When I was in elementary school, I remember climbing on the playground structure and falling off.
Do you remember the uneven bars “of death” that some alleged architectural genius stuck off to the side of the structure that’s purpose was a climbing entry point? Too low to the ground to hang from but too high to get onto easily without climbing. The best way to use these bars was to climb on top of them – army crawl style- or (if you were really brave) to walk on top of them praying you didn’t slip through the spaces as you walked.
I think you may have the visual picture.
I was part crawling and part walking and, shockingly, fell through the bars and banged my chest on a bar as I slipped through it to the ground. Upon hitting the ground, you guessed it, I couldn’t breathe: the wind had been knocked out of me.
I vividly remember laying on the ground desperately trying to “catch” my breath. It was, to an elementary age child, agonizing. It felt like it took forever for me to be able to breathe normally although, I am sure, it took only a matter of seconds for me to recover.
I obviously did recover from that incident, but it is interesting that that is what I am reflecting on in this current season of today approximately 40 years later.
I am learning to live with the wind knocked out of me.
Nine months ago, I became a statistic. I was (and am) suddenly one of the thousands of women diagnosed with breast cancer daily and it took the wind out of me.

I was maneuvering through the so-called playground of life and fell through the bars, crashing my chest into the bar as I went down. All I had done “wrong” was participate in this playground of life. By “playing” I was vulnerable to the impact living exposes me to.
That means, because I walk this earth as you do, things happen: both good things and bad things.
Things that can elevate you in praise, glory, and wonder. Things that can bring you to your knees as you gasp for breath and plead for meaning or mercy.
As the weight of the diagnosis settled into my bones, I clung to what I knew as truth while I searched for refuge, purpose, clarity, healing, protection, and help. What I knew about myself up to that moment was both challenged and altered.
My physical self was completely changed as part of me was removed. Some may think that is not always a bad thing, especially because reconstruction was going to be in my future. Why not have the body many people desire to obtain, after all? Why not enjoy the “perk” of cancer? Why not augment what I had been given when I was being formed in my mother’s womb?
The physical changes are mere reflections, reminders, scars of what has occurred in places people cannot see: my emotional and spiritual self.
As my body is being sculpted into wholeness by the skilled surgeons assigned to my case, my inner being is being sculpted by the Great Physician, the Potter.
Woe to him who quarrels with his Maker- a piece of broken pottery among other broken pieces! Shall the clay say to the potter, “What are you doing?” ~Isaiah 45:9
The temptation is very strong to question why, to argue that “I don’t deserve this” as if to say others do, to feel sorry for myself as if I am helpless in my situation. There have been moments when I’ve been justified in my feelings, but that doesn’t make them right.
But “woe to him who quarrels with his Maker by saying “what are You doing?“
Shall the potter be considered equal with the clay, that the thing that is made would say to its maker, “He did not make me”; Or the thing formed say to him who formed it, “He has no understanding.” ~Isaiah 29:16
I have heard many sermons regarding God as the potter, and we are the clay in His hands. The shaping, the molding, the shards of clay forcibly pressed into the mold on the wheel, other pieces aggressively torn off all sound painful. We speak of pruning in biblical allegories as well, which also sounds painful.
The picture is of God, as the gardener, who must cut or tear off what is hindering the plant from producing fruit. The visual is of God, as the potter at his wheel, with sweat pouring off his brow as he firmly molds, aggressively shapes with his hands, squeezing and pressing new clay into the wheel, crushing to form a new or improved piece of clay.
Reconstructing. Rebuilding. Reforming.
Both the gardener and the potter could be viewed as focused. Intentional. Driven to accomplish the vision with purpose. With force if necessary.
We could easily turn these allegories into explanations for transformations. Who are we to argue with the Maker? Who are we to think we can escape the hands of the potter who made us?
