My boy was but a few weeks old napping in my arms while my four year old sat next to me and we read about how God richly gives us everything to enjoy (1 Tim. 6:17). She was amazed at the thought, but it was the events that followed that made that day so memorable. It remains one of my most treasured memories of Amayah as her mama. And in the middle of so many messy days adjusting to being a mama of three, it is a lovely soft spot to remember in the middle of those times.
She asked me so many questions that morning with her brown eyes that kept getting so round at my answers. I told her how God is always wanting to show Himself to us, sometimes we just have to open our eyes and look how He is coming to meet us. She had all the wonder of having learned a piece of news that was completely remarkable.
After awhile, she asked if we could play outside. I slipped into my shoes, found two sets of little girls shoes for my older ones, then I gathered up Gideon in a blanket. Stepping out the door, I found a seat on the bench to nurse, and the girls followed. I don’t remember how soon it happened after we were out there, but Amayah was standing next to me there by the bench when a pretty, yellow butterfly landed right on her arm.
“Mama” she whispered with grand importance, but quietly, so as not to startle it. “God sent me a butterfly to show me He loves me.”
It was a matter of fact that she believed with all the roundness of her deep, brown eyes.
Ever since then, every time she sees a yellow butterfly like the one she met that day, she says “there’s my butterfly, mama.” And this past Thanksgiving, as a six year old now, the first thing she said she was thankful for was yellow butterflies.
She loves to chase them and giggle so hard at the way they flutter. And the sight of one always fills her with joy. She’s delighted just to chase after it and watch it fly.
It’s one of my favorite memories of Love on a week like Valentines Day.
I think it’s perfect. And maybe chasing Love is a little like chasing a butterfly.
When I was little, my brother and cousin and I, we chased down a butterfly right until one of us caught it. I can’t remember which of us it was who caught it. But anyhow, we put it in a can. It was great to think we could trap the fun and enjoy it as we wanted. But, well, when we opened the can again, the butterfly had no more life to flutter and fly.
Then, it became real, that the greatest enjoyment in chasing a butterfly is not in catching it. Butterflies are most lovely when they are free.
It’s just like the nature of Love itself.
Love doesn’t trap a butterfly. Love holds open hands.
Love doesn’t make demands. Love holds open hands.
Love maybe doesn’t grasp too tightly to the things it is given to enjoy. Love holds open hands.
Love can make space for things to be where they are and grow the way they can.
And how does one ever learn such a Love?
It’s hard to enjoy what you’re given without fear that you’ll lose it. It can feel impossible to Love with perfectly open hands.
And maybe, it helps to know that no human being has ever perfectly held their hands open in Love. Except for the One who held His hands open for us on the tree.
His death and resurrection, not only makes payment for the mistakes of our closed hands in love. It can also give purpose to the faltering steps of our closed hand moments.
We can always trust the One who ever Loves us with open hands.
He has never tried to trap us. When we wander, He loves to pursue us, yet never forces us back home.
He doesn’t condemn us when we close hands on the gifts He gave us to enjoy. When we close hands and all but forget that the real gift is the One who gave.
The chances He gives us to Love again are countless. Innumerable times, He pursues us again. It is the nature of our God plainly seen throughout His Word. So we will Love again. And again and again.
This is the life He freely gives us.
We get to always and ever learn how to be content following our butterflies and keeping open hands.
We are learning, with messy practice, how to enjoy the gifts He gives.
Even when they feel just slightly out of reach. Especially when they feel just slightly out of reach.
And maybe the way we follow God Himself is just a little bit too, like chasing a butterfly. I had never really thought about it before until I was reading this week about how the Israelites followed God in Joshua.
“As soon as you see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God being carried by the Levitical priests, then you shall set out from your place and follow it. Yet there shall be a distance between you and it, about 2,000 cubits in length. Do not come near it, in order that you may know the way you shall go, for you have not passed this way before.” Joshua 3:3-4.
The Israelites followed God, but they had to follow Him from a bit of a distance. In this scenario they had to leave some literal space between the ark of God and themselves as they physically followed. But they also followed from a distance in the sense that they could not talk to God directly themselves, but had to pray through the priest, if I understand that right. And they did not have the Holy Spirit inside them like we get to today.
In today’s time, we get to follow God closer than they, with the privilege of direct prayer through Jesus, and God’s Spirit inside us. And yet, we still don’t get to see God’s face or feel His presence the way we will get to one day (Rev. 22:4). We are still following God from a kind of distance and still trusting in what is coming.
We don’t get to hold His presence in our hands where we find instant and constant relief from the loneliness our spirits can feel. But we are learning to be content following Him with what we have, until we reach the day when we get to see His face.
When my little girl chases her butterfly, it’s the chase itself that is her great enjoyment and the source of so many giggles.
We are chasing beauty and chasing after it with open hands. We leave our hands open because we surrender to the promise of what we know is coming.
We are waiting for home and the loving face of our Daddy in heaven.
And we will wait with hope. Because after all,
it’s a short wait to get home when you’re running after Love all the way there anyway. Our Daddy in heaven does richly give us everything to enjoy.