
Redeemed in the Valley of Loss
In my previous article, I shared what amounts to my late wife Michelle’s and my adoption story, where he and I adopted a newborn whom we named Faith, who has Down syndrome. We lived what I thought was the American dream for almost six years.
Michelle was the love of my life, and we were raising our daughter Faith together. She was doing great in kindergarten, five years after her adoption, full of energy and curiosity. We laughed, told stories at the dinner table, and enjoyed watching her grow every day.
But one morning, that feeling of safety started to fade. While I was making breakfast, Michelle bent over in pain. Doctors started running tests when the pain got worse and worse. At first, it just seemed like muscle spasms. When they told us cancer was a possibility, we were shocked.
Our nights were suddenly full of whispered conversations by candlelight, even after Faith had gone to bed. Michelle and I talked about futures we might never see — what life would look like for me if she passed away, who would teach Faith how to grow into a woman, and whether she would live long enough to see our daughter graduate or get married.
Yet in the midst of fear, Michelle’s faith remained steady. She clung to worship songs like Good, Good Father, choosing to praise God not for what He could do, but for who He is. Even when her body ached and her future was uncertain, she declared through tears that God was worthy of worship. Our young daughter, watching and learning, often walked over to lay her hands on her mother and pray. Those childlike prayers became a living testimony of simple, steadfast trust.
Our church family and friends across the country joined us in prayer, and remarkably, more tests eventually revealed no cancer. We celebrated what felt like a miracle. The heaviness lifted, and for a brief season, joy filled our home again.
Lost
But just weeks later, tragedy struck with sudden force. While visiting family in Michigan, Michelle pulled her car to the side of the road and lost consciousness. Faith, strapped in her seat, tried desperately to wake her mother, tugging at her hair and whispering, “Mommy, wake up.” But Michelle never woke again.
The call that she had died left me undone. In one moment, my wife was gone, and I was left to raise a special-needs daughter alone. After months of fearing cancer, celebrating healing, and believing the worst was behind us, the final blow felt unbearable.
In the days that followed, I walked through shadows I never imagined. I stood at Michelle’s casket, remembering our 23 years together, the prayers she had prayed over me, the encouragement she had given, the laughter that filled our home.
When gazing at her at the casket, I recalled the front porch where we had always imagined ourselves sitting together, holding hands, and continuing to share life in our later years. The dream had vanished.
However, Michelle’s life was respected even in death. Stories from friends, coworkers, and students whose lives she had impacted poured out at her funeral. She never knew the profound impact her faith, laughter, and servant’s heart had had.
Divine Strength
During this tumultuous time, grief became my daily companion. I wrestled with feelings of inadequacy. Thoughts plagued me as I kept asking myself if I could raise Faith on my own, questioning God with the raw honesty of a broken heart. But slowly, I began to see a truth that reshaped my ministry and my understanding of God’s purposes.
The Apostle Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 1:3–4 came alive once again:
“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God.” (NIV)
This was no longer abstract theology — it was reality written in tears and sleepless nights. God reminded me that He does not comfort from a distance, because He steps into the valley with us.
I remember many nights when I would lie wide awake, staring into the darkness, unable to quiet the questions racing through my mind. Fear pressed in. Grief hollowed me out.
Yet in those moments when I had nothing left to offer, God’s presence became the very air I breathed. His comfort wasn’t an idea — it was strength I could not muster, peace that made no sense, and the grace to take the next step when everything in me wanted to stop.
It was that comfort which enabled me to care for Faith when I felt emptied of all reserves. There were mornings I wanted to collapse under the weight of loss, yet God gave me the strength to get her dressed, feed her breakfast, and assure her that we would keep walking forward together. I could not have done it on my own. What Paul wrote about in 2 Corinthians 1 became the fabric of my existence: God Himself had come near, the Father of compassion, the God of all comfort.
I began to see over time something I could not have grasped in the first storm of grief. God’s comfort was not only meant to heal my wounds, but to flow outward to minister to others. God was shaping me into a vessel of consolation for people walking roads I now knew by heart — the widower burying his wife, the child suddenly motherless, the family blindsided by tragedy. Pain became a strange kind of stewardship. The comfort I had received was never meant to be hoarded; it was meant to be given away.
I have written before about how adopting Faith was a story of redemption, a tangible picture of God bringing beauty out of brokenness. But Michelle’s life and her passing, too, have been woven into a greater redemptive narrative. Out of heartbreak, God birthed a ministry of hope. Out of loss, He gave me a deeper capacity to walk with the grieving, to sit with the broken, and to speak — not as one theorising from the outside — but as one who has been there, in the fire, and has found God faithful.
The pain of losing Michelle will always remain a scar on my soul. But scars, when surrendered to Christ, become testimonies. They remind us that death and despair are not the final words. The final word is redemption. Because in Christ, every valley leads to resurrection hope. And it is the very comfort I received from God in my darkest hour that now allows me to comfort others in theirs.
And so, if you find yourself in the valley today — overwhelmed, afraid, or broken by loss — know this: you are not alone. The same God who met me in my grief is the God who will meet you in yours. He is still the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort. And the comfort you receive today will one day become the comfort you extend to someone else. That is the redemptive pattern of His grace. That is the hope of 2 Corinthians 1:3–4.
___
Editor’s Note: Dr Timothy Orr is a lecturer in religious studies and has written many books. Read about them here. This story above is taken from his book called, “Letters to My Daughter: The story of how one family overcame tragedy and loss”. Buy it on Amazon here.
Image courtesy of Adobe.
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What a powerful and encouraging testimony. Thank you ,Tim
Thank you Tim for your honesty. I, too, have been on a grief journey and now I realise I can tell my testimony and not get churned up and feel I am reliving the grief. God has miraculously healed my memories. What an awesome and wonderful God we serve! May our gracious and compassionate Lord Jesus continue to guide you on this healing journey and surprise you with joy.
Still I will say, ‘It is well with my soul’
Thanks for sharing this profound human story wrapped in His Grace and love.
Response to Angelika Henderson
Thank you, Angelika. Your words mean a lot. Sharing this part of my journey is never easy, but I’ve found that God often uses our brokenness to encourage others. I’m grateful that Michelle’s story and God’s comfort in my valley can offer hope.
Response to Teri Kempe
Teri, I’m so encouraged by your testimony. What a gift it is when God heals our memories and transforms grief into a story of His faithfulness. You’re right — what an awesome God we serve! I pray that He continues to surprise both of us with moments of unexpected joy as we walk with Him.
Response to Leonie Robson
Leonie, those words — “It is well with my soul” — carry such depth when spoken from a place of loss. Even when our circumstances change, His grace and love remain constant.