Bethel worship leader Kalley Heiligenthal says quarantine began for her after daughter's death

Kalley Heiligenthal said she has been in quarantine as she heals from the passing of her 2-year-old daughter (Photo: Instagram/Kalley Heiligenthal)

Bethel worship leader Kalley Heiligenthal has encouraged people to know that God is still "king" and "shepherd" even in the midst of so much fear and uncertainty around the coronavirus pandemic. 

With large parts of the world in lockdown at home, Kalley made the heartbreaking admission that she had chosen to isolate herself after the tragic passing of her young daughter Olive as a way of finding healing.

Olive was only two years old when she died suddenly just before Christmas last year. 

"I've been quarantined. It's been three months, mine began shortly after Olive's memorial," Kalley told her Instagram followers.

"Jesus asked me to. Isolation from the majority, distance, space to heal. I'd resisted it, downplayed it, overplayed it, and then gave into it.

"I'd rather have stayed up and moving, looking triumphant and unfazed, but I had broken bones and He's too good to let me move around like normal on them.

"He was clear they weren't broken from defeat - there's no defeat here. But pain? Yes. Loss in this lifetime? Yes." 

She admitted to feeling angry and disappointed but said that Jesus never left her and only "pulled in closer" as she worked through these emotions.

"He's refused to leave, even when I thought He should," she wrote.

"I tried to play it cool, tidy, right and holy, but could only do that so long before it all started to come out. I never doubted His goodness, but anger, disappointment, searing loss had to get out."

She said she was learning through it all that "we never outgrow our need for a good Father" and that she was trusting in Him now with the coronavirus pandemic.

"I'm learning shepherd Jesus, who's acquainted with valleys, not afraid to walk it with us. Not rushed to move us along, because He doesn't ever do anxiety," she said.

She invited people to find rest in Him now instead of waiting for the pandemic to be over.

"He is Life when the planet is gripped with a fear of death, grappling for control. One of my biggest stances of faith now is to trust He means it when He says to come to Him when weary and burdened, not after," she said. 

"Rest comes from His hand, not from answers or resolve or things back to normal. I'll never have my old normal, who knows when you'll get yours. But He does make all things new.

"I don't know how but He does and He will. In what the world is facing now, He's King, He's Shepherd. He defeated death, disease and torment and so secure in it that we all can afford to hide in Him and pull from His confidence in this time.

"God, keep us in your wing as long as we need to get all you have for us here. He's making us soft, strong and unafraid. Let's let Him." 

News
The story of the pope known as the Apostle to the English
The story of the pope known as the Apostle to the English

Pope Gregory I, known as Gregory the Great, was one of the most important popes, and his positive legacy is still felt today - not least in Britain. This is the story … 

Christians redouble efforts to stop assisted suicide
Christians redouble efforts to stop assisted suicide

Christians are doubling down on efforts to stop assisted suicide becoming legal in England and Wales after Kim Leadbeater's bill was debated in Westminster on Friday. 

Christian leaders unite in Westminster to kick off 2025 ‘Shine Your Light’ evangelism campaign
Christian leaders unite in Westminster to kick off 2025 ‘Shine Your Light’ evangelism campaign

More than 100 Christian leaders recently came together at a parliamentary reception in London for the launch of Shine Your Light 2025 — a bold evangelistic initiative aiming to bring the message of Christ to streets, neighbourhoods, and marketplaces across the UK.

Darlington nurses still waiting for single-sex changing space despite Supreme Court ruling
Darlington nurses still waiting for single-sex changing space despite Supreme Court ruling

An NHS trust has been accused of continually flouting the law around women’s rights by requiring female nurses to get changed in front of a biologically male nurse who goes by the name of “Rose”.