoing current policies and creating new ones – not out of proven outcomes but to ration of a lack of supplies. It takes me back to my experiences in clinics set up in third-world countries. All supplies are donated, resources limited and creativity – to address needs with available supplies – a necessity. 

Caring for patients with infectious, life-threatening conditions is not a new requirement for healthcare workers. We enter rooms without a second thought because evidence has shown that following the correct personal protective equipment (PPE) will protect us from contracting a disease. But now the reality is that our allowance of PPE is inadequate. These changes make bedside staff vulnerable to patient’s wounds of resistant bacteria, flu, and the plethora of other respiratory viruses. 

These changes also add concern for other patients who do not require contact precautions. There is a weight wondering if bedside staff are now a vector for infection to the immunocompromised. Suddenly a sneeze or a slight post nasal drip is a symptom of grave concern. Is this allergies or a seasonal cold? Or am I a carrier of a virus that might threaten the life I am assigned to steward? 

The work of task forces and clinical engineering is continuous; the questions are weighty and the lack of knowledge looms; the disruption to routine has triggered fear, anxiety, frustration, and sadness. But these throbbing emotions have opened my eyes to an unquestionable realization – these feelings are a result of misplaced hope. 

This virus has simply unveiled hopes that are vulnerable to storms.  

COVID-19 has exposed the hope I have put in my country. In our response, we face a man-made problem of little PPE due to hoarders, budget choices, and a reliance on global trade. Even the most developed and progressive nations cannot provide us with the security and protection we desire. This hope is a sandcastle. 

COVID-19 has exposed the hope I put in knowledge. Hospitals are, by nature, chaotic, but controlled by evidence-based practice and set protocols to ensure the best outcomes. But with the introduction of something unexpected, the threat of limited equipment and too little staff, we see how control was a mere delusion. Our knowledge is not omniscient and our plans are not infallible – hope in these alone is a sandcastle. 

We see the stark limitations of human intellect and infrastructure; we see its failure. But friends, Christ has not failed us. The world spins in its chaos, but – in all of his love and power – God sees us. He sees the corruption, suffering and sickness and he does not leave us alone. 

Our God today was king during the bubonic plague, Spanish influenza, and ebola outbreak. He sees the AIDs problem and Zika epidemic. He sees persons plagued by failing organs and festering wounds. His heart is broken by the earth’s state and he actively intervenes. Jesus came to satisfy justice – to pay the penalty for sin. 

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”

John 3:16-17

He asks that we believe, trust, and follow him, that we love him above our comfort and our plans, that we cast our anxieties on him and know that he is sovereign. We are to trust God, whose character is perfect, who is unchanging and who is good. He does not mean for us to carry the weight of this world or outsource it to someone else. We are called to rest in his arms, to cast our anxieties on him, and to press on with his strength. 

The sufferings we are experiencing are momentary. God promises that he will restore creation to his perfect design and includes us in the process of redemption. We are not meant to simply survive or endure life. He gives our suffering meaning and our work lasting value. 

The world is put on hold, but this should never prevent but rather propel us to what God calls us to – share the good news of his salvation.  Our lives can be a witness of the assurance we have in both life and in death because of Jesus. 

By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers. But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him? Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.”

1 John 3:16-18

We demonstrate his peace by how we care for our neighbors, love our children, and serve others in our workplaces. We are called to act on his certain promises. 

God does not promise me my health; he promises me something greater. And I must go where he calls. I can enter a COVID-19 room with inadequate PPE and be the hands and feet of Christ to a loved creation of God. I can touch and comfort patients when their family members cannot. I can trust my life to God on this momentary blip because he has promised me forever. 

God does not promise me my health; he promises me something greater.

In a time where coworkers and neighbors are uneasy, I can work in such a way that holds nothing back because God has held nothing back from me. 

God is giving me peace as I press into his word. He is blessing me with friends who remind me to pray as I enter each patient’s room and perform each task. My nerves are calmed because I know that I am not in control and never was; someone who is much wiser, more powerful, and exponentially more loving is reigning today and will tomorrow. 

Friends, we entrust the reality of death and illness to a God who has already had victory over it. I pray that we will press on to how he is calling each of us with his strength. We do not have the answers, and we don’t need to if our faith is not in sandcastles but rather on the rock Himself.