It happened more than twenty years ago, but I remember it like it was yesterday.
The ring of our dorm phone jolted me from a deep sleep. My roommate reached over and picked up the beige receiver. “Hello?” Sarah said in a froggy voice. I rolled over on my top bunk in annoyance — my one morning without an early class!
After a brief minute, Sarah hung up the phone and said, “That was my mom. There’s been a terrorist attack.”
The words hadn’t even registered when Sarah turned on our tiny box TV. We watched as a second airplane crashed into the Twin Towers on the live broadcast. My mouth fell open but no words came out. I couldn’t comprehend what I was witnessing.
As the news slowly spread throughout the dorms (this was long before the days of smartphones and social media), so did a sense of panic. RAs came knocking on doors announcing that classes were canceled and the entire campus was shutting down out of an abundance of caution. We were on the opposite coast, but could another attack be coming? Would Los Angeles also be targeted?
The phone lines were jammed, so I pulled on a T-shirt and a crumpled pair of jeans and walked to the building next door to see my boyfriend. We congregated in the dim hallway with a couple of other friends from our college ministry group. After sharing our shock and fear, someone finally said, “We should pray.” So there on the dingy carpet, with fellow students coming and going, we sat and prayed. For those trapped in the burning skyscrapers. For the first responders and everyone who inhaled the ominous gray plume of ash and debris that swept through Manhattan’s streets. We asked the Spirit to groan for that which our group of nineteen- and twenty-year-olds had no words.
Eventually, our small gathering dispersed, leaving just me and my boyfriend. His eyes revealed a troubled soul. “Do you want to come back to my room so we can watch the news with Sarah and see what’s going on?” I asked.
“No, but I would like to go somewhere… just us. To talk.”
He grabbed my hand and we hiked up the long, paved hill toward the upper campus. The image of that plane piercing the building kept playing in my mind. I couldn’t swallow the lump in my throat.
At least we’re together, I thought, squeezing my guy’s hand. No matter what happens, we can face it side by side.
We finally stopped on the grassy knoll near the north traffic circle. A weeping willow bowed its branches away from a brick office, offering us a crescent cocoon of shade. He put his arm around me, and I leaned my head on his shoulder. We sat in comfortable silence, best friends not needing to fill the undeniable void of pain and confusion of this historic day.
Finally, my boyfriend shifted his body to turn toward me and inhaled a deep breath. I was eager to hear his sensitive and insightful thoughts on the attack. But instead, he told me we needed to break up.
Breath left my lungs like I’d been punched in the gut. Again, I felt disoriented, unable to grasp what was happening. He was the one. The one who stole my heart with his dimples and curly hair. The one who earned my trust with his unfailing honesty and integrity. We shared the same major and served together on our ministry leadership team. Every picture of the future I envisioned had a ring on my finger and his arm around my waist. I loved him. How could this be happening?
We talked and cried until there was nothing left to say. I couldn’t change his mind. I couldn’t fix it or turn back time. We walked slowly back to the dorms and said goodbye.
I spent the rest of that day and night in bed. My eyes ached from crying, and I felt a physical pain in my heart. All sense of safety and security had vanished. My future was a shattered mess of broken dreams. It felt like a brick pressed on my chest. It was hard to breathe.
One morning a few weeks later, I opened my Bible after another sleepless night. I didn’t even know what to read, so I opened to John because it was familiar. I skimmed a few passages, and then a word jumped out from the page like a 3D special effect. PEACE.
“Peace I leave with you. My peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Don’t let your heart be troubled or fearful.”
John 14:27 CSB
In the aftermath of 9/11 and in the wake of that devastating breakup, God was inviting me to change the way I defined peace, and change where I looked for it. Living in a prosperous first-world country is no guarantee of peace. Peace doesn’t come from titles like boyfriend and girlfriend. That heartbreaking September showed me that the peace the world gives is temporary, circumstantial, fallible.
But God offers a different kind of peace. Lasting. Unshakable. Perfect. When the whole world fractures or my own life shatters, the peace of Jesus is still available because the person of Jesus never changes.
Whether we’re in a time of crisis or just trudging through the struggles of ordinary life, we can entrust our troubled, fearful hearts to the one who is worthy of our trust.
Dear Jesus, thank You for offering a peace so different from what the world gives. Without You, my heart would be perpetually troubled. Fear would be a constant companion. I acknowledge that I can’t control my circumstances or strive for peace. I surrender my life and heart to You. Create in me a heart of peace. Amen.
This story by Becky Keife is an excerpt from the Create in Me a Heart of Peace Bible Study.
On this 23rd anniversary of the September 11th attacks, we’re reminded of how desperately we need the peace of Jesus and how faithful He is to provide it. We’d love to hold space for your memories and reflections. Comment below, and let’s pray for God’s peace to permeate our hearts, homes, and nation.
Lisa Wilt says
Becky,
Another heartfelt devotion! You bless others with your words! As always I shared it!
