Discovering the Love of God on the Pathway of Adversity

Discovering the Love of God on the Pathway of Adversity

I’ve been writing obliquely about my Parkinson’s disease diagnosis for the past year or more, but today the story takes center stage in an interview with Lois Flowers. She asks probing questions that tease out the details of my story, but more than that—it’s a conversation about what C.S. Lewis would have called The Problem of Pain.

Suffering comes to all of us in one form or another. Elisabeth Elliot defined suffering as “having what you don’t want or wanting what you don’t have.” In my case, what I “don’t want” is a tremor and loss of dexterity in my right hand and arm, impaired balance, and chronic pain. I invite you to read on as this conversation with Lois encourages you to seek God’s loving purpose behind whatever adversity you may be enduring today.

Lois Writes…

On the surface, my blogger friend Michele Morin and I are, well, as different as different could be.

She lives in Maine. I live in Kansas. She has four adult sons, and I have two young adult daughters. She homeschooled her children; my girls went to public schools. She has a flourishing vegetable garden; I have never successfully grown a tomato plant. She’s a gifted book reviewer; I’d rather go to the dentist than review a book.

For all the differences, though, when I read her words at Living Our Days, I sense a kindred spirit. Not only because she appreciates C.S. Lewis and can turn a phrase in a blog post like nobody’s business. I also value the wisdom of someone who is further down the parenting path than I am, who humbly holds fast to biblical truth, and who rests in God’s sovereignty even when life doesn’t make sense.

Michele was recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. She weaves this journey into her writing here and there, which—in my view—has made her words even more relatable and encouraging. This is where we began when, via email, we had the following conversation:

LOIS: What was your initial reaction to your diagnosis?

MICHELE: Sometimes being a pessimist is helpful. (However, I prefer to think of myself as a realist.)

For a year or two before my actual diagnosis, I had been paying attention to a slight tremor that involved only my right thumb. It was annoying but didn’t interfere with anything. I just took note and moved on. I suspected Parkinson’s or something neurological, so I was relieved that it wasn’t a tumor or something worse.

Managing Parkinson’s disease is a little bit like having a part-time job. Regular exercise is the only factor proven to slow the progression of the disease, and I have a terrific physical therapist who prescribes movement to counteract the pain, stiffness, imbalance, and tremor.

Managing #Parkinson’s disease is a little bit like having a part-time job.

There’s no question that Parkinson’s disease is continually in the business of taking. Even so, in slowing me down and forcing me to think about activities that used to be automatic, it leaves behind the gift of simply being, balancing, and breathing.

So I stand on one foot every morning and at the same time, I’m paying attention to the arrival of the light outside my kitchen window. I practice big movements and lie on the floor to stretch and strengthen, and all the while my heart and lungs oxygenate my blood without my having to lift a finger!

When the actual diagnosis came, it wasn’t a surprise, but I do remember asking God, “What are you thinking?” After all, I have a full and hectic life with kids, grandkids, and a church family who depend on me, a ministry of teaching and writing that I love, and a husband who’s expecting to retire with me in a few years. 

God’s response was swift but gentle: “Trust me.”

That’s my assignment.

Affliction by Assignment

LOIS: I suppose that is the case for all of us, isn’t it—individualized lesson plans from the same loving Father? Did you have any hesitation about working your Parkinson’s journey into your writing?

MICHELE: Maybe it’s because I’ve been pretty open about so many of my challenges as a mother and a believer, but I don’t think it ever occurred to me NOT to write about the diagnosis and the management of the disease. It took me several months to get used to thinking of myself as a person with a chronic condition, but right from the beginning, it was clear to me that this particular affliction had been measured out to me for my good (somehow!).

Even more important, God was very present with His unique blend of strength and comfort, and He “who comforts us in all our affliction” has in His mind the privilege of equipping us to “be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God” (2 Corinthians 1:3-5, ESV).

LOIS: That’s such a comforting, helpful perspective. Looking back over your life–as the mom of four boys, as well as other roles and challenges–can you pinpoint a few ways God may have prepared you for this season?

MICHELE: My orientation to time is always toward the future, so this question required some digging and rummaging around in the past. Like a lot of young adult evangelicals who were coming of age in the 80s and 90s, I think my theology was larded through with a mixture of prosperity gospel and the prayer of Jabez. 

Then I had children!

During a particularly intense season of homeschooling and parenting, I remember clearly the day I “heard myself” praying for my four sons, and it sounded like a page out of someone’s name-it-and-claim-it playbook.

I was asking for successful auditions, strong athletic performances, and admission to the college of choice as if all this were my greatest hope in life. 

When parents pray over an open Bible, the words of Scripture wrap themselves around the desires of our hearts and give us the words we don’t have. Therefore, while I would love to live on a planet where the “Christian kids” get full scholarships, never total their vehicles, marry believers, and stay true to the faith for their entire lives, that is not what the Bible describes or promises.  

Paying attention to my responses as a parent and being actively involved in the lives of fellow believers through the church I call home has been deeply clarifying to my theology. “Bad” things happen. Sixty-one-year-old grandmothers with full and challenging lives get Parkinson’s disease. 

The question for me, then, is this: “What am I going to do with it?” Railing against it in anger or falling into a puddle of self-pity are not reasonable options given the existence of a God who is both sovereign and good.

Railing against our #suffering in anger or falling into a puddle of self-pity are not reasonable options given the existence of a God who is both sovereign and good.

Wilderness Survival

LOIS: What a journey! The learning never ends, does it? As we wrap up this conversation, how does your belief in God’s goodness and sovereignty guide you, both on your own walk home to heaven and also as you seek to love your family of adult children as best you can?

MICHELE: This is a well-timed question because I’m working on a talk for an upcoming speaking engagement called “Survival Skills for the Wilderness.”

One thing I’ve noticed about myself and others is that no one ever volunteers for a wilderness, faith-testing experience. Yet we learn from the Old Testament that God does not take his people into the wilderness to abandon them there. The pathway of adversity is designed to show us what is in our hearts.

John Newton remembered his long wilderness days as “the Lord’s school.”

God wanted to make His people intensely conscious of their dependence and His power, so He met them there with the water of His grace. I will serve my family (and my readers) most faithfully by asking God to give me eyes to see what He provides as good, courage to relinquish what He withholds, and faith to envision what He wants me to become as a result of the challenges He sovereignly assigns to me.

LOIS: The folks who attend your speaking engagement are in for a treat, Michele. Thanks so much for being with us this week.

Friends, I hope you enjoyed that conversation with Lois as much as we enjoyed the process! I encourage you to get to know Lois through her online writing ministry.

Lois Flowers

As an experienced journalist, Lois puts her considerable skills to work on her website where she shares her observations and insights as a Christian and as a mom who is getting used to living in an empty nest.

Lois also hosts the Remembering Our Parents community on Instagram. It’s a welcoming place to share images and stories around sweet memories with loved ones. It’s also a place where no one is afraid to talk about the sadness of grief and the reality of loss. Check out all the details.

Thanks, Lois, for asking such good questions and for the invitation to participate in this meaningful conversation.

And thank you, readers, for your regular and highly valued input here! It’s always a blessing to meet with you around the Truth.

Holding You in the Light,

In the #wilderness, ask God to give you eyes to see what He provides as good, courage to relinquish what He withholds, and faith to envision what He wants you to become as a result of the challenges He sovereignly assigns to you.


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31 thoughts on “Discovering the Love of God on the Pathway of Adversity”

  1. I appreciate your honesty here about a very hard thing, Michele. I often learn the most from people in the midst of their struggles. Thank you for allowing us this peek into your diagnosis and how you are dealing with it. Blessings to you along this journey.

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  2. I always get a nugget when I visit here, Michele! I loved this: “God does not take his people into the wilderness to abandon them there. The pathway of adversity is designed to show us what is in our hearts.”

    You just don’t grow if you don’t experience resistance (another word of adversity). Although, I’d love nothing but sunny calm days, I know in order to flourish I must have a few rainy windy days to buffet me.

    Thank you for your honesty in sharing with us.

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    1. Resistance is a gorgeous way of looking at adversity—it reminds me of the bands and weights I use every day to strengthen muscles that want to atrophy.
      No resistance=no strengthening!

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  3. It saddens me greatly that you must soldier through the challenge of Parkinson’s disease, dear Michele. At the same time I thrill to see your strong faith, positive attitude, and staunch fortitude–a shining example of what God can do through a person devoted to Him, even in the midst of adversity. I so appreciate you, blogger- friend!

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    1. And I’m grateful for you, Nancy. I know you have a good supply of stories as well, attesting to the faithfulness of God in our wilderness journeys. He doesn’t lead us into the wilderness to abandon us there, but to get our attention, to be alone with us, to humble us, to test us, and to show us what’s in our hearts.

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  4. That you are having to hone survival skills in a wilderness walk saddens me, but with each Q & A, you teach us how to turn it to grace, saying, “faithfully by asking God to give me eyes to see what He provides as good, courage to relinquish what He withholds, and faith to envision what He wants me to become as a result of the challenges He sovereignly assigns to me.” God has, through faithful attendance to “The Lord’s School,” he has raised up a most beautiful, wise teacher!

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  5. Michele and Lois, I appreciate this post so much. I’ve always been drawn to the stories of biblical heroes and how their lives were packed with challenges they did not choose or want. I have a talk based on Naomi called “Trusting God when Life Stinks.” It could be on any number of biblical characters. Just yesterday when I felt dismayed over something I exclaimed, “God, what are you doing?” The next minute I added, if I can trust a human author to bring good out of evil in a novel, I can certainly trust the Judge of all the earth to do right. Michele, I appreciate your living testimony to God’s grace in our challenges. I especially appreciate your words, “I will serve my family (and my readers) most faithfully by asking God to give me eyes to see what He provides as good, courage to relinquish what He withholds, and faith to envision what He wants me to become as a result of the challenges He sovereignly assigns to me.” Sending prayers and love.

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  6. My dear man has lived with PD for 12 years now. Maybe I rather say that PD has been an unwelcome intruder into our lives, God’s grace has been more than sufficient for us. And God has taught us aspects of love, marriage and living through long term suffering in ways we would have never known. God has taught me patience beyond measure as I already thought I was a pretty patient person. My dear man says God has used PD to teach him compassion. We claimed the scripture in the book of Job as our life prayer going forward. Our latter days will be greater than our former. That might sound impossible, but with God we are living this truth despite long term PD.

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    1. Lisa, somehow this comment ended up in spam, so I’m glad I found it and rescued it! Your words are a huge encouragement to me, coming into the beginning of a similar journey. God doesn’t let anything go to waste, and I want to follow your example of claiming the scriptural promises of God’s faithfulness in the wilderness.

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