Share This Episode
Family Life Today Dave and Ann Wilson Logo

When He Doesn’t Fix It: Trusting God in the Middle of Loss--Erik Reed

Family Life Today / Dave and Ann Wilson
The Truth Network Radio
April 6, 2026 3:00 am

When He Doesn’t Fix It: Trusting God in the Middle of Loss--Erik Reed

Family Life Today / Dave and Ann Wilson

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1550 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


April 6, 2026 3:00 am

A young pastor and father shares his journey of finding God in the midst of pain and medical issues with his son, and how it led him to write a book about uncommon trust.

COVERED TOPICS / TAGS (Click to Search)
Faith Pain God Trust Suffering Parenting Medical Issues
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Truth for Life Podcast Logo
Truth for Life
Alistair Begg
What's Right What's Left Podcast Logo
What's Right What's Left
Pastor Ernie Sanders
Renewing Your Mind Podcast Logo
Renewing Your Mind
R.C. Sproul

This episode is supported in part by the Christian Standard Bible, a translation designed to be faithful to the original text and clear for everyday readers. We're grateful for their partnership in helping bring gospel-centered content to families like yours. To learn more about the CSB, visit csbible.com. My whole understanding get to that point was that, you know, if you just love Jesus and have enough faith, everything's supposed to just fall in place. You know, it's like cupcakes, rainbows, pixie dust.

You know, everything's supposed to just be perfect.

So, you know, here we are, you know, young, married, you know, young in our faith. We're serving in our church, eager and zealous for the Lord, and we have a son born early. with big time medical issues who has challenges. Welcome to Family Life Today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I'm Ann Wilson.

And I'm Dave Wilson, and you can find us at FamilyLifetoday.com. This is Family Life Today.

Okay, I've got an Ann Wilson. Exclusive question. I hate these. I want to hear your answer. To actually, I'm going to throw you on the spot.

It's a pretty heavy topic.

Okay. All right. Top one. Reason you think People walk away from their faith. Oh, if they have a faith and then they just like, I don't think I can keep believing anymore.

How could a good God allow this pain or tragedy in my life and in the world? How'd you know? You knew I was going to ask. I think that's what everybody knows. That's quick of an answer.

She knew. I think everybody wonders that. And the people on the street that I'll talk to that they have no belief or maybe they've turned away, it's tragedy. And they're like, I just don't know how God could allow that. How could a good God allow bad things to happen to good people?

Yeah. I mean, that is one of the biggest, if not the biggest, hurdle for not just other people, us as well. I mean, that's a real, and there aren't any easy answers.

So we've asked a pastor to come in. Eric Reed is with us today on Family Life Today. And you've never been here.

So welcome to Family Life Today. Yeah. Thank you guys for having me. This is exciting. I mean, obviously, as a pastor, you've dealt with that issue, but we're going to find out today as a husband and a dad as well.

You pastor a church in Lebanon, 10. Tennessee. That's right. And married with two kids. That's right.

Well, take us back to December 1st, 2019. I don't know if you want to go there, but it was a pivotal moment in your life.

Sort of tell us that story. It was Sunday morning. And My wife and I had been in the hospital with my son Caleb, who was 15. Going on a couple of weeks. Throughout his life, we had been.

in hospital weeks at a time. Multiple times a year. And so it wasn't a new thing for us. We were very comfortable with being in the hospital, more comfortable than most families probably would ever be. We were at home.

We packed our bags. We had routines. My wife would tend to the girls. I would stay at the hospital with him. I had my stack of books with me, my computer.

You know, we just had routines. We knew what to do because we'd done it so many times. And it was on this day that. We would realize that it wouldn't be like any of the other times. A few days prior to December 1st, doctors had come up to us and said, We need to start talking about possibilities of what happens if Caleb doesn't get better.

Caleb had been dealing with respiratory issues that were a result of a lot of other things going on in his life, and we can talk about that and how he got to this place, but his respiratory condition wasn't improving. And That was the first time that we had to kind of stop and go, Oh, my mercy, we may not go home like we have every other time. I think we had just grown so accustomed to we go in, we get a tune up, we get some antibiotics, we get better, we go home. We had done that so many times that it never crossed my mind that we may not get better and go home. And when the doctors told us that We had to have some hard conversations with each other with his primary care doctors.

