Today I sit in a coffee shop at a tiny table by the staircase, here with the purpose of writing. I have been here for about five hours now. If I were on schedule I would be finishing this post by now, but I am just getting started. I spent the last few hours at this table making purchases and completing projects that were on my list for earlier this week, as well as giving my heart and mind space in my journal to catch up to where I am today, because this is where my week is. And it helps my spirit rest into the day to say where it is.
I’m carrying a mix of beauty and sadness and unsettled places over several things: events of the week, tragic loss in the community, and also transitions that we’ve been moving through in the quiet over the last year. Perhaps it is just as well that I got a late start today, for while I have a feeling of where these words are going to go, I think I need more space to sit with it. How do you settle in on the inside, when the story that you’re living can often feel so unsettled through and through?
I’d say more, but I have to pick up my kids now, so I’ll be back soon.
Here I am again a week later, and I am at the same little table by the staircase in the corner of my favorite coffee shop. I have sipped my coffee while I sat for a bit with a good book, and I have journaled out bits of my thoughts and feelings of the morning.
Today when I pulled into the parking lot, I sat for a bit with gentle tears, like dear friends that bid my heart home.
Because tears might come when we all witness how life is so short and how we need each other so. And tears may be appropriate when the gifts of each of our personalities that are designed as means from which to be there for our neighbor, are also the very means we can tend to misuse in ways that don’t foster connection and with-ness at all. Tears are a right response when we desperately need the One who holds the story, the One who sees unspoken sorrows, the One who will make straight the crooked paths. Tears rise from a soul like a poem, an echo of the heart.
Tears bid us to know where they come from. They like to send us searching the heart, a place that is not simple, nor free of flaws, but how wild and beautiful it is.
This morning my little boy had tears that wanted to come. Because it’s been near a month since he began a new season of having sudden moments of fear when his body language quickly changes and he tells me that he is afraid. In the last week, we keep being drawn back to Psalm 16 where David begins with the words, “Preserve me, O God.” And we’ve found a four word prayer and a little song for Gideon that helps to calm him in those moments. And even while he’s still unsure, that prayer and song help the fears to not be so overwhelming, helping to carry him to the next thing. Just before he walked away from me for the morning today, he spoke his four word prayer, “God, keep me safe.” I love to hear the needy way he says it.
Tears and fears both, can drive us to remember God.
David’s psalm begins with the plea, “Preserve me, O God, for in you I take refuge.”
I can relate to my son’s sudden moments of fear that can sometimes feel as big to me as if I was a child myself. It is those moments that draw me to the words of this Psalm. I imagine that David could relate to those moments too. The way that David begins his psalm makes me think that perhaps this whole psalm is written as a response to fear in his heart. He sees his fear and he responds with prayer.
I desperately need to know where his prayer took him.
David goes on from there to name who God is in his life (verses 1-5). He names God as his refuge, his Lord and the One who He has no good apart from. He speaks of delight in all who belong to God, the Lord, and the sorrow of those who follow other gods. He identifies God further as His chosen portion and his cup who holds his story. David knows God as his satisfaction and the full security for his life.
Then, in the light of all that David remembers, all that He does know God to be in his heart of hearts, David redefines where he is. He defines where he is, not through the lens of his fears, but through the lens of who his God is.
In verse six, David names the story different from whatever his fears may have been saying before. “The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; indeed, I have a beautiful inheritance.” Upon remembering who his God is, David remembers that the story is beautifully good, especially because of the inheritance that waits for him.
This is when David comes to verse seven. “I bless the Lord who gives me counsel; in the night also my heart instructs me.” When David talks about the Lord giving him counsel, it states something that the psalm has been showing us all along. In the light of who God is, the story always becomes more clear.
David praises the beautiful counsel of God who illuminates our paths simply by who He is.
Coming from the flow of where the psalm has carried us, I would think that in talking about his heart instructing him, David may have been rejoicing in the feelings that drove him to remember God. Or possibly, he was grateful for the light of who God is that was shining into his heart through prayer and helping him remember what he most deeply knew and believed inside of his heart of hearts.
David does go on in light of setting his gaze on who God is and how that changes the story, to remember with surety where his life truly stands and what he does believe and know securely in the depths of his heart.
In verses 8-10, David meditates on the security and belonging that he knows he has in God. “I have set the Lord always before me; because he is at my right hand, I shall not be shaken.” In the firm knowledge that his life cannot be shaken, we see in verse nine, that David has gladness of heart, rejoicing in his being and fullness of security. “For you will not abandon my soul to Sheol, or let your holy one see corruption” (verse 10). In the depths of his heart with his sights set on God, David knew that God would not abandon his soul or let him go to corruption. God would not abandon his soul and this is what David needed to rest in.
