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The True Journey

The True Journey: what does it truly mean to walk with Jesus, all the way, with no compromise?

Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it. Matthew 7:13-14

"Do you continue to go with Jesus? The way lies through Gethsemane, through the city gate, outside the camp; the way lies alone, and the way lies until there is no trace of a footstep, only the voice, "Follow Me". ~ Oswald Chambers


My name is Melissa Morris, and my prayer is that through these writings, you will learn about Jesus. And follow Him on the True Journey.


Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Well, Hey Clyde!


The last posting left us at the hospital with me heading back to my room. I have to admit, once I woke up, I don't remember a whole lot else about that day or night. I have been told that I said some pretty funny things, though.

One thing that I do remember is that as they were rolling me back into my room, I looked up and saw my associate pastor, Clyde, standing there. My mom told me that I waved at him and said, "Well, hey Clyde!" and Clyde said, "Well, she knows who I am, so she's okay".

It's amazing to me that I don't remember a lot of things about the hospital after surgery. Maybe it was the meds they had me on...maybe it was just so much going on that I couldn't process it all...but maybe it was God's amazing grace that allowed me to rest not only my body but my mind those few days.

It makes me think about my past and my sin, and how Jesus sees those things. I heard a story once about a nun who told a priest that Jesus spoke to her, audibly, as if in a conversation. Of course, the priest did not believe her and told her that the next time Jesus spoke to her, to ask Him one question. The priest said to her, "Ask Jesus what sins I confessed in my last confession". She told the priest that she would.

The next day, she came back to the priest and told him that she had spoken with Jesus again. The priest, still doubting, said to her,"Did you ask Jesus was sins I confessed?" She said, "Yes, I did". The priest said, "And what did He say?" The nun looked at the priest warmly, smiled, and said, "He said 'I can't remember'."

Sweet forgiveness...Jesus doesn't remember our sins once we are forgiven. He doesn't remember our past before we came to Him.

But we're not that way with each other, are we? Just like my mom and my friends had to remind me of the things I said and did in the hospital, we can take this to a different level in our Christian lives. We want to measure our sin against other people's sin...we want to remind each other how bad we are...we want to hold people in the past...

The things that Jesus doesn't remember, we don't want to let people forget. Why? To make us feel better about ourselves. I am struggling right now with someone who insists on reminding me of everything that I have ever done wrong. And every time I think we are okay and we've settled things between us, he shows up and dredges it all up again. Every time I think I can trust him again, he shows up and proves that I can't. I personally don't have time for that kind of drama in my life - it reminds me of the Pharisees.

I choose to live in the mercy and grace of Jesus, whose death on the cross covered all my sins. If mercy and grace don't exist, then neither does Jesus. The Gospel is the mercy and grace of a loving God who sacrificed His only Son for a world that didn't deserve it. Not letting each other out of our past and our sin just cheapens that grace.

It's just what's on my mind today.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Where Do I Start?


This picture was taken by a friend of mine at probably my favorite place on Earth, Camp Little Crossroads (aka Crossroads Camp and Conference Center; I prefer to remain old school LOL). One thing that always calms me is water - whether it's at Crossroads, or sitting by the Rockfish River, or being overwhelmed by the vastness of the ocean and it's waves. No matter where I am watching the water, one thing is for sure. Each wave brings something new.


My life this year has been like the waves in the water - each moment is bringing something new, something uncertain. As I mentioned in my last post, we have dealt with many deaths in my family this year, which brings about a special kind of grief - the loss of someone we love. Death also brings about changes - our loved ones being gone change things, like where we might live, where we celebrate holidays, who we go to when we hurt...we also face our own mortality when the family seems to be getting smaller and smaller.


Before August 7, 2012, I had never faced a personal health crisis. But on that day, I took my first ride in an ambulance to the ER at Martha Jefferson Hospital. I was diagnosed with diverticulitis that had abscessed. God sent me the best surgeon ever, Dr. Andrew Bailey, and he explained the treatment options, with worse case scenario being major surgery and a colostomy. I was admitted to MJH and started on antibiotics. Two days later, after some different kind of pain, it was discovered that my bowel had perforated. I was rushed into the worst case scenario - major surgery and a colostomy.

There were so many God moments during the hospitalization, and over the next postings, I want to share with you how God showed up and showed off; today, I want to share my OR experience.