“O house of Israel, can I not do with you as this potter does?” says the Lord. “Look carefully, as the clay is in the potter’s hand, so are you in My hand…” ~Jeremiah 18:6
Through this season I have developed a different understanding:
Therefore the Lord waits and longs to be gracious to you, and therefore He waits on high to have compassion on you. For the Lord is a God of justice; blessed are all those who long for Him. O people in Zion, you will weep no longer. He will most certainly be gracious to you at the sound of your cry for help; when He hears it, He will answer you. Though the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the water of oppression, yet your Teacher will no longer hide Himself, but your eyes will see your Teacher. Your ears will hear a word behind you, “This is the way, walk in it,” whenever you turn to the right or left.” ~ Isaiah 30:18-21
15 years ago, I was so angry after the death of my sister-in-law. I was crushed that we never got the fairy tale ending to our story of addiction that I believed I was owed. I could not understand why, if there truly was a God, would a “good” God not intervene and stop her addiction? Why He didn’t stop ALL addictions. Why did He allow His creation to destroy itself?
Who else would succumb to the talons of addiction? Anyone it appeared.
In my anger, I decided to approach the One I was most angry with: God. So, I went to His “house”, His Church. Why not? What did I have to lose? Faith in something I didn’t like, understand, or could control?
Once there, I expected to be rejected. I expected to be exposed for the sinner that I was. I expected to be shamed for my behavior and choices. I expected to be told I was unwelcome and unwanted. Unredeemable. Unforgiven. Unloved.
I was going to the BOSS with disrespect because life was not working out the way I wanted it to. He wasn’t doing what I thought He should do even though I also was not doing what I was created to do myself. I wanted HIS blessings without having to serve Him. I demanded it, in fact.
I busted through the door into the throne room and found grace and mercy waiting for me there.
Therefore, let us (with privilege) approach the throne of grace with confidence and without fear, so that we may receive mercy (for our failures) and find (His amazing) grace to help in time of need (an appropriate blessing, coming just at the right moment) ~Hebrews 4:16
I was raised to “know better” that what I was doing. To “live better” than I was. Yet, I was met with open arms instead of hands ready to punish. Instead, His hands were ready to start the reshaping of me tenderly.
Reconstructing. Rebuilding.
Yes, I am the clay and He is the Potter. He sits at the wheel with focus and intentionality but also with LOVE as I, as the clay, am held in His nail-pierced hands. Every ounce of me that is being shaped, molded, and formed is being done so I am transformed more into His image. The spotless lamb. The suffering servant. The humble Messiah.
He has no stately form of majestic splendor that we would look at Him. Nor (handsome) appearance that we would be attracted to Him. He was despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows and pain and acquainted with grief; and like One from whom men hide their faces He was despised and we did not appreciate His worth or esteem. ~Isaiah 53:2-3
But, in fact, He has borne our griefs, and He has carried our sorrows and pains; yet we ignorantly assumed that He was stricken, struck down by God and degraded and humiliated by Him. But He was wounded for our transgressions, He was crushed for our wickedness; the punishment for our well-being fell on Him, and by His stripes (wounds) we are healed. ~Isaiah 53:4-5
Those are the hands of the Potter that I rest in. That is His character… not to harm me or hurt me as He molds me, but to lovingly and with grace shape me into who He created me to be.
Can you see the vision now?
Picture the Potter…not overly handsome or visibly strong in stature. His face is focused on what is in His hands, His eyes filled with grief over what I am bearing. His flogged-scarred body rocks gently as His foot pushes on the peddle to move the wheel while never losing sight of me, the clay.
I am being nourished with living water as new clay is brought to the wheel and as old clay falls off. The whole time I am nestled in the palm of His hands that willingly took the nails that held Him to the cross.
Can you see the beauty in it?
The tenderness?
The grace?
I have had cancer. I had my reconstruction surgery and have now been rebuilt externally…The Potter is still rebuilding the inside of me.
Shaping me.
Forming me.
Making me whole.
Giving me my breath back after having the wind knocked out of me.
Rebuilding me.
This is the Savior that I serve.
For God so loved the world He sent His only Son so that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send His Son into the world to judge and condemn the world, but that the world would be saved through Him. ~John 3:16-17
















































