From A Vessel of Wrath to a Vessel ofWorth
I
was an Air Force brat and therefore grew up in a very unsettled
environment. We moved every one to two years, in fact I was never in the
same school for two years in a row except when I was in sixth or
seventh grade.. I never had any close friends, and soon learned not to
make friends as I was hurt to often by having to leave them behind,
never to see or hear from them again
The
moving also did a lot to lower my already low self-esteem. During some
of my father’s overseas duties, my mother stayed at my grandmother’s
farm. My mother tried to maintain a strict Roman Catholic home, (Every
holy day and high mass were observed.) but she was a nervous wreck with
all the responsibility of five kids resting solely upon her shoulders.
We were a real burden to her and she let us know it. She was never one
to show affection or appreciation, so I turned elsewhere for the love
and attention I desired.
My
male cousin was one to catch on to my feelings of uselessness. He took
advantage of me and sexually molested me. Oh, the horror and guilt I
felt and carried from that time on. Men were just a nuisance to me. They
were only in this world to create more problems. I took up my mother’s
attitude------that I could live without men.
When
I was in high school, after my dad’s retirement from the Air Force, my
older sister became pregnant. Because she was an easy target, as the
boys called it, they thought I would be too. I was a victim of their cat
calls and evil tongues. I then decided that I would become a nun. I was
really seeking for some kind of acceptance, some kind of love. A love
that would accept me as I was. Someone that I would not have to pretend
with.
That
summer I worked at a girl’s camp which led me on to further sin and
degradation. If you want to send your children to the very abyss of
hell, send them to work at a secular summer camp. There I learned to
drink and party. There was no supervision for us minor workers and the
older ones were more than willing to teach us their ways.
I
decided not to become a nun as I figured that I was too deep in sin to
be that godly---that God would not accept such a sinful person. The
penance of confession to the priest did nothing to ease my conscience.
Every
time I tried to reform I fell. Every time I fell it was always going to
be the last time (so I promised God). I had no strength to withstand
temptation and so the vicious circle continued.
During
this time of my sister’s pregnancy, my dad left home and I strayed
farther from my “religious training”. Things had not been good between
my folks since the stress of separation during his overseas duties.
There was no love or trust between them. Add the stress and humiliation
of a teen pregnancy, and you’ve got a time-bomb ready to explode.
When
I was 15 my grandmother, Dad’s mom, died ofcancer. As she was lingering
on her deathbed I was so scared for her as I felt that her soul was on
the way to hell; and mine too. I was so scared that I was going to die. I
felt no security in the sacraments of the church. They were all just
vain repetitions and did no good for anyone. How could a man take the
place of God? How could the Virgin Mary help me? It just all seemed so
false, so empty.
The
summer after my grandmother died, my dad asked me to walk to my uncle’s
house for some cigarettes. I dutifully walked and got them, but on the
way back, I started thinking of my grandmothers agonizing death and I
tore up the whole pack of cigarettes. Dad waited and waited for me and I
finally confessed to him what I had done. He was both as mad as a
hornet and pricked in the conscience when I told him why I did what I
had done. From then on he didn’t trust me with his little errands.
I
became more of an introvert, so unhappy inside that I decided suicide
was the only way out. But I was to chicken to carry it through. I could
not take the pills and end it all. I was sure that if I did I would end
up in hell. Wasn’t suicide a mortal sin? It could not be forgiven. So I
gave up that idea too.
As
a teenager I was searching for something that was lacking in my
life. In order to fit in (to be accepted) I turned to alcohol.
Everything was a reason to party (i.e. it was Friday; the team won/lost
the game).
After
high school I was tired of the stress of our ever fighting and arguing
home life, so I decide to get out on my own. My attitude was, “Watch out
world, here I come!” Seeking for some kind of love I became rebellious.
I was not scum after all. I could prove it. Alcohol enabled me to
give up my inhibitions. The bars were right across the street and I was a
frequent visitor to them. The people there always greeted me and
accepted me as one of their own. But still I felt lost. Lost from what, I
knew not.
