Memo: April’s Cancer Update – June 2020

Invisible smiles. To unmask the secret workings of April’s cancer, she and I had to cover our faces with blue, three-ply fabric bound together by elastic string seemingly designed to afflict one’s ears. Though the masks hid our smiles, they could not damper the gleam of hope in our eyes.

While the Coronavirus crisis has been a season of death, hardship, and unrest for many, April and I have found these last months to be a fruitful time of hope. April has been able to disciple and educate our children and manage a majority of the day-to-day tasks of our home. She still battles fatigue and muscle pain as she fulfills her goals for her life and for our family. Though few have been able to peak behind the outside mask of our house, April and I can both affirm it has been filled with smiles both small and big.

God has been faithful and kind to us. We have found the words of Psalm 118:5 to be true:

Out of my distress I called on the Lord; the Lord answered me and set me free.

Though we have been weak, frail, unbelieving, confused, and depressed at times, God has been faithful. He has heard our sad souls and has sustained us by his mercy these past few months. When the coronavirus restrictions landed, we could have been laid bare. Instead, we have been infused with hope and faith as God has done more in April’s body and in our souls than we could ever imagine. Our hearts echoed the words of Psalm 118:1,

Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever!

Though our souls have been often hidden from public view these last few months, they abound with hopeful smiles.

We arrived at the Mayo clinic somewhat nervous to be at Mayo (after all no one truly likes hospitals). But, our disposition was still decidedly more hopeful than not. As we moved about the elevators decorated with yellow tape and sat in chairs spaced six feet apart that reduced the chances sharing either germs or causal conversations, the faint smiles on our faces grew. When the doctor unmasked the latest, findings, we smiled with joy.

According to April’s Mayo team, the treatment is working. All of her tumors have either stabilized or shrunk since her last scan. Most of the cancer spots have also decreased in either size or intensity. Though our faces were rendered invisible by masks, we could not help by secretly smile because we know God has heard our prayers and your prayers!

Most likely, our smiles will remain hidden for the foreseeable future since the Coronavirus refuses to surrender to the assaults of modern medicine. April and I will continue to follow social distancing and mask protocols. Because of her cancer and treatments, April remains susceptible to the Coronavirus which has claimed more than 120,000 lives this year. We long for the return to normal. But we know that day is not here yet.

We ask you to join us in praying for that day, for April’s medication to keep working, for us to have wisdom as we seek to live out the gospel in this COVID19 world while balancing love and safety, for us to have opportunities to share Christ, and for our kids to be drawn to Christ through this ordeal.

Though our smiles remain hidden because of the masks of space and time, they remain full of hope. Thank you for praying with us and for smiling with us today!

Contact Info:

Email us at: biblefighter@gmail.com 

You can reach us via snail-mail at : P.O. Box 637/ Amissville, VA 20106

You are also welcome call Amissville Baptist Church at: 540-937-6159.

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We will posting updates here at witkowskiblog.com

Thank you for your love, prayers, and never-ending support.

Sustained By Grace Through Faith,

Peter and April

Bad Karma Makes the Gospel Glorious

karmaThe gospel is beautiful because God is glorious us and we are not.

When Jesus assumes his heavenly state in Matthew 17, Peter, James and John fall on their face in holy terror.

The apostles knew they were not holy. Jesus had already rebuked Peter for identifying with the teachings of Satan. Indeed the words of Psalm 14:2-3 well described the apostles and by extension all of humanity. The text declares:

The Lord looks down from heaven on the children of man, to see if there are any who understand, who seek after God. They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt; there is none who does good, not even one.

Jesus agrees proclaiming, “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander.” Paul concludes that every soul lacks the glorious purity of God. They are “hostile in mind, doing evil deeds.” The holy terror that gripped the apostles should grip our souls as we contemplate being in the presence of God.

Despite this reality, Jude 24 declares that God will present believers blameless before the glory of God with great joy. Those who should fall down in terror because of their sin will walk boldly into the throne room with smiles beaming from their faces. How does this happen?

It’s not Karma. Despite the popular notion that humanity can overcome its bad Karma with good Karma, the Scriptures paint a much bleaker picture of human ability. Isaiah 64:6 state that

All our righteous deeds are like a polluted garment.

We cannot earn our way to heaven. Why?

Men and women exist to glorify God. Even those times when we gave to charity, played ball with our kid, and volunteered at the shelter fail to add positive value to our good Karma tank if we did them to get rid of some nagging guilt or to impress our spouse. Any action that that does not make directly glorify God is worthless. Our good karma will never outweigh our bad karma, because we never do anything good.

The gospel becomes amazing at this point. Jesus came to do what we could not do. He lived the perfect life that we could not live. He did good and did it abundantly. The moment we repent and believe, Jesus will transfer his righteous life to us and takes all our bad karma onto himself. Jesus does what our karma cannot do. He makes us holy.

Jesus does what our karma cannot do. He makes us holy.

And we know he can make this trade. He has wiped out our debts on the cross and then risen again to validate his claims of deliverance. Paul beautifully sums up the gospel when he writes,

For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.

Those who have repented of their sins and who have trusted in Jesus for salvation have ever reason to rejoice. The impossible has become possible. The terror has been replaced with joy. When we arrive at heaven, we will not experience judgement but joy.

