And you are Significant...

By Joni Eareckson Tada, (forwarded by Ms. Isaj Quesea)
Excerpts from "Glorious Intruder"


Every morning Connie opens Diane's door to begin the long routine of exercising and bathing her severely paralyzed friend. The sun's rays slant through the blinds, washing the room in a soft, golden glow. The folds of the covers haven't moved since Connie pulled them up around Diane the night before. Yet she can tell her friend has been awake for awhile.
       "Are you ready to get up yet?"
       "No...not yet," comes the weak reply from under the covers.
Connie sighs, smiles and clicks shut the door. The story is the same each dawn of every new day at Connie and Diane's apartment. The routine rarely changes. Sunrise stretches into mid-morning by the time Diane is ready to sit up in her wheel chair. But those long hours in bed are significant.

In her quiet sanctuary, Diane turns her head slightly on the pillow toward the corkboard on the wall. Her eyes scan each thumb-tacked card and list. Each photo. Every torn piece of paper
carefully pinned in a row. The stillness is broken as Diane begins to murmur. She is praying. Some would look at Diane---stiff and motionless---and shake their heads. She has to be fed everything, pushed everywhere. The creeping limitations of multiple sclerosis encroach further each year, her fingers are curled and rigid. Her voice is barely a whisper.

People might look at her and say, "What a shame. Her life has no meaning. She can't really do
Anything." But Diane is confident, convinced her life is significant. Her labor of prayer counts.
She moves mountains that block the paths of missionaries. She helps open the eyes of the spiritually blind in southeast Asia. She pushes back the kingdom of darkness that blackens the
alleys and streets of gangs in east LA. She aids the homeless mothers...single parents...abused
children...despondent teenagers...handicapped boys...and dying and forgotten old people in the nursing home down the street where she lives. Diane is on the front lines, advancing the gospel of Christ, holding up weak saints, inspiring doubting believers, energizing other prayer warriors, and delighting her Lord and Savior.

This meek and quiet woman sees her place in the world; it doesn't matter that others may not recognize her significance in the grand scheme of things... In the mind of God...that's about as significant as you can get, whether you sit at a typewriter, behind the wheel of a bus, at the desk in a classroom, in a chair by your kitchen table, or lay in bed and pray. Your life is hidden with Christ. You enrich His inheritance. You are His ambassador. In Him your life has depth and meaning and purpose, no matter what you do.

Someone has said, " The point of this life...is to become the person God can love perfectly, to satisfy His thirst to love. Being counts more than doing, the singer more than the song. We had better stop looking for escape hatches, for this is our hatchery."

It's my prayer that you will discover the significance that has been yours all along as a child of the King. You may not be able to know the full meaning of every event, but you can know that every event is meaningful.

And you are significant!

THE WHOLE POINT OF LIFE IS TO KNOW GOD...
AND TO ENJOY HIM!

By: Joni Eareckson Tada
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