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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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Let it Be

Let it Be

It was a little too dangerous to be out on the roads that had just claimed the life of a young father.  Great, treacherous flakes floated down from the clouds that hid the heavens.  But that didn’t stop them from coming.

Beautiful saints, every one, they came to give a soft place for the tears to fall, to embrace the broken, and to mourn with those who mourned the most.

Bonnie, who had been widowed younger than my mother—was my mother a widow?—was one of the first to come.  She came in, soggy from the snow, and grabbed my mother’s hands without stopping to take off her coat.  Her tear-stained eyes searched my mother’s face for the pain she knew was there and the pain she knew was coming.

They sat together in the steel light of the feather-frosted window, and Bonnie sobbed.  She sobbed for her dead young husband and she sobbed for my tall, handsome father, and she sobbed for my mother because Bonnie knew.

She sobbed because there was nothing else she could do.

There was nothing else anyone could do, and so, like Bonnie, they came in, silent as snow.  Dear friends from church, relatives, even neighbors–everyone came.  Some came for a minute, heaving a potted plant into my arms or pressing a fold of money into my hand for my mother before they flurried away so as not to be a bother.

Others stayed until the shadows grew and melted into the freshly-fallen snow.  They did not know how to leave a woman who had just been left all alone in the world with three young children and a house that needed fixing.  So they lingered.

They lingered until the little green house in the middle of the forest was filled up with the scent of the saints.  Even with the drafty windows and a wood stove that wasn’t quite up to the task, there was a warmth in that place unlike anything I had known before.  It was warm enough to calm the shivers that convulsed through my body, warm enough to stop my teeth from chattering, warm enough to help me believe that somehow, it would be okay.

I watched from the corner of the couch, from my little refuge behind the tall-backed adults and the nodding heads and the sad voices, and I saw Him.  Jesus.  Jesus in real hands and real feet and real tears crying over our Lazarus- grave when it was too late and there was nothing else that could be done.

How beautiful He is.

I rested my head on a couch cushion.  It smelled like my Sunday school teacher, who didn’t have any children but who loved children more than most women who did.  She had been there with me, and her fragrance lingered and filled up my space like a slow, parting embrace.

The entire house smelled like Jesus, in the remarkable way that Jesus smells like Dial soap and Old Spice and a kitchen full of casseroles.

Had He been there that day?    

In my mind, I went over all the faces.  Some old, some young, some full of their own agonies and some who were just learning how hope could be shattered.  Each with a story, but each willing to step in to the day when my story fell apart.  Just like Jesus.

It left me breathless.

Somehow, Jesus had come to my living room garden, and He had whispered to me, “Child, child.  Why do you weep?”

He said it in words that came through other lips, chosen messengers, but it was there all the same.  I clung to them as the bitter sleep drifted in and I thought to myself, if this is what it takes to see Jesus, then let it be.

I think of it, all these years later because we are in a hard bit of the road, right here.  I have told you about it, dear saints, and you have come in with arms that ache to hold me up and tell me it will be okay.  Some of you have cried with me because you know.  You have called and you have written and you have prayed for me even when you do not know me, not really.

You have been Jesus to me.

And I weep because it is so beautiful, I do not know that I could ever trade these moments even for all the answers I ever wanted that did not come.  I am surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, and it is you, dear friends, who cheer me on.  It is you, dear ones, who minister Christ to me in real hands and real feet and real tears that cry over my Lazarus-grave.

You have shown me Jesus.  I cannot wish for any other.

I am left with nothing more to say in my prayers but this: If this is what it takes to see Jesus, then let it be.

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God Showed Up

Dancing in the rain

The wind was a little wild this morning, and the clouds hung low.  I peeked out from under my covers and saw a sliver of silver-gray daylight and the cedars dancing through the storm.

Today was the day God was going to show up.

We have been wandering up and down and all through this wilderness, going where we believe God has asked us to go, but the strain of it has  nearly wasted me.  The hills are steep and roll on one after another like waves so we can barely catch our breath on the way down before losing it again on the way back up.

Then, at what we hoped was the very end of the journey, we came to a river.  We did not know there were going to be any rivers. 

Deception Pass WA

It was too wide to swim.

It was too deep to cross.

And we didn’t have a boat.

I stood on the shores of this great big river and I wanted to shout up to the heavens.  “Why did you lead us here?  We cannot cross here!”

Because it seemed a little personal, right then, when I had prickers in my socks and blisters on my toes.  No one had said anything about rivers.

A few other people joined us on the shore and contemplated the water with us.  “There might be a way to cross,” someone said.

My heart skipped over that little bit of hope.

“I think someone upstream has a boat.”

A little whisper came into my mind, “Have faith.  God will show up.”

So we set up camp and we waited.  We waited through one day, and another.  It was dark in the night and it was dark in the day.  I fought against the impossibility of crossing that little slip of water.  Fat, salty tears dropped into the waves, and I ate too many of the frozen cream puffs someone sent over for consolation.

