
Yesterday the Lord put a new song in my heart. It came in the most unexpected and unplanned way. I've found that's often the way He works. While waiting to come home from a business trip to North Carolina, I stood in an airport bookstore browsing through some reading material. I had over a five hour flight ahead of me. Just as I was about to run out of time, I happened upon a book entitled "Choosing to SEE" by Mary Beth Chapman. I had heard of it from a review in World Magazine and it sort of caught my eye back then. The longer I stood there, the harder I felt the tug to buy it, on impulse. It's very unlike me pay full price for something I know I could get for half the cost, and also not do a lot more research on it before purchasing. Sounds pretty calculating for such a tiny thing, and that's the way I am (drives Victoria crazy). I also wasn't sure I wanted to go there, where the Chapman's have been, so up close and personal. I knew part of the story, and also knew that it was a heartbreak. So, after standing there for five full minutes contemplating my small purchase, I felt a still, small voice inside of me saying "Just buy it! What could you lose?" I was convinced that pull was from the Spirit, so after laying down $20+ dollars I left and walked to the gate with new book in tow.
After finding my seat on the airplane, I got settled and immediately opened it to begin reading. My heart was pounding because I knew I was about to be profoundly moved by this family that the Lord directly used to bring Victoria and me to a place where we would be changed forever by adoption. If you don't know their story, I won't tell you now... you'll have to read the book for yourself. I barely got through the first small chapter and I couldn't hold back the tears from dropping onto my cheeks. I stayed glued to it the entire flight. At moments I laughed, but most of the time I wept in my heart, with occasional precipitation falling from the visual orifices on my face. The brutal honesty of pain and suffering, sin and failure, guilt and its eroding power was strangely refreshing to read and sorrowfully difficult to swallow. Yet at the same time the stripping away of everything, to the point where all you have to hold on to is Jesus, showed the power of His love to overcome anything, even death itself. I'm still in recovery mode as I reel from this story and play it over and over and over again in my mind. But I'm recovering not from the effects of the book, but from the passivity of my faith in the shallowest depths of despair by way of comparison. And that's why I have a new song in my heart, because I see more clearly that the simplicity of allowing Jesus to be my all in all within all is the joy He promised and freely offers. I know that may sound like a bunch of Christian-ese, and I'm sorry if my words cannot fully convey the depth of what Jesus has to offer, but that's always been a notable difference between us - God is God and I am not.

Today I looked at my family through a different lens. I've worn those lenses before, but my vision's been impaired with age. It's really not that much different than growing old in my physical body (I need to get my glasses prescription renewed again). But that's not the way God wants His children, regardless of their chronological age, to spiritually age. I've allowed the enemy to defeat me in so many ways. I've given him a foothold, so to speak. But not today. Today, in Jesus, I held my children differently. I thought of them differently. I disciplined them differently. I prayed for them differently. I played with them differently. I thought of them differently. I talked to them differently. I lived differently, choosing to see Jesus in every moment, and not waiting to see Him in the special moments. And you know what? He showed up. I saw Him in the smiles of my kids, the voice of my wife, the tears of the little girls after discipline, the busyness of life in my Annie-girl, the physical pain of my son Austin, and the needs of Barret.
The Chapman's may never know, until we hug in heaven, what the Lord's done in the lives of us Kruggel's through their faithfulness. Their faith has become our joy, and their suffering has become our blessing. Odd how God works. I would have never orchestrated it this way, but then it would have never turned out that way.
He put a new song in my mouth,
a song of praise to our God;
Many will see and fear
And will trust in the Lord.
(Psalm 40:3)
Choosing to SEE,