David closes his psalm in honor of the God who reveals his path. “You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”
The God who reveals David’s path, was showing him a path of life, joy and pleasure, to the fullest and forever.
It brings us back to the part of David’s psalm where he redefined his story through the lens of who his God is. “The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; indeed, I have a beautiful inheritance.”
How does one go from a needy plea of “Preserve me, O God.” to a satisfied realization, “The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places”? Both of these prayers are good and needed. Both of them are mature places to go with the heart inside of us. But the heart inside me cannot always find that second, satisfied prayer from an authentic place unless it goes through the first prayer.
I can readily find an authentic need to give that plea: “Preserve me, O God.” Yet, each time I have need for that first prayer, I want it to lead me to the other,
just like it did for David.
David’s psalm shows our hearts the way and we could learn from it for a lifetime.
Five days after writing through this psalm, as I finish cleaning up dinner, and getting my girls ready for another day of school, as I kiss my babies goodnight amidst the stories and songs, move the wet clothes to the dryer, and settle the dogs for the night, it feels grounding as I go, to tell myself where I am, for all of the day had been feeling scattered with places that I’m learning how to move through.
I’m moving through the learning to let go of where we were.
I’m moving through more of stepping into the now of where we are.
I’ve been laying down what is past and picking it up and laying it down.
And it is hard to learn where everything belongs.
The next morning, when I get home from taking the girls to school, I can’t stop looking longingly at my dining room window. It’s my favorite spot in the house and I’ve long thought it would be lovely to have a cozy spot next to it to sit in the rocking chair with my coffee and a book for just a bit. But there is no rocking chair there and I’ve always told myself it wasn’t very practical, that a rocking chair wouldn’t fit well in that corner and I’d have to scoot some chairs. But this morning I realized, there are no rules about this, and putting a rocking chair by the window for the morning doesn’t mean it has to stay there all the time. So I gave myself what I wanted all along. I grab the rocking chair from the next room and make my little morning dream come true. And it felt wonderful and restful. And I suddenly wonder what other magical possibilities could lie all around me.
Like the possibilities of what we can do with memories. Where do I keep my memories? I long to find where some of them are living and move them to where they’ll bring life.
Truthfully, I don’t know how to let things go, to lay things down. And most days I have no idea how to step into the day without one eye on the unsolved things of days past. Places I’ve come from and seasons that aren’t the same as what they once were, or what I hoped they’d be.
And the feelings carried can be a great mix of grateful, glad assurance about where we’re going toward and also sad, unsettled places about where we’re coming from. It gets even more mixed than that too, for both beautiful and hard memories can come from the same places you’ve been in before. Then also, finding new places, people and ways to live into, is itself both beautiful and hard at the same time too.
And perhaps when we set our sights on who God is, we can acknowledge the hard things for the plain truth of what they are, even while we also learn to see the plain truth of all that was and is truly beautiful too.
And when we feel the fog of hard memories and hard truths about what did happen, it’s the beautiful memories reflected in the light of our beautiful God that give us some firm footing. We don’t have to wonder what to do with those memories. Even the hardest memories that we cannot understand at all, usually have beautiful memories that we can find living right alongside them. And it’s those beautiful memories that carry us forward, that help us see the beautiful moments in our present and lead us to trust in the beautiful moments of the future. The story has taught us that beauty will always be there to meet us, even amidst the hardest times. For every past, present and future, beauty gives us firm places to stand when nothing else makes sense. So even when we find that we must learn to lay down our hopes of how the story would go, we never have to leave every single thing behind.
So we will walk down the halls of our memories that hold hard things and even while we grieve the hardest parts, we will let the light of our beautiful God show us the beautiful things. For those things are ours to keep forever and bring into our present. We will pick them up and dust them off and see them for all of the beauty that they are. These are the beautiful things that we will keep with us, coloring the framework of how we see today.
We never need let go of any of the Love we’ve ever known. That is what will always be there to help us step on in Love for today.
The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places.
For in every last hall that this memory of mine can go, there are pleasant places all along the way. And those are mine to keep for always.
We get to decide where our memories live inside of the home of our minds. The beautiful ones don’t have to stay back in the halls we’re learning to let go of. For in the loss of what we don’t have anymore, it’s grateful memories that carry us onward and help us keep on to find the life.
No beauty we’ve ever known is trapped in the halls behind us. And every single beauty we’ve ever known behind us is but a hint of the beauty that is yet before us.
So while we keep on releasing our grasp of the halls we’ve already passed, we will bring all of the Love and the beauty with us to keep us stepping on into what is yet to come.
And we praise the One who reveals to us the path of life.
In His own presence there is fullness of joy. At His right hand are the pleasures that last forevermore.