"Out of the blue" - something that is unexpected, surprising, unanticipated, unforseen, unplanned.
We have used this phrase several times over the last week to describe the circumstances surrounding Mark's liver transplant: "He was out on the softball field, helping Laurie coach the 9th grade girls softball team when 'out of the blue' he got a call from the hospital, telling him that a liver was available that was a match for him and that he needed to come in for the transplant."
That sentence pretty much gives a perfect example of the definition. I mean, how much more unanticipated could it have been?? Mark was on the softball diamond, and didn't even have his phone on him; it was in the car and the hospital had to call Steve, who called Nathan, who then went and got his Dad. It's not like Mark didn't know that he was on the transplant list. But he didn't expect to get the call until a few years from now. And yet, here it was - right blood type, right tissue match, even the right size. So, ya, getting the call about the liver being available pretty much came 'out of the blue' in the dictionary sense of the word.
But I've been thinking this week that it came 'out of the blue' in a different sense. Over the past few months there have been small, almost undetectable signs that Mark's liver was deteriorating. His color was getting worse; he had gained a large amount of weight over the past 4 months; his MELD scores (indication of liver function) were getting worse; the lymphadema in his legs was getting worse; and he was very tired all the time. But there was no major crisis, like the last time, no obvious sign that things were about to go downhill. We just didn't know.
But there was a phone call, 'out of the blue', saying that a liver that was a match for him was available. And after they completed the transplant, the doctors told us that they expect that if Mark had not received the liver transplant this week, he would have 'crashed' sometime in the next 2 months and been in critical need of a liver immediately. Which, of course, is not really a good thing to need; 1 in 4 patients die while waiting for a liver transplant. But they didn't know that ahead of time. For them, as well as for us, this came 'out of the blue.'
James 1:17 tells us that "Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows." I think that Mark's liver did come 'out of the blue' - but in the sense that it was a gift from Mark's heavenly Father. He knew all about the deterioration of Mark's liver and how close Mark was to 'crashing,' and, out of His abundant love, grace and mercy, sent him this wonderful gift....truly 'out of the blue'!
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