#52 Trusting God in Crisis: Faith When Life Falls Apart

By Taylor Hartley

Introduction

On February 3rd, 2025, at approximately 6:39 AM, my dad called. He never calls at that time. The phone started buzzing on top of my nightstand, and I fumbled for it as it slipped to the floor. Swinging my legs out of bed, I reached down and grabbed the phone before it went to voicemail. “Hey, Dad,” I said, still pretty groggy. “Tay, I’m really sorry to have to tell you this, but Grammy passed away this morning.”

I couldn’t believe it. Surely not. Death can’t happen like that, right? You’re supposed to receive advanced warning. You’re supposed to have time to prepare yourself for a brand-new reality. In my case, my grandma was a hero to me. She taught me how to love God’s Word. She taught me the power of story. She taught me how to listen, love, and laugh. My grandma was simply the best, and much of who I am I owe to her. And she’s been gone for six months. . .

How many times over the course of a lifetime do you think life will feel like it’s falling apart? If you look back over your own life, how many times has it already felt like it’s fallen apart? For me, I think I can recall nine times when life felt like that. Now, of course, not all nine times were equal in severity. The question is not how many times life has fallen apart, but how many times it has felt like it’s fallen apart. So, nine for me, the ninth being my grandma’s passing. How many for you?

One time, my pastor and I were on a ministry trip. After dinner one night, he suggested we play a game that centered on family history. A round represented five-year increments, and each round would have each of us share everything we knew about our grandfather’s lives. The next night, we played the same game, only this time documenting our dads’ lives. Here’s what I learned: my grandpa and my dad have suffered a lot of losses in their lifetimes. I also learned that those losses seemed to increase in frequency as they aged. Something about life in this world, the longer it goes, requires more of you.

You pay with your heart. Family members you love pass away. The opportunities you wanted have gone to someone else. Things you never want to experience happen to you. . . or to someone you love. Life in this world is going to hurt. It’s going to feel like it’s falling apart. So, how many times for you? Here’s the reality. . . however many it is, it’s sure to be a growing number the longer you live. You will receive a call, a diagnosis, or a notification,  and it will seem like all the air has leaked out of the room; like all the good in the world has turned to bad; like all the light the sun can produce has gone dark. What will you do then?

The answer to this question forms the burden behind this guide. At The Mentoring Project, we want to produce practical guides informed by biblical principles for the many life scenarios you will face and the life skills you will need. And yet, in a guide about suffering, I must warn you, whatever else I can say about how to cope with suffering will surely fall flat if you don’t know who God is and what role he plays in the most painful of life’s experiences. So, as you go through this guide with your mentor/mentee, yes, ask questions about what to do and how to respond to suffering. But more importantly, ask questions about who your God is and what he has promised you in Jesus. The answer to this latter line of questioning will bear so much more fruit than any answer I may offer to the first line. Answers to both lines will be interconnected and present in all four parts of this guide. I pray you find it useful as you suffer today or prepare to suffer tomorrow.

So, what do we do when life falls apart?

ऑडियो मार्गदर्शिका

ऑडियो ऑडियो
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#52 Trusting God in Crisis: Faith When Life Falls Apart

हमारे समाचार पत्र की सदस्यता लें और साप्ताहिक बाइबल और शिष्यत्व सुझाव प्राप्त करें।