We talked about how school was going for her, how work was going for me. We talked about the trip, my excitement and fears.
I told her I was starting to get anxious, that I haven't been sleeping as well. I couldn't put words to it all, but as the realization of only one month left at home became more real, my heart began to ache at the thought of saying goodbye.
The jets turned off, and we were left with an uncomfortable quiet. Just before she went to turn them back on, I told her, "Wait. Just embrace the silence for a second."
That second turned into 15 minutes of the deepest calm I have ever experienced. It was as if I was looking into a movie set, a live picture that wasn't actually the real world. Huge snowflakes floated down without a sound, and the streetlight from the park softly lit the towering pinetree in the backyard. There was nothing to be heard, not even my own breath. The silence flooded my ears, flooded my soul. And my mind kept going back to one thing, "Be still and know that I am God." My heartbeat slowed, my eyes closed, and there was a hush that can only be compared to the world's sigh of relief.
The soft noise of wheels on wet pavement reminded me that time hadn't stopped, that life was continuing beyond that backyard. I opened my eyes to see that the snowflakes had become even larger and fell at a slow-motion pace. I gently rocked back and forth in the warm water and watched the steam meet the snowflakes, shrinking them down until they disappeared.
We are often told to sit in silence and listen for God. We are often told to be still. My attempts have never been very successful. My mind turns too fast and there are too many distractions.
But this time, God chose the moment. He provided the calm. It wasn't something I could have created myself, and it wasn't a moment of epiphany either. But what it did do was quiet my soul. Like Psalm 131 says, "Oh Lord, my heart is not proud. My eyes are not haughty. I do not concern myself with matters too great or too marvelous for me. But, I have quieted and calmed my soul. Like a weened child with its mother, like a weened child is my soul within me. Oh beloved, put your hope in The Lord, both now and forevermore."
He erased my fears. He melted away my anxiousness.
I have 30 days left in Holland. I know it is going to go way faster than I want. But The Lord is good, and The Lord is sovereign. He satisfies me in the morning with His unfailing love, and He calms and quiets my soul. I cannot wait to see how He continues to work and move in my heart throughout these next 6 months.
"For The Lord is good, and His love endures forever."
indeed!
ReplyDeletelove you my sweet!
Mom
Grace, you are such a blessing and are soooo blessed! I read this out loud to myself. Your gift with words is such a treasure.... wonderful, touching, inspiring. I was moved to tears as your gift rolled from my lips. without a doubt, you were named perfectly. GRACE, that is you. As a noun, As a verb. It is who you are, it is what you do. You, Dear Gracie, are gonna move mountains! "To whom much is given, much is required." Please know how very much you are loved! m.j.
ReplyDeleteJust read this now and was blessed by your words. Psalm 31 has always been my favorite Psalm. It calmed my soul many times when we were living in Taiwan.
ReplyDeleteJan Afman