“Consider it all joy my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.” (James 1:2-4)
This is one of those verses, you know them…the ones that are true, even when you don’t want them to be, the ones that hit you where it hurts. Who wants trials? Trials are not fun; they are painful. I can’t think of anyone who would ask for one, but ask or not, they come. We can all tell some stories of pain, suffering, waiting or some other kind of challenge we have faced. What must we admit once we are on the other side of the trial? It has usually resulted in growth. We become stronger, more sensitive, and closer to God.
I love the visual the authors use to explain the process we are going through as a lady in waiting. A pearl. For many of us, it isn’t the first time we have heard how pearls are formed. What I loved were the parallels they used. How many of us have felt like the ugly oyster shell just sitting on the beach being passed over, watching all the prettier seashells get picked up and taken home? I know I have. And I think as more time goes on, and I see more seashells go home, it starts to feel hopeless. But God does not want us in that place!
He is doing a beautiful work in us! There is our hope. The grain of sand, whether it is divorce, loneliness, abuse or any number of other trials we face are not meant to be irritating and painful forever. God takes that pain and turns it into something beautiful. This is not an instant process though. The reworking takes time. What is most amazing to me is the greater the irritation, the more valuable the pearl! Think about how beautiful our final products will be.
It is through these works, these trials that God puts us through, and how we come out the other side, that we will become the women that God wants us to be. This is the woman who will be ready for the man who God has for us. There will be someone who wants to know what is inside that oyster shell, and see our true beauty. This is not to say that we are unattractive, that men can only be drawn to our inner beauty despite our outer beauty. But what it does say is that true love comes from true beauty. If someone is only attracted to the outside shell and puts little worth on what is on the inside, the relationship is doomed before it begins.
Beauty fades, character doesn’t. What attracted Boaz to Ruth? It wasn’t her outer beauty. In fact, she looked very different from the other women in the area, beautiful or not. When Ruth asks Boaz why she should receive his favor Boaz replies, “All that you have done for your mother-in-law after the death of your husband has been reported to me, and how you left your father and mother and the land of your birth, and you came to a people who you did not previously know”. It wasn’t what Ruth looked like that caused Boaz to fall in love with her, it was the woman of virtue that she was.
So ladies, let God work in you. Take those sands of pain and turn it into a beautiful string of pearls that all ladies of virtue deserve to wear proudly. The Lord wants you to be a lady of virtue – a costly, beautiful pearl for all to admire.
God bless,
Michelle
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