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“My grace is enough to cover and sustain you…” 2 Corinthians 12:9 The Voice
In May 2023, my friend Terri transitioned after beating back ovarian cancer for seven years. Terri and I met sixteen years ago in a divorce recovery class. At the time we were both in the early stage of the divorce process. We also had two little girls the same age. They also became fast friends. Terri was a faithful, resourceful, kind, and gentle soul who always saw the best in people and circumstances. She was slow to anger, quick to forgive, and graciously extended grace-meaning unmerited favor-to others. Because of Terri, my children and I received an outpouring of grace that still informs how I serve and respond to others. It remains one of my most profound life experiences.
Shortly after finalizing my divorce I put the only home that my children had ever known on the market. The house sold very quickly leaving me only a few days to find a suitable home for us. I decided to rent an apartment until I could regain my financial footing. Unfortunately, the apartment community that I found was anything but suitable. It was a nightmarish version of Animal House and totally inappropriate for families especially those with precocious eight year old little girls. By the end of the following school year, I knew that we had to move.
I used all of my limited resources to secure our new home and had no money left to pay movers. Without missing a beat Terri called an associate minister at her church. She asked him if he knew anyone who could help me move. Fortunately, a group of college-age young people from across the country were scheduled to complete a missions project at the church on the same weekend that I was scheduled to move. The associate minister arranged for young men from the group to spend two hours on Saturday morning moving all of our belongings. I was shocked. I was not a member of Terri’s church. In fact, I had never even visited and knew nothing about the missions group. Why would strangers help me with anything, especially the dreaded task of moving? I was very skeptical. Terri, on the other hand, confidently reassured me that the group would show up.
As promised early Saturday morning a Penske truck pulled up to the back of my apartment unit accompanied by approximately 25 young men. After brief introductions, the young men started moving stuff out of the apartment and onto the truck. They then drove the truck to our new home and unloaded it. Before leaving, the young men thanked me and my children for allowing them to serve us. Then they prayed blessings over us and our new home.
Life is hard and often unforgiving. Grace helps us navigate life’s hard places. It is the hand that helps us up when we fall. At the time, I was struggling financially and overcome with a firmly entrenched depression. I had fallen. Terri and the missions group helped me rise.
The entire experience left me wondering what would happen if we generously extended grace to each other. Would joy displace anger and hate yield to love? Could giving or benevolence supplant greed? Perhaps violence would be replaced by peace, patience, and even agape love.
In the years since then, Terri continued to shower me with grace, forgiveness, and prayer. I know that I am not alone. Over the last seven years, Terri’s gratitude and faith never faltered even in her darkest moments with ovarian cancer. Thank you Terri for giving me the gift of grace. Rest in power.
Copyright © 2023 Stephanie Hughes
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