Times of change are tough.
Sometimes they come upon us gradually—reeling us in like an angler, one foot of line at a time, as we struggle to rush away with our prize, not even realizing that we are slowly being pulled, inexorably, to the fisherman’s hand. The last thing the fishy expects is to suddenly be hauled out of the water, surrounded by all that dry stuff (I think they call it “air”..?)
Sometimes periods of change are more sudden, and it’s more like the fox that’s walking down the path. A sweet, innocent, harmless, mouse-eatin’, doe-eyed little fox… Imagine you’re a fox. You’re prancing along, you get thirsty, you spot a little brook, you put your little fox lips down to the cool water… BAM! A net springs up around you and rips you off the ground! Your feet are running frantically, grabbing at nothing but air…
Sometimes change happens like that. Sudden-like.
It can leave us frantic. It can leave us breathless. It can leave us stunned.
But in almost every case, it can leave us scared.
“Gee, Matt, calm down! Isn’t change good sometimes?”
You’re right. Change doesn’t always have to be an outdoorsman metaphor.
Sometimes change, whether sudden or gradual, brings wonderful things with it. Let’s go back to the fox…
Let’s say that you’re the fox, and your entire habitat has been destroyed by fires. The little brook you’re putting your little fox lips down to drink from is flowing with ash and silt, and the water may as well be poison. The net that snares you is the net of a wildlife rescue team, here to relocate you to a fairytale forest beyond your wildest dreams… Now I ask ya… If you knew what the Rescuer had in store for you, would you still struggle in the net like that?
Times of change are tough. But they aren’t always bad.
Let me walk you through some of the change that I’ve experienced in the last couple years…
So, I guess we all experienced the whole virus thing back in 2020. We’ll skip that year, since it sorta feels like that year skipped us.
So, let’s just start with June 2021, and make our way to this June, in 2022.
I had met the girl of my dreams, and convinced her to move to Georgia so we could get married… By June, our wedding had already been delayed twice. Also, my mom had been in the hospital a few times already, I think.
Well, by December of 2021, I had gotten a new job (in Sep), set a wedding date (Oct), seen my mom in the hospital again (Nov), and gotten married (Dec 3). Something of a whirlwind.
Things were looking great, as December started. Amazing changes happening. My mom was able to be present for my wedding. She loved the affair. My job was going well, and I was getting ready to start my training to be a manager in the company. I was enjoying my new life with my new wife, and things were going very well.
Then January happened…
On January 2nd, I visited my mom and dad, and Mom wasn’t doing well at all. She was in and out of consciousness, and only somewhat lucid. Our pastor was there the same day, and though my father (the doctor) was trying to put on a brave face and be optimistic, I insisted to our pastor that we should pray over her and anoint her in accordance with the Word of God.
The three of us gathered around her bed and prayed. The pastor anointed her with oil. I continued to pray in my heart.
Then I kissed my mother on the head as she slept, told her I loved her, hugged my father, and walked out the door.
That was the last time I saw my mother alive.
The next morning, as I began to feel strangely ill, I received a call from my sister…
It was the call.
My mama had gone that morning, in comfort, into the arms of her Savior.
I called my wife, she came home from work, and we made our way weepily to my aunt’s house, where my parents had been staying.
I sat at the foot of my mom’s bed, barely able to keep myself together. I felt so sick and could barely stay awake.
But I sat alone with my mommy for a while, and as I sat with her body, I held her foot, lovingly, and I started to sing through the sobs—“Great is Thy faithfulness, O God, my Father. There is no shadow of turning with Thee. Thou changest not, Thy compassions they fail not. As Thou hast been, Thou forever wilt be. Great is Thy faithfulness, great is Thy faithfulness! Morning by morning, new mercies I see. All I have needed Thy hand hath provided. Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me…”
All three verses. All three choruses.
All of me wracked with grief and tears. Barely able to choke out half the words, let alone hold the tune.
I finished the song. Stood up. Kissed my mama on the head. And spoke to her a saying that the two of us had used to encourage one another over the last few years, “He is good, and He does good. Faithful He has been and faithful He will remain.” And then I added, “enter into the joy of your Master…”
I stumbled back down the hallway to where my family was gathered. Sat down in the kitchen, nearly passing out.
Ten minutes later I tested positive for COVID-19.
Thus began the hardest month of my entire life.
I would be sick and bed-ridden for the next three weeks, only barely able to keep touch with my office, and completely unable to string two thoughts together in any intelligent way.
After being reassured by my HR department that my illness and bereavement would not affect my job, I then found myself being demoted to a position that I’d not been trained for at the end of the month. After one week in the new position, with no training, my company then fired me for not being productive (citing “time theft”).
Talk about kicking a man when he’s down.
The net had sprung up around me.
I didn’t know what to do. I was desperate, but still fighting the fog and the weakness that Covid had left me with.
I felt like my life was completely destroyed.
My mom was gone. My health was still fragile. And my job had lied to me, betrayed me, set me up to fail, and falsely accused me, just so they could save a buck.
During this time, my wife was a rock for me.
She encouraged me. Wept with me. Sought to understand my stress. And showed me love in ways that I didn’t know were possible.
I would be despondent and weepy, and (though she had also been hit with Covid at the same time I was, and every bit as seriously) she would hold me and love me. I would be irritated and weak, and she would be patient and serve me. I would be unenthusiastic and sour, and she would be my joy. I cannot praise her faithfulness enough.
(To have been put through such trials and tribulations, within the first months of marriage, and to have not gotten a single break to simply sit and be, since the day we said “I do…” Elissa, I cannot express my appreciation, love, and respect for you. Please forgive me for my faults and my short comings—for they are many—and know that you are my heart and my home.)
But this was the net of the Rescuer.
Little did I know that God was working to pave a path forward for me, for Elissa, and for the entire Kunz family.
Change has been swiftly occurring, and I believe I am still in the net, because I feel like I’m still struggling… But I’m beginning to catch what may be a glimpse of Faerie—that better world—ahead in the distance.
This week, after months of living hand-to-mouth, barely making rent, Elissa working her tail off at the restaurant, after hundreds of resumes and cover letters sent, I finally received and accepted a job offer that has the promise of providing us with a survivable income.
It is in a new industry, with a very different direction than what I was previously doing, but its beliefs align with my own, and I am excited for the opportunity.
Expect to hear more about it in the coming weeks.
In the meantime, I am working to remember that not all change is scary change, and (because He is sovereign) all change is God’s change. He Himself does not change, but He guides and directs the change within and around us. Sometimes it’s painful and frightening, and sometimes we don’t even notice it, but it acts inexorably upon us all the same.
For years, my work uniform has consisted of scrubs when I worked at the doctor’s office, and then gym shorts and sweats when I worked remotely. Now, it actually matters what kind of pants I’m going to be wearing.
Pants are a weird way to monitor change in one’s life, but to me, right now, it makes sense.
Maybe it makes sense to you too.
If you’re going through a period of change, I want to encourage you, whether it’s slow or fast, hard or easy, scary or exciting or boring, hold fast to God. The change comes from Him, and He’s taking you exactly where you need to be.
It may be by hook and line, or it may be by net, or it may just be Him taking you by the hand and guiding you into the next phase of your life (as He did with my mother).
Do not fear it.
Rather, let your fears die.
Let your faithlessness die.
Kill your sin.
Be cleansed.
Believe in Christ.
Times of change are tough… but they are good.