And talk about Do we think that everything has been done that could be done? We also were looking at a son who had been struggling and suffering for. Really, his whole life, but the last couple of years in particular, in a big way. And so early that morning, after discussions with the doctors and just a lot of tears, we knew that we were at the end of the road. We went and talked to Caleb.

and asked him if he was ready to see Jesus. And with his inability to talk at that point because of the stroke, and plus he had a BIPAP machine mask on his face, we just asked him to blink twice if he was ready to see Jesus. And he gave the biggest two blinks you could ever imagine. And at that point our daughters were at church. And we had family let them know that they needed to bring them up there to the hospital.

And of course, we started calling our family and letting people know what was happening. And our daughters showed up. Uh to the hospital. I went out to meet them. And boy, um walking them hand in hand down the long hallway to their brother's room.

Knowing I was about that to tell them that He was gonna go be with Jesus soon. Uh was one of the hardest things. I ever had to do. And they just cried and I just hugged them and, you know, tried to console them as much as you can. And we went into the room together.

And Katrina and my wife was in there with Caleb and we all The five of us got to spend some time together before the rest of the family came in and he passed away. We prayed and read scripture over him. We sang 10,000 reasons, his favorite song. And, you know, that last line, you know, on that day when my strength is failing, the end draws near, my time has come. Still, my soul will sing your praise unending 10,000 years and forevermore.

And, you know, we just filled the ICU with praises to God. And he passed and went into eternity and face to face with Christ. And I prayed and gave thanks to God for a son that I got to have for 15 plus years and just asked him to help us. And he has answered that prayer over and over again. Oh, Eric.

I mean, I'm sitting here crying because you've lived through. The fear of every single parent. Yeah. And you've walked that. And I think what we're talking about today.

Is how do we find God in the middle of our pain? Yeah. Because so many people are living that, experiencing that. And your book is called Uncommon Trust, which is a perfect title. Yeah, 'cause...

You know, you can walk us through because you had to do it. Give us a little bit of backstory of the. you know, 15 years of Caleb's life. It started out. In the hospital when he's born, you knew you had complications.

And you were just starting to plan a church at that time? That's right. I was just brand new in ministry. We would start a church the next year, but we were, I was brand new in ministry. I didn't have much theology under my belt, you know.

I had a lot of love for Jesus and a zeal, you know. And you didn't grow up in the church. I didn't. I would go to church with my grandmother when I spent the night with her on Saturdays as a kid. And that was it for church.

That was sort of a you have to go to church with me deal. Yeah, but I loved like not being at my own house and spending the night with her.

So it was like, okay, I get to go to church with Gan, you know? And so, so it wasn't that I minded church, but it was just something that I did with grandma. My parents didn't go to church. And so it was one of those things where not a lot of grounding, not a lot of depth or understanding. Certainly.

Perfect candidate to start a church, right? Just the perfect pastor you would want. Yeah. So honestly, if December 1st, 2019 would have happened. Um, 15 years prior, I had no grounding at all, and honestly, even if you do have grounding, you still get rocked and your legs get wobbly.

So, I had to jump into the deep end with no floaties on as a young man. Um, married, you know, just over a year now with my first child. And we learned that he had some medical issues. He was born premature at 30 weeks. He had a bad kidney that had cyst all over it, and he had a good kidney.

And so, you know. You know, we were told, hey, listen, all we got to do is get this bad kidney out. And once the bad kidney's out, you know, he can live a normal life with one kidney. You know, doctors were telling us people who live with one kidney all the time, don't even know they only have one kidney. Really?

You know, yeah. Oh, I learned, I've become an expert at kidney. I just don't, I don't have a degree for it, but I can tell you a lot about your kidneys.

So you're 24? Yeah, at that time when he was born, I'm 23, about to be 24. Wow. And thrown into the deep end with a son, born early. With big time medical issues, and I don't have any theological grounding at all on, okay, you know, what do we do?

My whole understanding get to that point was that, you know, if you just love Jesus and have enough faith, everything's supposed to just fall in place. You know, it's like cupcakes, rainbows, pixie dust. You know, everything's supposed to just be perfect.