Sending you fall Joy,
Lisa Wilt
Becky Keife says
Thank you, Lisa. You’re such an encourager!
Betsy Basile says
Dear Becky……This story hit me like a brick. It is my story except a little backward for me. Back in 1967 at college, I met the love of my life and everything seemed fine and we both professed our love to each other, but apparently I was wrong. As we prepared to go back to our third year, I was so excited about being able to see him again whenever I wanted. NO, when I got back and kept seeing if he was there, I ran into his roommate and asked if Jim was back. He gave me an odd look and started to cry. He said, Betsy, are you telling me that he did not tell you he wasn’t coming back here? I said, ” What? ” and collapsed on the steps in a ball of hysteria. He had transferred to another college. Of course there is so much more to the story, but all I will say is that I had a nervous breakdown and couldn’t even go to classes. Just laid in my bed just crying with a terrible pain in my heart. I couldn’t tell my parents and my friends did not know what to do to help me. It was never solved and some years later I read that he was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon ( no details though ). Maybe God was helping me by this happening as He knows everything and He did not not want me to go through that. Fast forward to 9/11. I was considerably much older then and was working at a place I loved as a manager. I also will never forget one detail of that horrible day as you did to, Becky. I was at my desk and another manager in my same area came running down the aisle and grabbed my hand and said we have to go in the lunch room where there is a TV. Why? I said. There has been a terrorist attack in New York. We were in PA. As news drifted around the office more and more people came running where we were. You could hear a pin drop in that large lunch room. Nobody knew what to say and many of us prayed through tears for all the people that were trapped or dead. An hour later our upper management told all of the employees there and there were 100’s to go home to our families and then we heard about the brave people on that plane in PA that were heroes. They knew they they were going to die, but they made sure that their plane was not going to attack another place in our country. Of course, we all watched TV when we got home. As things started to sink into our minds, I know I thought of Peace to and I decided to pray again but in a different way. Your devotional today Becky was so perfect, as I read it I cried again, but I stopped then and went back to praying for Peace from the Lord. It really helped me. It didn’t erase what happened that day, but I was able to handle the struggle in my mind a different way. Boy, I certainly would have loved to have the (in) book on 100 Days of Strength in any Struggle as I do now plus all the other books I have gotten from your marvelous community of women. Today I will pray again for all those people that we lost and the First Responders who bravely went in there not knowing what they were going to see. Our world was upside down for months. Thank you Becky for your devotion today. I wish everyone could read it and remember what it was like then, if they are old enough. I am sorry about you and your boyfriend too, especially on that particular day. I also thank you for the scriptures and prayer. I send my love and respect to you as we all have to remember God will give us Peace if we just pray and ask Him for it. Take care today and if you can, please include me in your prayers for the terrible situation I am still going through after 17 months……………………….Betsy Basile
Becky Keife says
Betsy, your story is so tender. Surely God catches every tear and walks with us through every season. Thank you for sharing these pieces of your heart and memories. I’m praying for you now.
Elaine Pool says
Peace. I need peace. Thank you, Becky.
Becky Keife says
Elaine, God sees you. He is right there with you. The Prince of Peace is opening his hand and heart to you. You are his. Praying he gives you new eyes to recognize him today. You are so loved.
Claudia Batke says
Thank you Becky. This is so encouraging! I love that verse in John. Would you please pray for an extended family member who is dying from ovarian cancer. Joanie is not a believer and is not open to the gospel. I have been praying for months. She doesn’t have much more time here.
Thanks for your words of encouragement.
Becky L says
Claudia, I’ll be praying for Joanie who has cancer ♋️ and that she will believe in Jesus and be with Him in heaven when she dies. Hopefully she’ll recover from cancer as my daughter had same one as well and still alive and almost out of pain.
Becky Keife says
Claudia, I am praying now for Joanie. God wants nothing more than to welcome her into his kingdom. Praying her heart will soften as he faithfully pursues her. May she respond to the hope that is available in Jesus!
Becky L says
Remembering 9/11 still breaks my heart due to people who died and those who helped other people that day in NY. Just listening to the radio after I woke up in another bedroom in our house got me to get up and turn on the tv. I saw the second twin tower get hit. I cried and started praying when I first heard about it. I had my son get up from bed and he saw it too. He thought it was a movie that we had seen on tv. Our daughter was at a college in WA. She called me later that day. She was 40 minutes away from Seattle so there may have been a threat to the Space Needle in Seattle. I was in another bedroom due to not
wanting to sleep with my husband as I was upset with him for awhile. But we did get things figured out, and we are still together. Next month is our 47th anniversary. I’m glad to.get support from Jesus in my life or it would be different. He’s with our son with what he’s going through right now. Becky, I liked what you wrote and the scripture verse is a good one. God bless you , Becky
Courtney Humble says
I was born in November of 1999, so I remember learning about 9/11 through school assignments and stuff we did on 9/11 each year. My school also used to have a moment of silence on that day.
Also, thank you for the reminder of His peace and I hope we will all feel His peace so near to us.