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Pastor reflects on walk ‘through the valleys’Published March 10, 2005
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (LifeWay) There is a good chance things arent going that well for you if the local funeral director takes you out to lunch to recruit your business. After being diagnosed with cancer, Ernest Easley learned how to cope with difficult situations like that onebut he learned more about trusting God. In 1998, Easley, who at the time was pastor of First Baptist Church of Odessa, Texas, was diagnosed with a fast-growing throat cancer called squamous cell carcinoma. After a knot was discovered on his lymph node, the 40-year-old pastor tumbled into what he describes as the valleys. Easleys struggle with cancer and his eventual healing inspired his new book Through the Valleys, released in February by Broadman & Holman Publishers. The 44 radiation treatments and six months on a feeding tube gave Easley plenty of material to work with in this personal look at how God blessed him through the cancer and allowed him to share his testimony with others. The mountaintop experiences are good, Easley wrote. But the valleys are where we grow. The valleys deepen our roots of faith. The valleys drive us to God. Each chapter explored a different valley that Easley encountered during his battle with cancer, including uncertainty, fear, detours, suffering, storms, discouragement, confusion, correction and sickness. If you live long enough, he wrote, sooner or later, you will find yourself in a valley. The book includes numerous references to biblical characterssuch as Job and Jonahwho encountered major challenges in their lives. But Easley also shared how God restores, heals and helps His people to become stronger through difficult times. Victory comes through the valleys, he wrote. Though it is often difficult to realize when you are there, every valley has value. God teaches us things in the valleys that we would never learn on the mountaintops. Easley admitted he didnt always see things this way. I wondered why God did not step in and do something about my cancer, Easley wrote. Why wouldnt He touch me like He touched the leper who was instantly cured? I knew that He could do it. Though God is capable of healing, Easley wrote, the Lord is not obligated to heal in every situation. He learned to depend more on the faithful prayers of friends and family. His wife, Julie, sent out routine e-mails to keep prayer supporters informed of her husbands progress and setbacks. The true healing began when Easley learned to trust the Lord no matter what the outcome. He knows the cancer could return at any time, but he is thankful that he hasnt had to take any funeral directors up on offers for a free service just yet. Will God heal Ernest Easley if his cancer returns? he wrote. Perhaps, if it will bring Him the most glory, He will ... Will I trust Him with the outcome? Absolutely. Easley resides with his family in Powder Springs, Ga., where he is pastor of Roswell Street Baptist Church in Marietta. His book is available at LifeWay Christian Stores or online at http://www.lifewaystores.com/lwstore/gk.asp?k=51FBE42407. |
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