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Home > 2008 > JulyChristianity Today, July, 2008  |   |  
WRESTLING WITH ANGELS
Here's to All the Losers
Why defeat at the hands of God is magnificent.



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If you like action-adventure, check out the Genesis 32 account of Jacob's Jabbok River wrestling match. Jacob is camped out and stressed out, awaiting a potentially dangerous confrontation with his estranged brother. His worries are interrupted when a stranger jumps him in the darkness. By morning, Jacob realizes he's spent the night wrestling God; somehow he manages to limp away blessed. In the process, he learns that God is more than willing to be grappled with, and that holding on for dear life is the way to go.

It's amazing—and sobering—to realize that Jacob has the strength to resist God. It isn't until the angel of the Lord dislocates Jacob's hip that Jacob surrenders and requests what he's really been fighting for—a blessing. My husband, a wrestling coach, tells me the hip is the wrestler's pivot point, the core of his strength. God can't give Jacob the blessing he desperately needs until he incapacitates him at the center of his human power. Frederick Buechner calls Jacob's resounding loss The Magnificent Defeat.

There's something familiar about Jacob's story.

I'm a singer and songwriter. I recognize that such a vocation is more fun and fulfilling than anyone deserves, and I've spent most of my professional life grinning at my good fortune. But last year, I found myself in the midst of a tour feeling miserable. My own company was handling many of the details, and every night I took the stage consumed with logistics. I've always loved the fact that performing forces me to be in the moment, but this tour I was definitely somewhere else. I'd find myself disoriented in the middle of a song, unsure whether I'd already sung the second verse. Something was wrong.

I prayed. I asked God to restore to me the joy of singing about my salvation. I begged for the ability to be focused and present. And I worried. I suspected that the blessing of my vocation had run its course, and that it was time for me to investigate Tupperware sales.

Three weeks into the tour, I lost my voice. As you might imagine, a singer's voice is an obvious and vulnerable pivot point of strength. I reminded God that it would be helpful to my singing ministry if I could sing. But my voice did not return.

I called a vocal coach and got instructions. "Hourly, sit at a kettle and breathe in the steam. Then add salt to the water and snort it. Put drops of oil of oregano on your tongue. Apply peppermint oil to your upper lip." (Caution: Over-application of peppermint oil leads to a condition I remember now as the moustache of fire.)

I spent 24 hours sequestered in my hotel room in an involuntary silent retreat. No interviews, no fretful logistical phone meetings. I steamed without end. By concert time, my skin had never been smoother or softer. But I still had no voice.

A funny thing happened when I took the stage. I felt calm, and present. The whole quiet day I'd had nothing to do but steam, read, and pray. A paraphrase of Psalm 23 ran through my head: You make me lie down by still waters—or steamy, salty ones. I walked up to the microphone and had a sudden conviction that my voice would be not only restored, but also brilliantly transformed.

It wasn't. I still couldn't sing. Not a bit. I croaked, I cracked, I sort of whisper-rapped. It was awful. But the audience leaned in. They smiled. They prayed for me and breathed with me. Never certain what my swollen vocal cords would do next, I was in the moment, adapting, adjusting, and—eventually—enjoying a new and improbably wonderful way of doing ministry. It was, to both my chagrin and my delight, one of my best concerts ever.





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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 12 comments.See all comments
Pr. Borch, LtCol. USAR   Posted: July 16, 2008 7:19 PM
I feel that John, Amy and Lewis are closer to reality. Life is not prone to "devotional" quick fixes.

TIMOTHY   Posted: July 17, 2008 2:26 PM
Stuff happens in life and it may not be your fault and it certainly might not be God's design. I contracted Meningitis ten years ago and I fortunately lived to tell about it however the Doctor's still have no idea how a person contracts that illness. I already had a healthy reverence for God and I already knew that my friends and family loved me so I really took very little from the experience at all. However I had a much smaller experience where I cut my foot with a weed trimmer and it got infected, I learned to wear my tennis shoes instead of my sandals after reading the safety warning on the box. Not every bad thing that happens to us in life is a revelation from God, not every bad thing in our life has purpose, and not every bad thing can be avoided by reading the instructions on the box first. Sometimes bad stuff happens without meaning, purpose, fault or design. However God can use everything to His Glory if it is in his will.

Amy T   Posted: July 16, 2008 12:13 PM
Boy, with a title such as “Here’s to All the Losers: Why Defeat at the Hands of God is Magnificent” you could powerfully minister to a lot of Christians. Unfortunately, Ms. Arends testimony seemed lightweight, sweet, and blessed with a happy ending. A perfect article for Guideposts! Let's talk about real losers in the eyes of our culture, real crushing defeat, and real calling stripped away. And maybe in this piece, there’s no neat ending … just the presence of God and lessons learned out of desperation. Then, I think, the title would fit the article.

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