Cream Puffs

Surely there had to be a way!  When was there not a way?  For heaven’s sake, I could see the other side!

But there was no way the first day, and there was no way the second day.

This is a test of faith, I reasoned.   Other people said it too, and we all nodded wisely and said faithful things and I stoked up my belief because this was going to work, this faith thing.

That is how we came to the third day.  This day.

And God showed up.

But God said no. 

Maybe it was a “not yet”–it’s hard to tell with God– but it wasn’t a “yes” and it certainly wasn’t a bridge or a boat or even a life vest.  It wasn’t anything my faith could conjure up.

The river remained, wide and lapping at the shores.  And we remained stranded with the great big wilderness behind us and the impervious waters before us and a God who said “no” and not much else.

But at least we were there with God.

And I thought to myself, on a grey day when the wind was wild and the cedars danced, that if all I have in this life is a great big wilderness and a river I can’t cross, it is enough if God is in the midst of it.

Marysville, WA

*This past week, my husband completed the long and arduous process of applying for Active Duty as an Army chaplain.  His paperwork (which was lost once) was resubmitted on time.  But due to a random computer error, his recruiter team was unable to submit his packet by the deadline.  All attempts to fix the problem failed, even though they stayed up until 3 am working on it.  

There was no boat.

But we are here at the shores of a great big river with a mighty God, and that is enough.  

 

 

 

 

 

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Hanging Out in the Hallway

Military Chaplain

It has been nearly a year since my husband came home from work and told me the private school where he had taught for five years was downsizing and he would not have a job in the fall.  It has been nearly a year of waiting, praying for open doors, flinching when doors shut, and trying to remain faithful instead of fearful.

But it has also been a year of beautiful provision, of seeing the hand of God in the embrace of friends.  We have been well-loved, and whenever I begin to feel like I am just another face in the crowd, someone flashes a smile at me and I remember I am treasured.  I am known.

It gets me every time and brings me to my knees.  I am so prone to doubt.  I quickly grow weary in the waiting.  But God provides for me still, independent of my trust in Him.  A stranger in a checkout lane presses a five-dollar bill into my hand and tells the children to pick out a candy bar.  My husband’s former principal decides to include him in part of the staff Christmas bonus even though Jeff no longer works there.  I receive a check in the mail from someone who hardly knows me but was told by my Daddy to take care of me.

I am reminded that I am a child, a sheep, a prodigal, but God’s love for me is audacious and unfaltering.

You’d think I would know that by now, but it takes the breath right out of me.  It has been a year of living in the lavish love of God, and still it amazes me.

But it has also been a year of hanging out in the hallway, and I wonder why I still get my fingers pinched in the doors that close.  It all comes from sticking my fingers where they don’t belong, I suppose.

Still, I wonder, why God has to shut doors so hard.  Maybe it’s because I have a habit of trying to force open the doors that shut.  I’m not very good at hanging out in the hallway.  I’m anxious to find a place to belong again.

So with trembling hearts we come to another door and wonder if this is the one that will open.  Jeff is in the final steps of applying for Active Duty chaplaincy with the Army.  He has been a reserve chaplain for well over a year and has found that it suits him very well.  He loves being in the field with his “congregation,” serving the men and women who serve our country.  It is a joy to see him enjoying the opportunity to pastor in a most unexpected way.

It has been a long journey, though, and an exhausting one.  The application process to the military is an unending pile of paperwork and appointments.  For months, he’s been hard at work at it, and we’re just about to the end.  Tuesday, he has an interview with the senior chaplain at Ft. Lewis.  Then, in mid-April, a board will review Jeff’s application and decide whether he’s in.  Or not.

And there is the nagging question of whether this is where God wants us at all.  It seems like it, but on the other hand, we love the local church.  Perhaps God is calling us to love a little congregation somewhere, or join a church-planting team that focuses on planting churches near military bases around the world.

Or perhaps the chaplaincy is right where God wants us.  It seems so, and our hearts have begun to hope so.  We’re about to test the door to find out.

Most days, I’m excited because we’re running out of places where God does not want us.  It stands to reason that pretty soon, we’re going to find a place to walk through.

But then, the fear seizes me at unexpected times.  I want to be wanted.  I want my husband to be able to use his gifts and be able to minister according to his calling.  I do not want to hear another no.  It’s easy to talk a big about faith but when the months roll on and on and the answers come in words that make me feel inadequate and unwanted, I falter.  Help me, Jesus.

Will you pray with us?  Even in my fear, I do not want to go where God is not leading.  I would rather have a closed door than an easy path where God is not.  Pray that I will remain faithful and steadfast in the waiting.  Pray for God to lead and thank Him for provision.  We are blessed, indeed, because we are not lacking.  We are dwelling in the lavish love of Christ.

Even if it’s in the hallway.

 

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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