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On a recent flight to Nashville, my not-so-smart husband booked our seats across the aisle from each other. After we boarded the plane, I stretched my hand towards him and pouted my lip, until the stewardess bumped us with her drink cart.
Coming through!
So much for a romantic getaway without children.
Beside me sat a middle-aged woman named Kim. After talking for a few minutes, I popped in my AirPods and cranked Imagine Dragons. As I began to doze off, I glanced over to see Kim clenching the “oh crap” bar attached to the seat in front of her while performing Lamaze breathing techniques in order to remain calm.
I caught a glimpse of her stomach.
She doesn’t look pregnant.
So, I did what any good pastor would do—I pretended to be asleep—while squinting slightly in order to see her out of the corner of my eye. (Don’t judge me!)
It was one of those awkward moments where you aren’t sure if you need to give someone privacy or if you need to help them. Like when you’re in a public restroom and you hear someone struggling in the next stall. Part of you wants to make sure they are ok, and the other part of you wants to run.
Her sighs and deep breathing grew louder. Meanwhile, the plane hadn’t even left the ground yet!
“I haven’t done this in awhile. Last time I flew, I had my family for moral support. I guess you guys have to be my family today,” Kim explained.
I opened my eyes and smiled, trying not to laugh.
“Sure, Kim. I’ll be your mom.”
Then I leaned over to the stranger sitting on the other side of Kim and asked, “Is that OK with you, Pa?”
Like any good labor and delivery coach, I rubbed her back during take off and calmed her fears with my cheesy jokes. When we were finally in the air, Kim glanced over and asked, “How do you stay so calm?”
I nonchalantly replied, “He’s got me” as I pointed upward.
Kim shook her head and then spent the rest of the flight hitting on “Pa” in the next seat over.
My answer to her was elementary. Yet at the same time, it was my gut reaction and I knew it originated from deep within.
How is it that two people the same age, in the same situation, on the same plane can have two polar opposite reactions?
The simplest answer: I knew God had me and she did not.
Listen to me, no matter how crazy our world gets, remember: He’s got you
Your external circumstances don’t have to determine your internal turmoil.
And your sense of security isn’t based upon your SAFETY level but your TRUST level.
“The peace of God, which transcends all understanding will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” (Phil 4:6-7)
The word for peace in the Greek is best translated as a blissful rest, like when a baby is fast asleep in their parent’s arms without a care in the world.
As a mom of a newborn, there is an unspoken rule: Never Set a Baby Down. EVER!!!
If you do, they instantly start crying. It doesn’t matter how gently you lay them in their crib, how quietly you tiptoe to their bassinet, or how many times you sing Hush Little Baby—the instant you set a baby down THEY WILL SCREAM.
It’s maddening. (And we wonder why new moms never shower or sleep.)
Yet the second you pick the baby up, they immediately stop crying.
Why?
Because they know you got them.
And when you know God’s got you—you can sleep through a storm, you can praise God in a prison, you can rest in a lion’s den, and you can smile during a global pandemic.
Because peace is not found outside of Jesus.
Peace is a person—so, let Him hold you.