And every story you hear, that's always supposed to be like somebody else's story. It's like, it's those people. It's never you.

So, you know, here we are, you know, young, married, you know, young in our faith. We're serving in our church, eager and zealous for the Lord. And we have a son who has challenges. And so we wanted to, you know, wait for him to get bigger before they took the kidney out.

So when he was born, what they did is they put a drainage tube in that would help keep these cysts from filling up. It kept draining the cyst, which was good, but the tube in his side started creating infections. He started, it started causing problems. And so he battled for those first two months off and on with getting infections. And it became one of those things where doctors are saying, okay, there's a risk-reward here.

The longer we wait and the bigger he gets, the better it will be for his surgery. The longer we wait, the more opportunity there is for serious infection. And he may not survive these infections. These are, you know, he's getting really sick when this happens, which then sets him back from getting bigger, too.

So finally, they came to us two months after he was born and said, it's best to get this kidney out. Had he been hospitalized that whole time? The whole time.

Okay. So we were in the NICU at that point. He was born at 30 weeks in the hospital, and we stayed there the entire time. Anticipating this surgery to come.

So, the day of surgery comes, and you know, it's kind of anticipation, you know, because the idea is like, hey, we're going to have surgery, and this is done. This nightmare is over.

So, you aren't worried, you are anticipating. We were excited. You know, obviously, there's a little nerves because it's a surgery, it's your child. But, you know, the whole thing was like, we're going to get this kidney out, right? As soon as he urinates and we see that the good kidney is good, we're going home.

Going home. And so they did the surgery. You know, he goes to recovery and, you know, he's in recovery and then getting put him back into a regular room. And we're told, hey, the next morning, you know, everything checks out and everything looks good. You, you guys will go home.

So the next morning, I get up early, anticipating the doctors won't come till lunchtime or so. Actually, when I had a side job, just because I was doing an internship at the church and they were paying me gobs and gobs of, you know, tens. I had to go do something. I was like, I'm about to bring a kid home. You know, I got to go make some money.

So I was actually installing satellite dishes, like side jobs. And so I told her, I was like, Katrina, I said, I think I can go get a satellite put up this morning, come back to the hospital, load up, we'll go home with Caleb. And so I took off to go do a job, you know, and she called me a couple hours later. She said, you've got to get up here. And I said, Oh, what's going on?

She's like, I don't know. The doctors are running around. His blood pressure is really high. His heart rate's really high. They're doing ultrasounds, but they're not telling me anything.

You just get back up here.

Something's not right. And of course, I immediately go back, and it's like a 35-minute drive, and it was the longest drive of my life. I'm just like, I'm praying. I'm like, God, I don't know what this means. I don't know what's going on.

Please be with my son, be with my wife, you know. And I'm just, I felt so helpless. I was like, I can't get here any quicker. You know, I'm just sitting here. I'm crying and I'm praying.

I don't even know what I'm praying for because I don't know anything that's, I don't know what's wrong. Wow. And so I just felt so helpless. I'm crying out. And I get to the hospital, and that's where we eventually learn.

The surgeon comes in and he says, I don't know any other way to say this, but there's been a mistake on the surgery. And instead of taking just his bad kidney out, we have accidentally removed his good kidney as well.

So they took out both kidneys. Both kidneys were taken out in the surgery. And so the way that they, the way that that happened was his kidneys, he had what was called horseshoe kidneys. They didn't know it at the time. He had what's called horseshoe kidneys, which if you're, you know, for listeners to imagine, think about if I held my fist together and then I linked them together with my pinky fingers, right?

That idea that those two kidneys represented by my fist are connected. And now instead of fists, think about little bitty thumbnails because this is a little bitty baby who's preemie.

So they were connected together and then folded on top of each other. Oh.

So when they go in to take the kidney out of his body, when they go in for the surgery, they look in and they see the bad kidney facing them. They see the cyst and they go, okay, there it is. And they go to remove it, not realizing that with that bad one is the good one connected to it. Could they have separated them? No, once it's out of the body, it's done.

