____________________________________________________________________________________
Children, and their parents, crave stability. When their
world is rocked by change, they are comforted by that which remains the
same. I have been reminding my children of late that the loss of their
mother, for all the pain, doesn’t mean that everything has changed.
Indeed when I put my littles to bed each night I, as I have always done,
remind them of these bedrock truths, “Daddy loves you. Mommy loves you.
Daddy and Mommy love each other. And Jesus loves you.” These are the
unchanging truths they can always count on, the solid ground on which
they walk. We that are left behind are still together. And I am
still me.
I am afraid, however, that I am not still me. This melancholy that
follows me about like a cloud hovering over Charlie Brown, that’s not
me. Waking up with less energy than when I went to sleep, that’s not me.
Uninterested in food, that’s definitely not me. I don’t recognize
myself in the mirror. Neither do I hear my own voice in what I write.
It’s a stranger that sits here crying in my office. ...
The Bible says that husbands and wives are one flesh. Christian
marriage pundits turn this into “Be nice to each other.” That is, we
are told about the importance of open communication. We are encouraged
to be as concerned for our spouse as we are for ourselves. We, in
rephrasing what God has said so that we might understand it, end up
further from the truth. We are not commanded to live as if we were one
flesh. Instead we are told that such is the actual truth. The one-flesh
reality means that I haven’t just lost the love of my life, but half of
me. How could I recognize me, when I am now only half the man I once
was? It isn’t quite accurate to say that when she drew her last breath a
part of me died. Instead, half of me died.
The good news, however, is the same. Half of me has died, and is with
Jesus. Half of me has no melancholy, but only joy. Half of me cries no
more. Half of me sins no more. Half of me loves me, and the children,
with a perfect love. Mourning, over the coming weeks and months, will
move to dancing, as this half of me begins to more deeply believe the
blessings I have in my better half.
I love Denise all the way to heaven and back. She in turn loves me
all the way from heaven and back. And Jesus loves us both as the great
bridge that not only brought us together, but keeps us together. May
these gospel truths give me gentle sleep tonight.
[Sproul Jr.s' post on Ligonier]
No comments:
Post a Comment