Rehearse Your History with God

“Rehearse your history with God.”

This was my recommendation to my family last night as we sat around the dinner table. Our discussions lean toward the “heavy” these days. So much going on in the world. Chaos, confusion, concerns. You know. And out of that deep well of heaviness, I drew forth these words:

“In times like these, family, we need to rehearse our history with God. Trace his faithfulness. Trust in his goodness.”

Billy acknowledged my words with words that my father used to say to me … “You know, Elaine, that’ll preach.”

A smile passed between Billy and me, and then the internal gnawing began within my soul … the rehearsing of my history with God.

There’s a lot to recall, to reflect upon, to remember. Instead of focusing on recent memories, I dug further into my past – twenty-five years in retrospect.

As a single mother of two young boys, I made the decision to return home to Wilmore, KY. If “home is where the heart is,” then I definitely made the right choice to move back to the Bluegrass. Wilmore is the place where I first trusted God and began my long obedience with him. Most importantly, Wilmore was where my parents were living, and I needed the safety, acceptance, and love afforded me therein.

I also needed a job. After a disappointing interview with a Christian school down the road (one where the questions were centered more around the reasons for my divorce rather than my qualifications as an educator), I decided to apply for a job at Asbury Theological Seminary – the vocational home of both of my parents. Dr. Kenneth Kinghorn was looking for an administrative assistant; he’d known me as a child, and now he would better know me as an adult. The interview process went forward, and within a week, I had a job. And while I mostly didn’t have a clue what it meant to be an administrative assistant, I did know that, for the first time in a long while, I was safe. Dr. K had given me a chance to start over, to further “grow up” and mend my heart in an environment that had earlier shaped my beginning days of faith.

For three years, I sat under the great favor of Dr. Kinghorn. He protected me, challenged me, walked alongside me while never judging me. He stocked the supply closet with Diet Dr. Peppers, and he lovingly allowed me long lunches with the Beeson girls (you know who you are), as well as daily walks to my mother’s office on the other side of campus. When the bi-weekly chapel hour came, he put the closed sign on the office door and said, “Let’s go.” When my boys showed up at my office after getting off the bus from school, he ended my work day early. When asked for his counsel, he wisely engaged. He daily prayed over me and, on occasion, trusted me with campus “intel” reserved for the privileged few. He didn’t micro-manage my work nor meddle in my personal affairs. Instead, Dr. Kinghorn allowed me the privilege of personal healing according to God’s time table and his immeasurable grace.

Dr. Kinghorn wasn’t the only one. There were many moments throughout my three years at ATS filled with similar privilege. Dr. Ellsworth Kalas’s mentoring moments – his sermon and directives from Moses on Mt. Nebo. Dr. Steve Seamands’s Ash Wednesday service where a quote from Omar Cabrera took center stage in my heart. The day Reg Johnson handed me an envelope with cash inside – the exact amount I needed to cover an unexpected bill. Bill Goold’s after-chapel walk with me, asking me how my “desert season” was going. Maxie Dunnam – a president never too busy for a hug or a word of soul-stirring encouragement. Albin Whitworth’s exuberance, laughter, and invites for the boys to come and swim at his pool.

The list goes on – I suppose not enough room (or time) in this space to record my thoughts. But in my time of remembering today, in rehearsing my history with God from this limited segment of my past, a tender truth is emerging:

Not all men cast stones. Some men carry them instead.

Stones not to harm the guilty, but rather stones to heal the broken-hearted. To stack and to build a better future rather than to hurl and to re-injure a wounded past.

In that season so long ago, I couldn’t fully appreciate the stones that those giant men of faith were carrying on my behalf. But in rehearsing my history with God today, I am overwhelmed with their willingness to do so. Perhaps they did it, in part, out of their great love for my dad, Chuck Killian. No doubt, because of their great love for their heavenly Father. And just maybe, there was a little part of them that knew something of grace because of their own histories with God. Regardless of their reasons, twenty-five years later, I am stunned by their intentional generosity toward me.

Not all men cast stones. Some men carry them instead.

Indeed.

So today, friends, if you’re feeling heaviness of heart, if confusion is creeping in and around your spirit, I encourage you (even as I am encouraging myself) to rehearse your history with God. Look for the stone carriers from your past, your present. Remember them; be grateful; do likewise.

There’s a broken heart nearby who needs the benefit of your strength and the grace of your history with God.

Those who have ears to hear, let them hear. As always …

Peace for the journey,

(7.11.2020. All rights reserved.)

12 Responses to Rehearse Your History with God

    • Thanks, Tami. You know my prayers are with you. God will carry you through to the other side.

  1. Love this Elaine! I’ve been rehearsing my own history with God purposely this year because I’m celebrating my 50th Jubilee year of my salvation to Jesus Christ since Jan 30th (1970)!! God has continued to bringing forth many people from my past who have indeed been ‘stone carriers’ in my life. So many of them helped shape my walk with Jesus in unexpected ways. One in particular called me out on a behavior I had in my early 30’s. That loving rebuke turned my heart in the right direction from that day on.
    She never remembered that conversation but I was able to thank her recenly, for her boldness because she cared for me with a sincere heart.
    Also as you point out here, God’s faithfulness and goodness to us can never accurately be measured because it is far greater than we realize!
    Thanks for keeping us alert, awake, listening and always remembering our history with God… with a grateful heart!
    Choosing Joy~
    Stephanie
    Psalm 126:3

    • I, too, have known the rebuke of a friend. It’s never easy to hear at the time, but is usually for our good. These days, those friendly rebukes are rarer in coming. Maybe I need to make myself more available to them. Thanks for being here.

  2. When I first read your phrase, ‘Some men carry them,” I thought you were going to refer to the way we carry our burdens and brokenness around like a millstone around our neck. I like the direction you took with it. I’ve always called them Stones of Remembrance. I still pick them up when I go places. Stones for me are meant to be stones of remembrance – to build an altar, a place of worship and give thanks to God for His faithfulness. Do you remember when we first met in real life at She Speaks? I was giving out grace rocks. We sat together often. I would hope I gave you one! I carried them around in my bag all weekend. LOL

    • How well I remember that weekend! It was a blessing to meet you then and to keep the connection alive all these years. Yes, stones of remembrance. It’s a beautiful way to recount the faithfulness of God. Thanks for being in my life.

  3. What a sweet, tender post. The echo of LEGACY is one of the things my heart hears from it. Not only your legacy, but the legacy of those wonderful people who sowed into your life and heart. Oh, that I would be one that is tender to the needs and hurts of another. Thank you, Elaine, for such a meaningful prompt to my heart. Love you!

    • Heaven writes the witness – one day it will be revealed to us. I pray for a faith that lives and loves outwardly. It’s become so easy to live the opposite. Love you, friend, and can’t wait to begin your study this fall with a group of women.

  4. Such a delightful read, Elaine. I love that the people at ATS ministered to you so richly. It IS an especially-anointed place! Back in 1983 I began a journal of God’s faithfulness to our family. Included are the names of mentors, encouragers, listeners, examples, supporters, and more–stone carriers all. I thank God for the privilege to be a stone-carrier for others, and pray I don’t miss an opportunity!

    • God has filled my life, time and again, with rich contributors of grace. Even our re-connecting after all these years, has served as a reminder to me of the hugeness of the family of God. Much love!

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