Death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, no pain anymore.

Revelation 21:4

Though viruses may spread, though false teachers may abound, and though persecutions may come, the believer has nothing to fear because Jesus has died for her sins. God will one day present her “blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy.” The early church martyr Ignatius said, “Bring on all the hideous tortures from the Devil! Just let me get to Jesus.”

Let’s get to Jesus! Are you ready?

Book Review: The Gospel at Work by Sebastian Treager and Greg Gilbert

When Christians leave church on Sunday afternoon and step into office on Monday morning, many do so without the gospel. They leave that on coat rack at home with their kids’ backpacks. They will wear it again when they dive into their church’s midweek Bible study, pray with their family, or go to church. But the gospel seldom makes it to the work floor.

Sebastan Traeger and Greg Gilbert wrote The Gospel at Work: How Working For King Jesus Gives Purpose and Meaning to Our Jobs to remind Christians that they need the gospel at work for it alone provides Christians with fulfillment. The two authors conclude,

No matter what you do, your job has inherent purpose and meaning because you are ultimately doing it for the King. Who you work for is more important than what you do .

They use the next 160 pages to tease out the implications of working for King Jesus.

The acessable book begins with a discussion of the two great errors that transform the beauty of God’s design for work into a mangled mess. Traeger and Gilbert warn, “we can let our job become our idol…on the other hand we can slip into being idle at work.” After providing the reader with six questions that will help him or her diagnose whether or not they have swerved into the ditches of either idolatry or idleness, the authors detail how the theology of the gospel should shape the Christian’s motivation for working. They encourage their readers to use their job as a means to love God, to love others, to reflect God through improving the world, to secure the money they need to care for their family, to find enjoyment, and to create a platform for gospel expansion. In short, Traeger and Gilbert believe the gospel can be boiled down to, “Work Hard, work smart, trust God (71).”

Though the gospel is simple, its influence upon the workplace is anything but trite. The authors reveal the extent of the gospel’s power as they wrestle with the following questions: “How do I choose a job? How do I balance work, church, and family? How do I handle difficult bosses and coworkers? What does it mean to be a Christian boss? How can I share the gospel at work? Is full time ministry more valuable than my job?”

These chapters highlight the book’s true value. The authors avoid the temptation to create a modern version of the 1950 homemaker books that turned societal expectations into morale codes. In the place of heavy burdens, the authors hand the readers freeing biblical principles that can be used by teenagers nervous about their first job and by executives looking for the next great thing. Concepts such prioritizing obedience to God and love for others above our felt needs shows the reader how to avoid jobs that will lead to to his or her financial or spiritual ruin. The decision-making pyrimid found on pages 77 and 81 alone makes the book a must have.

The authors show Christians that an effective work, church, and life balance consists of finding a job that enables one to provide for themselves, care for their families, and share with others. Successes is located in biblical principles as opposed to keeping up with this Christian or that Christian.

All these practical chapters are built around questions or principles that help the reader to tease out what is driving his or her perception of work. Each chapter also contains a list of questions that can be used by couples, counselors, or Bible study groups to further applicaiton and discussion.

The authors also reveal the sustaining power of God’s sovereignty. Instead of worrying about missing out on job opportunities or descending into petty office politics, the believer locates his confidence in the powerful hand of God who is working all things, even the dead-end job, together for his good. Traeger and Gilbert also note,

We compete by working at whatever we do with all our heart, not by undercutting and sabotaging the efforts of our coworkers.

The book should also be commended for addressing the bosses. While many books deal with complaining spirits and unbiblical competitiveness on the ground floor, few books speak to those who occupy the corner office on the second floor. Traeger and Gilbert’s go up the elevator. They remind employers that their authority comes from God. CEOs shuold use such authority to bless others though sacrificial service that should inturn create a platform for gospel expansion. In short, both the employee and the employer should view the jobsight as space for gospel living that will benefit others and facilitate evangelsim.

The authors believe God has sent Christians to career fields with a missional purpose. Christians who work can reach scores of people that would never pick up the phone if a pastor called. But the authors caution the Christian against merging either idolatry or idleness into one’s evangelism. Both the cutthroat Christian and the lazy Christian undermine the beauty of the gospel. To reach the lost, the Christian must work faithfully, speak honestly about God, and love others well while tapping into the resources of the church.

Though Traeger and Gilbert should be applauded for having given their readers a biblical understanding of how the gospel shapes work, their book could be enriched if they addresses issues related to gender. They only briefly touch on the role of motherhood as work. The also do not tease out how the roles of fatherhood and motherhood shape the discussion on work and life balance. Though the book could have been enriched, its content still proves helpful for both men and women who are thinking their work in light of the gospel.  

Those who bring the gospel to work with them will find work to be a joy because it ceases to be a race for money, power, or meaning. The authors correctly note, \

We don’t need work to make us loved or liked or accepted, nor do we need it to prove ourselves that we’re worthwhile. Why? Because all of that has already been secured for us by Jesus!

The Gospel liberates the Christian to work!

Do you know that joy? Are you bringing the gospel to your job?

If not or if you are like me need help thinking through the job-related questions that Traeger and Gilbert tackled, I would encourage you to read their book!