It’s when someone is gone that suddenly every interaction you’ve ever had with them becomes so much more valuable than you ever realized it could be.
We were in small group together. I shared mistakes in my life that I can near daily struggle to let go of guilt from. I cried to tell the story. She encouraged me and handed me a slip of paper with a note from her inviting me to come with her to another Bible study she attended. Though I didn’t end up going, it meant alot to me that she would reach out and extend the invitation. I only saw her every Thursday in small group, but she met me as a friend. One day, her and I and two more of us took care of the three year olds together in the children’s program for our group. I know she was a kind person to serve alongside. The things I remember most are her laugh, her confidence, her kindness, the joy that seemed to stay with her always, and the simple times she would make a point to catch my attention with a smile and a wave. It was simple, but it lifted me up. I didn’t realize how much so until she was gone.
Then, on the phone, there was the hard, tragic news. I don’t even know how to say it here. But maybe you will understand.
Uncontrollable gasps of horror came out of me like a reflex. Then, I was speechless.
I can’t imagine the grief of those who knew her best.
It’s a kind of tragedy that can bring in a whirlwind of questions, doubts, fears and a thousand other things that feel like they could be strong enough to throw the whole world off it’s axis if you don’t find a way through.
Different people process things differently. I only know my own grief. I’ve called a few friends, partly to cry to, and partly to hear their voice that helps the world feel more steady than the feelings inside. I’ve asked lots of questions. I’ve tried to understand until I felt like I couldn’t breathe. I’ve been lost to try to pray. I’ve had moments where I couldn’t stand the thought of crying anymore, moments when I just really needed to laugh. I’ve said a piece of Scripture over and over, louder and louder, as if maybe if I speak it enough times or say it loud enough, maybe it could make all of the fears go away. One of my kids missed a day of school this week and wasn’t even sick. I’ve had moments where I felt like I had to hear a friends voice right now or the whole entire world might just explode. I’ve told and retold the memories of the small number of interactions I’ve had with her beautiful self.
I share this simply because when I have big, scary feelings myself, sometimes, it can help me more than anything to hear that other people have big, scary feelings too. It helps me have proof that we can carry through.
And again, I can’t imagine the grief of those who knew her best.
I found the simple little note she gave me. Though it’s just information about where she was inviting me to, it feels so much more valuable now. To think of the hands that wrote that note. Maybe it could help me remember that all of us are just as fragile and every interaction with another human being is an utter gift. Even though the interactions I had with her were small in number, they were beautiful, just as she was.
Instead of the phone call with the tragic news, I want to hear her tell the story. I want to hear her tell about how she made it through whatever she was struggling with. I want her to be able to tell the world that story. The enemy of our souls has robbed this world of hearing that story. He is the only one to blame. That story won’t be told. Yet, my own story is impacted by her as are so many others.
For myself, the gift of her presence lingers only in those Thursday morning memories. Memories that seem just out of reach. Those memories were just here a moment ago when nobody knew what was about to come.
There is no way to go back to yesterday.
But there are a lot of ways to use the memories to love her today.
These simple ways of love are helping me find peace and a new perspective.
I can love today by accepting her in what she was going through on her last day and releasing what I can’t understand.
The more I accept the reality of her last day on earth, and surrender the need to understand, the more my own soul will find peace to continue in love and find beauty in the gift of the people that are still here around me.
I can love her by seeing her eyes in the eyes of the people around me.
I can know that all of us are susceptible to being overwhelmed by our feelings. Every soul is so fragile. And with that thought, I can treasure each interaction with another soul as an opportunity to share love today from one beautiful, fragile soul to another.
I can strive to be here for the people around me, just as if it’s for her.
I can love her by finding the helpers, the way that I would want her to find the helpers.
This is attributed to Mister Rogers. His famous quote: “When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’”
I love this, because it turns attention to something so hopeful. There are always people who want to help. And the truth is, we all need help hearing truth sometimes. When we can’t hear truth ourselves, we can look for the people who want to help us hear it. They want to help us through.
I can love her by holding hope, because even though the story of how she would make it through has been robbed from this world, her love has impacted a lot of stories including mine, stories that are here to be told.
I can love her by sharing the story of love, because by doing that, I am partly sharing her.
I can love her by fighting the one who robbed this world of her life. And the best way to fight him is prayer.
Even when we feel lost in prayer, God still knows when we’re praying and He still hears the groans of our hearts. We can always find a simple prayer. He makes it so easy for us to come to Him.
Satan, the enemy of our souls, wants all of us to believe that the story is hopeless. But he never has the last word. And he can never, ever separate us from the One who loves us.
We can pray. And as we pray, it will help us all to learn Love.
Toward the end of the funeral, the preacher said something about how the tragedy that happened could never negate the love.
It’s true. No matter what kind of tragedy could ever come, Love will always live on. This tragedy is no different. The love that took place in her life, both given and received, the love lives on. It cannot die.
Love is stronger than any kind of tragedy.
And it makes me remember that there actually was one tragedy that happened when love did die.
The catch was what happened to Love after the fact.
The worst tragedy that ever took place was when Love, Himself died. For the people involved, nothing could be harder to process than that.
Jesus’ friends had seen him heal the sick and raise people from the dead. They had seen him calm an entire storm with one single word. They knew what he was capable of. And I can’t imagine the feelings they must have gone through trying to understand how Jesus could just let Himself die. Maybe they felt like he was abandoning them. Maybe they felt angry that he would let this happen. Maybe it rocked their entire world more than anyone could fathom to think that the very One who was the only hope of the world was just letting Himself die. And he wouldn’t even let them try to stop it from happening.
Horror of all horrors.
But….
But, if they could have only seen what else was to come, they would not have been afraid.
Well, we have the Bible and we know the truth of what they could not see at that time.
For three days, they endured the shock of the worst horror of all time. Love, Himself, was dead.
But, it was only in death, that Love could win the victory that proves for all time that the worst tragedy in the world can only multiply Love more than anyone could have ever imagined.
With the risen life of Jesus, now it was true. Before Jesus died, he had multiplied bread to feed five thousand. But after he died, the tragedy was actually used to put into action the greatest multiplication of Love that could ever happen.
Now, Jesus’ own body, became the bread that was multiplied to be offered to the entire world.
Because the thing is, tragedy might think it can kill Love.
Or maybe more truthfully said, Satan might think that he can thwart love with a tragedy like this.
But truthfully, tragedy can only make Love stronger than it ever thought that Love could be.
Tragedy always multiplies Love somehow.
Or rather, God always multiplies Love through the tragedy.
If we could only see what is coming, we would rest assured.
That is why we know: we have no need to fear.