One
day, because I was to hung-over to work, I was watching a television
evangelist and he said, “God cares for you. He’ll love you no matter
what you’ve done. Just pray the prayer of faith and become one of his
own.” I figured that that was all right for him but I was too far gone
for religion. After all, I tried being faithful to a church, and when
temptation came my way it all went down the tubes. There’s no hope.
My
job as a cook at the local rehabilitation home led me to my
(soon-to-be) husband’s grandfather. Carl was a very friendly, caring man
compared to the rest of the residents. His sunny smile and friendly
chatter soon won my heart. He told me of the good old days and his walk
with the Lord. I wasn’t ready to take the road to the “religious life,”
and I could not let his words bother me so I turned to more alcohol.
I
was lonely. To meet guys, a friend and I went to a get-together for CB
radio users. There I met my husband-to-be, Carl’s grandson.We started
dating and went out to bars on every date. We had a hasty engagement and
were married seven months later.
I
continued working at the nursing home and Carl kept up his visits. His
words began to sink into my heart and I began to seek God more
earnestly.
A
year after we were married, we had a beautiful baby girl. I felt, “ At
last, I will have someone to love me and accept me.” But then I knew I
wanted her brought up differently from the way I was. I didn’t want any
drinking or fighting in her home. I wanted her to grow up knowing that
she was loved and wanted.
So again I turned to the TV evangelists. I wanted to be saved. I wanted to give up my sin. I was
tired of the burden I was carrying and so during one of the programs I
prayed with the evangelist's wife and gave my all to Christ.. There
would be no turning back. The love of God was what won me. I already
knew all about sin and the burden of carrying the guilt of it. I tuned
it all over to Him. A peace fell over me that I had never known or felt.
I was forgiven. I could love anybody now. I also took on the new
burden of bringing others to him. I gave up my smoking and drinking,
and would just as soon be dead than to be caught in a bar. No sir, I was
not ever going to be caught in that trap again.
My
friends noticed the change in me and thought had gone crazy. “What’s
gotten into you?” they would ask. And I would say, “ The love of God,”
and “peace that passeth all understanding.” They soon steered clear of
my “fanaticism.”
After
my salvation I started going to church with my mother-in-law. She was a
Baptist and her life seemed to be the kind I was looking for. She
gladly accepted me as a daughter-in-law and a young sister in Christ. I
went forward for an altar call and was soon surrounded by a group of
loving, caring, saints. I reveled in the love and acceptance that I had
so long been searching for.
The
pastor of the church spent many hours working with me to ground me in
my new-found convictions. I then felt (after reading that those who
believed and are baptized shall be saved) that I should be baptized, so I
followed the biblical example and was immersed. While being baptized I
felt the washing away of my sin and the renewing of my mind.
I’m
not one to do things half-heartedly and so I became a zealot for
Christ. My husband became my first would-be convert. I had given up my
alcohol for Christ’s sake and I was bound and determined that he would
too. Every bottle of booze that was in the house was lined up on the
woodpile and blasted to bits with the shotgun.. He would bring in
six-packs of beer and I would meet him at the door, and the same demise
would come upon them, He soon learned that I meant business. This “zeal
without knowledge” did not turn him to the Lord but rather pushed him
further away.
We
had two children now and I did not want my children to grow up in a
drunkard's home. So I got a job to earn enough money to support the kids
and I. I told him of my plan and he kept on drinking like a sieve. We
kept on pulling our own separate ways for six more months and then the
last straw fell. It was my birthday and he was drunk. We were
supposed to go out for dinner with his folks and he was too drunk to go.
That was it. I was leaving. But he beat me at my call. He turned to the Lord. He repented, and God ruled ourhome.
I
in no way recommend the “shotgun method.” for winning converts to
Christ. As women we are to be meek and mild. We are to win our husbands
by our conversation. We are to be submissive even though it goes against
our grain. That’s the biblical method (1 Peter 3:1-6).
Now let me explain something here about God’s acceptance of me and my acceptance of Jesus Christ as Saviour: He saved me from my sin, not despite
my sin. God does not want us to continue living in our old sinful ways.