No, I mean, if they had known. If they would have known, they could have. But nothing that had been done up to that point in terms of testing and, you know, all those things picked up the fact that that was the case. Oh, so you're sitting in this hospital. Sitting here in the room with him sitting beside us, blood pressure levels of 200 over 100 blood pressures, 240 over 130 kind of stuff.

I mean, stroke level blood pressure. They say this to you and your wife. Yes. What do you feel in the moment? Numb.

And the surgeon was so Heartless, even when he said he said. It's unfortunate. He literally used those words. Those are his exact words. And looking back, and there's a story even about, I mean, you talk about a journey of having to learn to forgive him.

His bedside manners were non-existent. And I'm sure he was stunned. I'm sure he, too, was in a place of unbelief of what had happened. But his deadpan delivery. And his, it's unfortunate, you know, felt so indifferent.

It felt so calloused. that when he left the room we just looked at each other like And I was so naive at that point. And I was just like, but what does that mean? Like, can they put it back in? Like, I'm so naive at that point.

I don't, I mean, I don't have any reason to know about kidneys. Right. You know, it's like, I got them, I think, you know, so I don't, I don't need to know anything particular. Right. And so I knew nothing.

And my wife looked at me. She understanded the full implications. She says, you can't live without kidneys, Eric. And that's when it hit me. And then the next question is: what can we do?

You know, your mind immediately goes to solution. What can we do? What's happening? What's the next step? And so we end up having a meeting later with.

A team of doctors and hospital administrators. And I mean, it was me and my wife. And at a conference table full of very important people. And they're asking us and discussing with us what we want to do. These 24-year-old kids never had a child.

Don't know anything about life. And they look at us and they say, We've got two approaches. They said we can do something we've never done with a child this size. And this is at one of the top hospitals in the country. Or we can do nothing.

Wow. I said, what does that mean? And they said Your son will pass. And I said, well. If there is something that can be done.

We would like to try to do that. If you think that it could be effective, we would like to try to do that. And so they said, okay. And that meant the next thing that needed to happen was a surgery to place Dallas's catheters. And what we would have to do is get him big enough to get a kidney transplant.

And he, you have to have an adult kidney in even in a child, because all the blood vessels would be so small if they were from a child that they would just clot off and it would be ineffective. And so they have to get you big enough as a baby has to be big enough to get an adult kidney.

So we knew it was going to be a process, and the only way to get to that process was dialysis. And to start dialysis on a little baby, they had never done that.

So they end up having surgery. We end up getting a catheter in. They end up, you know, we were there, I think, another month or two, just getting his body back regulated, blood pressure down, getting all the fluid off of him. And then we got to go home with a kid that needed to do dialysis, you know, every night at home. And after a year, the dialysis quit working.

And, you know, because he started getting infections and they had to put new catheters in, the catheters wouldn't work.

So we had to shift over to a different kind of dialysis, which they do where they run your blood through a machine. And so that required us going to the hospital three days a week, three to four hours at a time. And so for the first two years, that was our lives with him. I want to sit on the floor and just cry. Imagining the two of you.

Enduring this, walking through this, holding on to each other. Praying for, hoping your son would make it, and thinking about all the dreams that you had for this little boy. I grew up imagining having a son. In fact, that's all I ever imagined: having a son. I was an athlete, I loved playing sports, and I always thought about, I can't wait to have a boy to play ball in the yard with and do all these things.

And now, all of a sudden, here we are with our world turned upside down. After it happened, my wife couldn't even go into the room and see him for days. She was so devastated. She couldn't even look at him. And so a life-changing moment for me.

was The day after it happened. I went into his room. There's a rocking chair in there. He's in there hooked up to all kinds of things, and machines are beeping. And I had my Bible, I had a notebook.

Of course, you know, I haven't preached any sermons at this point in my life. I'm going in there for survival. I'm not looking for content, you know. And I just had my Bible. I said, God, I just need to know.

What to do, what to think, how to survive, how to help my life. And I didn't even know where to turn. And I'm just, I'm flipping around. You know, I'm just, I don't know what I'm looking for, but I know I'm looking.

So I'm flipping, I'm flipping. I'd read a few things, and you know, nothing was resonating where it was like, oh, okay, God, you got my attention here. And I got to the book of Daniel. And again, you know, not growing up in church. And, you know, at that point in my life, I didn't like I voraciously just tore through the Bible and had it all implanted.

