A young boy showered my husband, Carl, and me with bubbles as he came running by us on the Atlantic City boardwalk. It was a light and fun moment on a difficult day. We had come to the city to visit our brother-in-law in the hospital and to help Carls sister who was struggling and having trouble getting to her doctors appointments. So as we took a break and walked along the seaside boardwalk we were feeling a bit overwhelmed by the needs of our family.
Then came the bubbles. Just bubbles blown at us whimsically by a little boy in the ocean breezebut they had a special significance to me. I love bubbles and keep a bottle in my office to use whenever I need the smile of a bubble break. Those bubbles and the vast Atlantic Ocean reminded me of what I can count on: God is always close. He is powerful. He always cares. And He can use even the smallest experiences, and briefest moments, to help us remember that His presence is like an ocean of grace in the middle of our heavy moments.
Maybe one day our troubles will seem like bubblesmomentary in light of eternity for what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal (2 Cor. 4:18).
In fulfilling his calling as an apostle (Acts 9:15), Paul endured great suffering. But in the midst of great opposition, persecution, and painful suffering, Pauls refrain is: We do not lose heart (2 Cor. 4:1, 16). His confidence is not rooted in himself but in Gods sovereign power, in His sustaining grace, in Christs resurrected life, and in the expectation of future reward and eternal glory (vv. 718).