2019 is ready to step in and I want to know how I can fix all the things and make this one life beautifully right? And Jesus pleads, look up. See his beautiful life.
I can only give my focus to my life or His and here is this cross to hold that hurts like a call that feels impossible to remember. It can make you feel the weight of a fallen heart that cannot for life remember to not forget what really matters.
“I tell you, do not worry about your life.” Matthew 6:25. His words are simple but Jesus gives them as words worth the whole attention. “I tell you, do not worry about your life.” I tell you.
I look at this life of mine, and how in the world do I take my eyes off of the sinking waters I sit in? I have to do something before everything falls apart even more. I have to fix it. I have to find a way out of this mess. And Jesus, He calls my heart. I tell you… He knows how much I need the small, quiet words.
One night, Nano comes home from work and it doesn’t take but minutes after he walks through the farm’s front door for me to open the gates of all the cares I’ve been brewing inside the four walls of this heart. I spill out in words all the weight of these pieces of life that are just not right. We can’t do this, Nano. What are we going to do? I shed tears and troubles. I want to know he hears me. He doesn’t say much. It’s getting late. As I’m on my way to tuck in kids for the night, he cracks a joke at the troubles in the laughter-language he breathes by. And in defense, I unleash more of this pity. How could he? I heave my frustration before I hold my head up and march to the kid’s room without looking back. I haven’t been refreshing to come home to tonight and in that moment I don’t care.
Seconds tick slow in between beds and the sinking brokenness of a heart that always forgets. Oh for a redo. And in the final night of three sleeping babies, I ache from my worry, from my mess. I hope desperately to find him awake. I long to make peace with our evening.
In the dark, the pieces of this old farmhouse sag under my steps. I push open the door and I’m frozen. There spilling into the dark are candles. And music. Two chairs sit pulled together by the heater. My Nano is there with his eyes on me. I didn’t expect this. Not at all. This isn’t a place we’ve been for awhile. And tonight? After that?
He stands up to take my hand and guides me to the chair. I follow his lead, breathing it in slow, uncertain. It’s dark but I need to see those eyes. I lean in to see him in the candlelight and love is what looks back at me. The flickering flame lights it up in those eyes. I had marched off in defiance and why would he romance me now? We sit there together with the music playing. I look down at my own nervous hands. I’m not sure how to take it in. I look up and his eyes are unmoving, focused on me. I had so much to say, and words still haven’t made this right. My feet fidget, so unsure in the glow of this love. I look up yet again. Those eyes know. In those eyes, it’s all right. My own eyes might spill.
He picks up a cup of water from the end table and holds it out to me like a gift. Now the tears fall. What he offers is love for all of this mess. Simple. Imperfect. Catch-your-breath. Love.
I wrap hands around the cup slow and pull it up to my lips. I’ll drink this love.
I drink it – slow, like it feels like I’m doing something sacred but I don’t really know. It’s done, and I set the cup back to the table… He’s still looking.
There’s this something small inside me that’s almost frightened by how this feels. Is it real? I need to feel his touch. Looking into those eyes for reassurance, I reach uncertain for his hand. He takes mine in his. My reaching hand is held. Strong, quiet love that holds me in my mess.
This is unabashed romance. This is the sound of grace….
Love like Jesus coming from the quiet strength of my husband, pursuing my heart while my heart is a mess.
What do you do with this?
What do you do when you spill out all of this frazzled mess of a year that you need lots of words for and Jesus tells you. I tell you… What do you do in the glow of this quiet strength that doesn’t even begin to try to tell you what to do with all the mess you feel? Jesus listens, but He’s not saying much. I want words.
I carry on with my head up until it kinda sinks in… and when I come back to Him with all the things I want to fix, He sits there with the glow of His Love for me to receive. And there is so much inside me to say, and I didn’t remember how hard it is to just sit here and receive the warmth of His quiet Love. This quiet Love is His answer.
I wanted words but that’s not what I needed. I wanted noise, but sometimes Love is a simple, fierce quiet.
It is a mystery that grows fullest not in the words, but in the quiet places where we discover slow the art of receiving grace.
Grace isn’t waiting for me to say anything. Grace doesn’t need me to figure out what I did wrong and give a proper apology. Grace only waits for me to sit down in the gift of this and absorb the quiet Love that is here. The quiet Love of a heart nailed naked in front of all the judging people to pay the ransom for my own failing heart that only hurt him.
Grace simply sits here with me quiet, loving me, waiting.
I look up and I don’t know how to take this in.
I want to find beauty in everything expressed. But grace expresses itself with this strong quiet. Grace sits here beside me, unmoving, focused on me.
Grace might not give a lot of words, or a lot of clarity, but grace offers me quiet love to drink.
Grace only waits for me to reach out my hand and receive love.
All the things that the turn of a year comes without, all the longed-for things, maybe they’ve been there all along, right alongside in the silence.
2019… You’re coming has sounded so quiet to me. Teach me slow and gentle the art of embracing your quiet beauty.
And maybe what a new year needs is less a list of doing things and more a manifesto of remembering things for a forgetful heart to cling too. My soul needs a daily heart-cry to hold to for all these things that make it shy away from the life of love I need.
For when my heart does all the nervous things that love grows from, I tend to shy up and try to sweep it all away so I can fix it… instead of letting it be exposed to the life of the One who already fixed anything I could ruin.
I don’t want to sweep it all away. And I hold a manifesto in hope.
We will not pretend our shy feelings don’t exist, but we will let them have the space to find their purpose. We don’t need to sweep away what we feel, but to let Jesus pour His life into all that we feel.
I invite you to come with me in the shy soul’s manifesto and a venture to enter the silence…
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