My mother’s battle with breast cancer began when I was only fifteen years old, and ended just three years later. Her loss shook the very foundation of my faith. I grew up in an environment where bold declarations of healing were the norm. In every prayer meeting, we fervently proclaimed, “You will live and not die” (John 11:25–26 NIV). We recited these words as if they were a lifeline, convinced that they meant my mother would be rescued from the clutches of disease. Without question, we made that verse say exactly what we wanted to hear — that she would be healed and spared from suffering.
Yet, as her condition worsened, a disquieting truth emerged. Despite our heartfelt prayers, one crisis followed another. Though our declarations of faith never wavered, my mother’s physical decline was undeniable. In those charged moments, I felt not conventional sorrow, but an electrifying expectation — a fierce belief that God’s power was about to burst forth. And yet, as days turned into weeks, that anticipated miracle never came.
I remember the day I left her hospital bed after yet another long vigil. I was in the shower when my phone rang; the nurse’s urgent, almost somber tone cut through the steam: “Come now, don’t drive alone, and call your closest family.” In that moment, I knew this was not a call about a testimony of healing. It was a final, inevitable goodbye.
My mother’s last breath was soft and quiet. A single in, then out — and she was gone. In her final days, she murmured to each visitor that God needed her in heaven, a message I once dismissed as the babbling of a mind fading under pain.
In the aftermath, I was haunted by questions. Did God truly hear our cries? Why didn’t our prayers yield the physical healing we so desperately longed for? These questions led me into long, honest conversations with God, as I spent countless hours in prayer and Scripture, seeking answers in the quiet. I grappled with disappointment and the painful gap between our unwavering declarations and the reality we faced.
It was during those intense moments of reflection that a transformative revelation began to emerge: God’s mission is not primarily to heal the body, but to mend the heart. The grueling journey of sickness became a setting for overdue conversations of forgiveness and reconciliation. I recall overhearing intimate exchanges at my mother’s bedside — confessions, expressions of forgiveness, attempts at mending fractured relationships. In those raw moments, I witnessed a different kind of miracle unfolding. My mother was not being restored to physical strength; her heart was being cleansed and prepared for a final, sacred transition.
The words of 2 Corinthians 4:16–18 became my lifeline: “Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” I began to understand that while our bodies are subject to decay, the inner renewal — our emotional and spiritual healing — is continuous. For us, the promise of “living and not dying” isn’t about escaping physical death; it’s a declaration of eternal hope, a hope that our deepest wounds will be transformed into a testimony of God’s enduring grace.
I invite you now to reflect on your own experiences. What promises have you held onto that didn’t turn out as expected? How do you reconcile the gap between what you believed should have happened and what actually unfolded? I share my journey not to dwell on pain, but to open the door to a deeper unboxing of unrequited faith.
My journey through grief taught me that every trial, every unanswered prayer, holds the potential for an unseen miracle. It demands that we face our disappointments, ask the hard questions, and allow God to lead us toward inner renewal. I learned that my mother’s legacy was defined not solely by the decline of her body, but by how her heart was purified through forgiveness and reconciliation. In that purification, she discovered a new kind of life—a promise that echoed into eternity.
This is not about your theology of healing. It’s about releasing the expectation that God must immediately fix every broken piece. It’s about embracing the slow, mysterious process of inner restoration. When you open your heart to honest inquiry, you may find that every trial is an invitation to experience a transformative grace to dig deep and sift through the pain.
The declaration we once recited so fervently, “You will live and not die,” was not an empty promise; it was an expression of our deepest hope — a hope that continues to renew our hearts for an eternal destiny with Christ. Perhaps that is the greatest miracle of all.
I pray you find comfort in the midst of your own trials and that your journey from grief to grace reveals the hidden blessings of embracing God’s love, even when it defies earthly expectations. Let every disappointment become a call to deeper, transformative grace. A grace that leads not to a denial of pain, but to a new understanding of what it truly means to live amid and even after pain.
Leave a Comment
What a powerful, much needed message Nicole. I thank you for sharing your journey.
What a wonderful vision of how gain and loss, together, show us just how great God’s love and mercy can be.
Thank you so much for sharing your heart with us.
This is an article I truly needed to read today. After having lost my dear Mother in 2019 at 951/2 years. Missing her is sometimes unbearable, however God’s grace has provided that needed comfort and peace. However after the recent loss of a relationship, particularly at older ages is very difficult and much of it unnecessary. You remind me that the Lord and the Holy Spirit always gives us the truth we need to keep going in the midst of the trial and that eventually it all works together for the good. Thank you Nicole.
Nicole I have any of my Family saved not even my 84 year old Dad. He knows I pray for him. But he doesn’t believe anything I say about Salvation. I want him as well as the rest of my Family saved and their Families. Why I want my Dad saved especially as he has the start of Dementia. As time getting short for my Dad on earth and his Dementia getting worse. I want nothing from him but to know he saved so when my time to leave earth and go to Glory I want to know I will see him there as well as the rest of my Family that don’t believe. My Husband is saved. Death is one thing in life we will do one day unless saved you’ll not get to Glory to be with Jesus. Sad thing is people in this world that don’t want to know Jesus now believe they will see Jesus in Glory one day that sad as they will not if not saved. I pray in faith for my Dad and my Family to come by God’s Holy Spirit to come to know Jesus as their Saviour. Death make you sad but someone ever told me this or it was God I can’t remember. This will make those that are saved and if the Family member that has died they were saved like the Family that they will see either in Glory one day with Jesus they have that to look forward too and I say Amen to that. But my Dad and my Family I will never stop praying that are not saved to come to know Jesus. No better present could they give me to know they are saved. Thank you for the excellent reading. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh N.Ireland xx