I
sit down at my computer. My weapon of
choice.
I
am ready to write.
Something
someone said has reached down into me.
It has reached down so deep it hurts.
The
person said something untrue. Something
that takes who I am and crinkles it into something I do not recognize. I frantically try to pick it up, to lay it
flat and to make sense out of it, but I cannot.
So
I pick up my pen, or rather my keyboard and begin to write. In a matter of thirteen minutes, I have
started and almost finished twenty-two letters, but none of them seem right.
It
is not the words or the tone or the text.
There is something keeping me from writing, perhaps keeping me from
learning. This feels painfully like
something I am supposed to step back from and pray about, because some things
in life have no easy answers and certainly no easy cures.
They
confuse the mind and tax the soul. There
are things we step through and our souls sense the burning coals. The scars form and they cause us to stand
much closer to the One that understands scars.
I
lay down my weapon.
I
watch a video. That is what the twenty
first century person does to purge pain.
We stimulate our senses.
Sadly
the video is far from entertainment. I
am both confused and alarmed about the idea of terrorism and refugees. In my quest to understand I have found myself
following the words of Mr. Rogers. As a
child, I lived for channel nine. Mr.
Rogers Neighborhood was a source of both comfort and extraordinary life lessons. He told us as a child when he was frightened,
his mother would say, “Look for the helpers.”
So
I did. I was looking at helpers. People
helping refugees. People fighting
evil. A woman sat and told her story.
She
talked about her journey, her seven day journey from her home and the life she
knew. She had nothing, no food, and no
water for seven entire days. The story
was riveting.
She
continued to speak in her native language.
I continued to read the translation at the bottom of the screen. Then six words leapt off the screen and I had
to pause to put them into some perspective.
She said,
“My young daughter starved to death.”
I
cannot count the number of times I have complained about my ‘journey.’ I cannot begin to describe the insignificant
things I have found unfair or unkind.
I
would like to tell you in thinking about my journey I have kept the end in
mind, knowing every minute of every hour will be worth it in glory.
I
cannot. I have naively and selfishly and
stupidly complained. For the entire morning, I had secretly complained about my
hurting heart and demanded justice for my soul.
Beloved,
this life, and this journey between these two oceans is so unbelievably and
undeniably blessed.
There
has never been a day I have lived without water nor food. I have never wondered about the safety of
where I sleep. I have never slept
without a bed, a pillow and more than one blanket.
I
cannot imagine the tragedy of seeing my child do without food or water or the
tyranny of seeing her starve.
The
Apostle Luke knew we would see these days.
He knew through the divine anointing of the Holy Spirit that many of us
would have much, and he warned that much would be required.
What
IS it that is REQUIRED?
It
is living a life that is worthy of the call and the ownership placed on our
souls. It is speaking, doing, working
and living as if it is your very last day to reflect Jesus.
It
is not easy.
I
forget and I would guess you do to. But
I can do better and perhaps, just perhaps that is our challenge. Perhaps I need to look outside myself more
often and remember daily that giving a small portion of what I have is better
than giving nothing. I don’t necessarily
mean money. I mean the hard stuff.
What if we all offered a bit of time, a bit
of love, a bit of our comfort and a word of encouragement? What if we sacrificed our schedule for His?
What
if when I am faced with a crinkled heart or hurt soul I grasp the blessings
instead of nursing the bruises?
I
want to be a helper while I walk this earth, not a holder or worse a hoarder.
Our
looking within ourselves should not be for pain but for promise and hope and choosing to reflect His glory.
I so understand this journey past hurt to the loving arms of Jesus to love Him in it all!
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