No, He expects us to repent of our sin. He renews our minds so that we
are able to overcome our sin if we are willing (Eph. 4:22-23) to give
it up. We cannot expect God to be near us when we are far away from Him
in rebellion. He wants us to be humble before Him. He abases (Dan. 4:37)
the proud and gives grace to the humble. (James 4:6) (In
other words if you aren’t humble He has ways to humble you.) It goes
much easier in the walk of faith if I swallow my pride and tell God I’m
willing to be all and do all for Him. Not for myself or for anyone or
anything else, but for God. I’m not saying it’s easy to do. I found
pride to be one of the hardest things I had to give up. It meant being
willing to be misunderstood by the world. It meant rejection by the
world and even by those I dearly loved. But when I look upon my life as
just a vapor in comparison with the life that awaits me in heavenly
eternity, it is worth it all. Count the cost! The Christian life is not
one of ease and peace. Jesus Christ did not have the easy life. No, he
had “nowhere to lay his head.” (Matthew 8:20). He was taunted by the
Pharisees and Sadducees. Even one of his own, Judas Iscariot, rejected
Him and turned Him over to be crucified. Like Christ, we are to be
willing to deny ourselves daily and to bear the cross (Matt. 16:24), to
be persecuted (2 Timothy 3:12) like the apostles and martyrs of old.
(Hebrews11). The overcomers are the ones that will get the reward of
eternal life. (Revelation 21:7). They are the ones that stand tried
and true.
Don’t
let the idea of persecution and rejection scare you from faith in God.
God is faithful and just. He “will not suffer youto be tempted above
that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make away to escape,
that ye may be able to bear it.” (1 Corinthians 10:13) Just likethe
refiner, he sits by his gold (Malachi 3:3) and watches with a watchful
eyeand only uses enough heat to consume the dross (sin, bad habits,
pride, etc.) and to purify the gold.
Now
don’t you think for one minute that my life had been a bed of roses. If
it has, I have had my share of the pricks of thorns. God does not
promise us health, wealth, and prosperity, but he chastens those he
loves. He doesn’t do it to push us away from Him, but to draw us ever
nearer.
We
have been tried by a car accident, in which three of our children were
seriously injured; a house fire in which we were homeless in sub-zero
weather for about a month; and a skill-saw accident that
disabled my husband for four months. Most recently God has again put my
husband through a farm accident of which he almost lost his life is
still disabled. The car accident caused me to really appreciate and
love my children. When you come close to losing some it really opens
your eyes to how much you love them. It also makes you appreciate and
cherish them and to guard them with a jealous protecting love. My
unsaved sister was with us during the accident. AllI could think of
during the accident was that if she got killed she would be sent to an
eternal hell. This accident did eventually open her eyes th the
shortness of this life. And that maybe, just maybe, there was Someone
else in control. The house fire served to remind me that happiness is
not brought about by worldly material possessions, but by
living for God’s will and being content with such things as I have.
During my husbands recuperation periods God mightily used the saints of
His to show of His great love towards us. We were provided for in such a
loving manner, and we never went without food or encouragement.
Whenever finances were getting low God would send some money to meet our
need. The money always matched out needs. Words of encouragement were
used to lift our sagging spirits and to keep us pressing on. It also
taught us to be more faithful and thankful with the things God does so
graciously provide.
God
has blessed our home with ten children (including two sets of twins).
Our lives are busy and I am ever striving to raise these precious souls
to be godly men and women. I really feel this burden as I don’t want my
children to have to experience such a deep fall into sin as I had in order to find the Saviour's Iove. Oh, how I pray they would be saved before Satan
or death comes to take them to an eternal hell. I see many of my
shortcomings (both in word and deed) being reflected in my children’s
lives, yet I rely on God’s help to raise them for him. We feel it is out
duty to “train them up in the way they should go.”
In these last evil days before the Lord’s return we pray that God will find our children worthy to be called his own. That makes my job, as mom, to be always in the line of duty for Jesus Christ. my Saviour.
My prayer for you is that you will also be converted and found in the line of duty for God, and “that
he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be
strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; that Christ may
dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in
love, may be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and
length, and depth, and height, and to know the love of Christ, which
passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fullness of
God.”
“Now
unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask
or think according to the power that worketh in us, unto him be glory in
the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end.
Amen.” (Ephesians 3:16-21).
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