Everything happened so fast, but when I went into the operating room, I was completely calm, completely at peace. See, people were praying for me and with me. Prior to surgery, I had a phone call from my friend, Laverne, who prayed with me, a visit from my friend, Billie, who prayed with me, and my friend and colleague, Ruby, who not only prayed, but helped them roll me to the OR.

People were rushing around me, and I remember saying to God, "If I wake up in Heaven with You, that's ok. If I wake up upstairs with my family and friends, that's ok, too. I'm good either way". Complete peace. Then, in the midst of this chaos going on around me, someone walked over to me and took my hand. I didn't know if she was an angel, a nurse, a doctor or what. She had the kindest eyes, and even though she had on a surgical mask, I could see her smile. She said, "I'm here, and I'm going to be here with you through this." Again, complete peace. I remember looking up at a man standing next to me, then sleep.

It seemed almost immediately (although it was a few hours later) that I opened my eyes, and I saw a three headed woman standing over me. I joked and told my pastor that I had read in the Bible that some of the cheribim and seraphim have multiple faces, so I didn't know immediately if I was in Heaven or still at the hospital. But I blinked a few times, and she had one face, and she checked me and then sent me back to my room where my family and friends were waiting for me.

You know the cool thing? If I was in Heaven when I woke up, I still would have had a group of family and friends waiting for me...grandparents, Dad, and those who had recently gone on ahead of me.

The doctor in the ER told me that he couldn't believe that I was smiling and laughing as sick as I was. The 10 days in the hospital, people said, "You seem so happy...how can you be that happy being this sick?" One of my friends who was there when they took me to surgery said, "You just walked over to that gurney and got on, like a brave soldier."

I have one answer for that, friends...it's called Jesus Christ.

I can't say I wasn't scared. I feared many things that I might have had to endure and may still have to endure as I face more surgery. But I know that God is with me, and that either way, I'm going to be okay. My faith in Jesus will allow me to endure what I have to endure while here on this Earth, and my faith in Jesus will allow me to live for eternity with Him when I leave this Earth.

God gave me this verse during my recovery:

2 Corinthians 4: 16-18: Therefore we do not lose heart. Even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward [man] is being renewed day by day. For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more exceeding [and] eternal weight of glory, while we do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen. For the things which are seen [are] temporary, but the things which are not seen [are] eternal.


So as the waves come, and I experience my "light afflictions", I will praise Him through it all.

God's got this. God's got me. And He's not gonna let me go.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

What happened?

Well, I guess you guys wonder where I have been since June and my last post. Sometimes I have to stop and think about where I have been since my last post in June. 2012 has been a crazy year for my family. It started in March and it continues, and will continue into next year. In March, my aunt died. The night she died, Steven followed me in the kitchen as I talked with the Hospice nurse on the phone, and when I hung up, he looked up at me with his hands out like a little Italian man, and said, "Wissa, what happened?" I find myself looking up at God in a fog, not asking why, but "What happened"?

It's been non-stop since then. My aunt died on March 5, her daughter in law committed suicide on March 28, and my uncle died on July 24. One family. My aunt and uncle dying caused my cousins to have to find a new place to live after being raised in that house since 1993. At my uncle's graveside service on July 31, I looked at everyone remaining in my family and said, "No one else is allowed to get sick or die in this family for the rest of this year".

Two weeks to the day, I was in the emergency room with diverticulitis that had abscessed. Two days later, I was rushed to surgery with a perforated bowel. 10 days in the hospital. Another week of IV antibiotics when I got home. 9 weeks out of work. Colostomy.

All this time, my mom was struggling with an issue that we came to find out was misdiagnosed by her doctor (PS - don't let your doctor or nurse tell you they don't have time. You know your body. Make them listen. If they don't, find a new doctor.), and we learned last week that she has cancer. It is a rare form but completely treatable with 6 weeks of radiation every day of the week, and chemo in addition to the radiation.

So, where am I in all of this? Trusting God even more than I did before, and loving Him even more than I did before. Even though I said I was starting to feel like Job, I know my God is faithful, I know He is still on His throne, and I know He is in complete control.

My friend Lori posted this to my Facebook wall on Sunday: This was from our scripture reading this morning and I thought about you... Job 23:10: "But he knows the way that I take; when he has tested me, I will come forth as gold." Tell Patty Cakes that you two are gonna be the Golden Girls! ♥ you both!

There will be many stories to come about my hospitalization and recovery, and how God has been in every step...so I'm changing my focus right now to giving God the glory in all that is happening...stay tuned for more...