Making the Most of Our Lives

Making the Most of Our Lives

July 20, 2019 Off By Donna Wuerch

Over the 19 years since the diagnosis of osteoarthritis in my fingers, some deformity occurred. Initially, the pain was so severe that I needed help to do the simplest things like buttoning a blouse or zipping up slacks. The worst part was being unable to pick up my grand-babies. Through prayer and wise nutrition counsel, I have had no pain or only minuscule pain if I overuse them. I continue to stand in faith for total healing. But, what a small price to pay for years of the gift of using these hands to type, write and accomplish so many things in so many ways. Such a gift to be able to hold someone’s hand and lay these hands on those in need or prayer. I’ll continue to use them despite looking a little gnarly. I am not complaining.

I can’t complain at all, especially when I see others with even worse physical issues. I was touched by Shane Claiborne’s book, “The Irresistible Revolution”, subtitled “Living as an Ordinary Radical”, that describes what a truly Christian lifestyle should be like based on his personal experience with Mother Teresa in Calcutta, India. He wrote: “People often ask me what she was like. Sometimes it’s like they wonder if she glowed in the dark or had a halo. She was short, wrinkled, and precious, maybe a little ornery, like a beautiful, wise, old granny. But there is one thing I will never forget — her feet. Her feet were deformed. I would stare at them. A Sister explained: “Her feet are deformed because we get just enough donated shoes for everyone, and Mother does not want anyone to get stuck with the worst pair, so she digs through and finds them. And years of doing that have deformed her feet.”

Years of loving her neighbor as herself deformed her feet. When people are asked about the person whose life they most admire, so often the answer is “Mother Teresa”. She made the most of her life which sounds strange when we consider her life was a life of self-denial, taking up her cross, following Jesus.

Life is an extraordinary and a wonderful gift. God’s Word constantly urges us not to waste this gift but to make the most of our lives. “Making the most of our lives”, to some, varies from seeing the seven wonders of the world, being sure to visit every state in the union, climbing the tallest mountain, running a marathon each year OR, in the case of exhausting this body that was given us to make a difference in our world or at least to make a difference in those who God places in our lives. My bucket-list has become a shorter list these days — because now I’m seeing clearer what “making the most of my life is really all about”. Lord, make me an instrument of your peace, your love and your joy — just maybe — I can make the most of my life today by surrendering my will to yours.