I have been waiting for the phone call while trying not to wait for the phone call.
Lily is the best girl in all the world. And she drives WAY TOO CLOSE to the car in front of her. Way. Always. No matter what.
I have said it 67 thousand times.
Not enough stopping distance.
Lily. 45 mph means 4.5 car lengths.
Girl. The truck should be able to SEE you in his rear view.
STOPPING DISTANCE.
She don't care. In fact, I'm preeettty sure we're at that place of, the more I say it, the closer she is following.
(Mom. I know this was me. I'm sorry for all I put you through. I was a punk.)
I finally had to stop. She gonna have a car accident. She gonna have to deal with it. Lord, protect her despite her.
Most of you know this...the prayers and challenges of the toddler years don't come CLOSE to the launching years. You're begging for lives, survival AND for sanity, nowadays.
So Monday night, I'm driving home from church with Sofie, Kid's Volunteer dinner and training complete, and Matt calls me.
You almost home? Lily hit the car in front of her on the way home from work. I gotta go.
I pulled in, he pulled out, I head up to the littles to pray for Lily and to usher in sleep.
And I'm MAD.
I've told her a million times. Her van is MY VAN. Her life, MY HEART.
And I'm scared.
What if she's not ok, or they're not ok?
And I'm emotional.
Lily called, Matt was coming. She has a good and present father, just like I did, and I miss him.
And I'm worried.
Insurance is already SO MUCH. We can't afford it going up! She's gonna PAY for it, when it does.
And I'm fighting.
My littles don't need anything at bedtime but His peace.
By the time they get home, the house is quiet and the Lord has helped me. She comes up to the little's room right away and hugs me for a long time, quiet. She looks whole.
When I come downstairs, He reminds ME to be quiet and just listen. Let Him talk to her about the things she won't hear about. Let her talk to me without any hint of I told you so.
She tells me the story, rattling a thousand words a minute and me almost missing His thing in the middle.
...so while we're all standing there waiting for the police and it's dark and I'm so shook up and I can see that even though they're fifty or sixty, they're really shook up too, and so I ask them if I can pray for all of us, and they tell me I can. So on the side of the road I pray for all of us, and when I'm done, my hands had stopped shaking and they had stopped shaking and everything just shifted. They started to be kind and calm and I felt a lot more calm, and then the police got there, and...
After it all, I pray over her and she goes to bed, and I'm left sitting with Him.
It is not normal that a 17 year old girl has her first car accident, and stands on the road in the dark praying boldly and openly for and with the stranger couple that she hit.
I would not have done that. Not today at 43, prayer my passion.
Oh, I would have been praying. But not with my hands on the shoulders of the strangers shook and angry. Not out loud. Not simple bold. Not like that. Quiet and urgent and inward.
Who does that?
I always tell young people to look for the thing inside of them that's weird, that feels normal but is NOT normal to anyone else...because that's how I found His calling on my life.
Terribly planned missions trip...sleeping on the floor, not enough food, not enough translators, overwhelming orphanage....everyone was miserable and wanted to go home...and I was alive like I had never been, hungry like I had never been, satisfied like I had never been. What was weird in me was what HE had placed there.
And here is my girl, debating the Muslim faith and pointing to Jesus with her nail tech the day of prom, getting in tiffs at school over what the Bible says vs. what everyone wants to believe culturally, getting in car accidents alone at night and praying boldly for all involved without even thinking about it.
The Lord has a plan and a calling for Lily's life, and this girl might just be the Jim and Elisabeth Elliot I have always prayed she would be...bold, abandoned, ready to go, ready to obey, ready to preach.
And far more than her stubborn driving...I care about her heart. And in the moments when it matters most...hers is His.
Teary days.
Giving our people again and again and again to Him.
Overlooking bumpers and fears and spilt sugar (another story for another day) and looking to Him.
Trusting Him, sight unseen.