So, you know, I get to Daniel. The only thing I know about Daniel is like, oh, yeah, the lines down. Yeah, you know, I remember the Sunday School flannel graphs and all those things. And, but I got to Daniel 1. For whatever reason, I started reading right there in chapter 1.

And the very first thing that happens in Daniel 1 is God allows for Nebuchadnezzar. to go in and take Jerusalem to take Israel. And turns them upside down. And these young men. And all the best and brightest of the land get ripped.

kicking and screaming out of their homes, out away from their families. Dreams gone. Everything changed in a moment. Sent away. New identities, new names, new language, new everything.

And I remember reading that, and I just stopped, and I was like, I felt like That's how I felt. Like, our world's turned upside down. Everything has changed now. And I felt I could identify with these. These people, this is a true story.

I had no idea where the story was even going. Like at this point in my life, I'm like, You're just chapter one. What's going to happen to him? You know, but I was drawn in, especially by the idea that it says. And God gave over.

Jehoiakim. To Nebuchadnezzar. in Judah and I just And I sat there and was like, okay. Or now what? And I kept reading, and you eventually get introduced to Meshach, Shadrach, Abednego.

And you see the command to bow down, and they won't do it. And all of a sudden, they get summoned to Nebuchadnezzar. And Nebuchadnezzar says, This is it. This is your chance. Here's the fiery furnace.

You can feel the heat on your face. Bow down and worship me and live. What God will save you from my hands, and their response to him. It was like the page, it exploded into life. When they said, The God whom we serve is able to save us, I wrote down in my little notebook.

God can save us. And I turned over and I looked in at my son and I thought, Okay, God, I know you can save him. I know this isn't the end of the story. I know you have his life. And I just sat there kind of hopeful for a second, like, Yeah, that's right.

You are the God who can save. You know, I look throughout scriptures: like, you're the God who rescues your people out of Egypt. You're the one that parts the Red Sea. You're the one that can send manna. You can do all things.

And I was charged with hope in that moment. And then I read the rest of the verse. I was going to say, but if he doesn't. And I was wrecked by that. When I read, but even if he doesn't.

But if not. We will still. Not bow down and serve him. And guys, at this point, you know, I just. I just sat there, really, probably with just a blank stare.

I probably had a thousand-yard stare on my face if you'd have walked into that room. And I was grappling with this idea that They were committed. To following him. Even if he didn't rescue them. And I was wrestling with this.

I loved, I loved the idea that our God could save us. I was like, why didn't he just put the period there? Why not stop that? You're cheering. Like, yes.

Stop that right there. It's good enough for me. And I just started to really work through there's something in the theology of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego that understood God could absolutely save them, but that God was under no obligation to do it. And here's the thing, and that did not anger them. They were resolved and surrendered to say whatever he wills.

And guys, I'll just be honest. I just. I wasn't there in my life. I could grasp with my mind exactly what they were saying. My heart.

could not comprehend. Why wouldn't God rescue my son? Uh But I knew what I was listening to, what I was reading, what I was looking at, what I was thinking about. I knew it was right. I knew.

I don't know how to get there. But I know there is where we have to be. And we don't have time to tell the rest of the story now, so you're going to have to stay tuned for day two because we got to go to how did you get to uncommon trust?

Well, it is always great to have these conversations with Eric Reed. And again, his book is called Uncommon Trust. Learning to trust God when life doesn't make sense. And isn't that just like the perfect book for the things that we're going through right now in our culture and in our time? And if you want his book, you can just find it in our show notes at familylifetoday.com.

Just click the link in those show notes. Every single day, families around the world are facing real struggles. And Family Life is here with gospel-centered help and hope. And when you become a Family Life partner, your monthly support fuels this work. And with your monthly gift, you'll become a part of a community that receives insider updates, which is pretty amazing.

Yes, it is. And who doesn't want to be a part of an insider community? You also get invitations to special events and more. Because together, we're helping families really grow stronger in Christ.

So join us. Yeah, just go to FamilyLifetoday.com and tap the donate button at the top of the page. Family Life Today is a donor-supported production of Family Life, a crew ministry celebrating 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most. Yeah.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime