Guest blogger, Laurie Coombs @lauriecoombs
Laurie Coombs and I met last August at the Christian Communicators Conference at Billy Graham's, The Cove. Four of us - total strangers - shared a room. After that first hug and subsequent giggles, we all became fast friends. I am delighted to introduce you to Laurie. Her testimony flows through the waters of grace and the power of forgiveness in the face of her father's murder. Laurie and I pray that you will be strengthened by her courage to share her story. To God be the Glory.
Welcome Laurie!
I had always thought the world was a wonderful place, full of beauty and love and light. Growing up, the life I imagined for myself looked more like a fairytale than I care to admit.
I had plans for my life, big plans. But just as I was
coming into my own, just as I was about to seize all life has to offer, my
world unraveled when confronted by an evil I never imagined possible. My dad,
who I love more than I can ever say, was murdered, and with that loss, all the
lofty notions I held about life shattered.
Things
like this don’t happen to people like me, I thought. I grew up in a nice,
quiet small town. I came from a good, loving family. How could my dad have
been murdered? I wondered.
I
found myself sitting at a park after the funeral questioning just about
everything I thought I knew to be true. Something my mom always said came to
mind. “Everything happens for a reason,” she used to say. I pondered this familiar adage for some
time, wrestling with my new reality, before crying out, “How could there be a reason for this?” through my anger and tears.
This
was not my plan. This was not the path I thought my life would take. And
I was angry. Mostly at Anthony, the man who murdered my dad, but it was more
than that.
I was angry at the lack of sensitivity I saw in the media.
I was
angry at the indifference of others watching the news coverage.
I was angry at
our society and its unhealthy fascination with murder.
But I was also angry
that my life was not turning out the way I thought it should.
It
just didn’t seem fair. All those big plans I had
for my life were upended by my new awareness of evil. Nothing good can come
out of this, I thought. Nothing.
But
I was wrong.
The
years that followed were characterized more by trying to be okay than actually
being okay. Shortly after the murder, I put on my happy mask and decided it was
time to move on, and so I did. I buried my pain and went on with my life,
hoping my past would stay in the past.
But it doesn’t take much to know that unresolved
pain rises to the surface at one point or another, regardless of how deep its
buried.
It
took nine years for my pain to resurface, and when it did, I was absolutely
stunned by it. My pain showed up in the form of anxiety and depression,
something I had never dealt with before. I didn’t
know what to do when this monster reared its ugly head. And for the first time
in my life, I was presented with something I could not fix. I was able to work
through every other struggle in my life prior to this, but this time was
different.
I
tried everything the world tells you to do in a situation like this. I tried
eating better and exercising more. I tried meditation. I tried taking a stress
management class. I tried yoga. I tried self-help books. And I even tried
taking medication, but it only worsened my condition.
Nothing worked.
And so
with all other options exhausted, it seemed God was my last and only hope.
But
I was not a believer. In fact, I was a skeptic. I was one of those people who
thought faith was something weak-minded people relied on to get through life.
All that stuff in the Bible seemed like a fairytale concocted to tickle ears
and make people feel all warm and fuzzy inside. But at this point, I had come
to the end of myself and saw no other option out of the mess.
And so with a
fearful heart and an analytical mind, I attended church, fully expecting the
God-thing to be yet another rabbit trail that would lead absolutely nowhere.
But it wasn’t.
As
I listened to the pastor speak, my mind only semi-present due to the anxiety,
God did something I never imagined possible. He showed up. He continued to do
so time and time again until there was absolutely no denying it was Him, and I
received faith.
But
I don’t believe I would have ever gotten to
that point apart from my dad’s murder, and so the very thing
intended to destroy my life would be the thing that would save it. Apart from
this terrible tragedy, I would have never experienced true life. God had a
better plan than the one I had planned for myself. A messy plan. A plan that
included tragedy and loss. A plan that included pain-filled searching.
But also
included in that plan was my salvation and the call to love and forgive my
enemy which ultimately resulted in the beautiful message of hope and redemption
that I have been called to share with this world.
Yes.
We live in a broken world. A world that involves evil and loss and pain. But
apart from the darkness, we would never fully know the light.
Only in the
darkest of dark does light shine the brightest.
Only in a broken world can we
see healing and redemption.
Love is shown greater in the face of hate. Beauty
is all the more beautiful in the face of the ugly.
And
what beauty there is to behold in this wonderfully messy world.
A Tweetable to Encourage Others
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Meet Laurie:
Laurie Coombs is a passionate writer and speaker on the issues
of forgiveness, redemption, and the hope found in Jesus. She is the author of Letters
from My Father’s Murderer:
A Journey of Forgiveness, an incredible true
story of grace, mercy, and the redemptive power of God. Her story was featured
in Billy Graham’s film, Heaven,
and she is a featured writer and blogger for iBelieve and Crosswalk. Laurie and
her husband, Travis, make their home in Nevada along with their two daughters,
Ella and Avery. Be sure to visit LaurieCoombs.org or connect with Laurie
on Twitter, Facebook, and Pinterest.
To order Laurie's book, Letters from My Father's Murderer, please visit her page on Amazon.
Laurie, I'm sitting here with tears. I am so thankful God redeems what is broken in our lives and uses what is so horrible to His glory to bring salvation. What an absolutely blessed testimony of faith you have. Thank you for sharing your story with us and helping us to see once again that God is The Answer. Blessings to you, Marcie
ReplyDeleteNan, thank you for sharing Laurie with us. :-)
It's quite remarkable, isn't Marcie. I'm so thankful Laurie's words of faith ministered to you. You are precious to the Father and to me.
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