It is the custom of the Coffey house to gather just before bedtime for a period of scripture reading and prayer. The stories we share would be familiar to most—Noah and his flood, Moses and his staff, Jesus and his cross. Each are read and discussed and questioned at length. Nothing gets left out.
If this description of our religious home life conjures an image of four people huddled together in reverent silence, I’ll ask you to erase that picture from your mind. It is not like that. Very often one or both of the children will interrupt with sounds of various bodily functions. Or they will offer their own commentary about it not all being Eve’s fault or that sitting in a whale’s belly would stink or that Moses would have done much better if he would’ve had a lightsaber.
It is lite fare to be sure, a mix of holy and silly that ends with a firm foundation in the ways of God. My kids know what they believe, and they can defend it. These days, they must.
It is afterward, when the Bible is closed and hands are joined, that all silliness ends. We close our eyes and pray. Thanks comes first—for the good day and the sunshine and the mountains, for an absence of homework and an abundance of macaroni and cheese. Only after the thanks can the asking come. It’s always been like that with the kids. It’s as if children are born knowing how to pray and then slowly forget as they get older.
Chief among their asking every night for the past year has been healing for Ms. Pierce, a teacher at their school suffering through cancer. There have been days when her mention was brief—“God please help Ms. Pierce”—and days when it was much longer. Yet neither of my kids have wavered in their conviction. The faith of children overshadows the smallness of their bodies, like the oak in the acorn. They never doubted that God would make her cancer go away, even if everyone else did. Because God is bigger than sickness. Bigger than even the sunshine and the mountains. To them, miracles are a given and the hand of the Almighty rests upon us all.
Every night, they prayed.
Tonight, they did not.
There is silence in our home as I write this; the only sound is that of my pen sliding across a pad of paper. But if I listen closely I can still hear the quiet sobs of my daughter, who has for the last two hours refused to surrender her despair to sleep.
Ms. Pierce has passed on.
Hers was a quiet death, one that provided peace after a year of pain. For her family, this day is almost a release, the dropping of a burden too heavy for them to bear any longer. There are times when God delivers us from our mortal pains, and times when He delivers us through them. Ms. Pierce went through, and that was God’s holy and mysterious will.
But those words will not comfort my children. They are too young to understand such things. And as I sit here in the fringes of lamplight surrounded by this dark night, I cannot help but think that there are times—many times—when I believe I’m too young to understand them, too.
To my children, Ms. Pierce’s death means the miracle did not happen. That either God did not hear them or He did not care to listen. That they did not pray hard enough or believe hard enough or that they were bad in some way. I’ve talked with them, told them that wasn’t true. It isn’t working yet. There is wisdom that comes from the going and wisdom that comes from those who have gone, but much of our truth sprouts from the former.
I’m sure God seems distant to them now. It’s a terrifying feeling, one that feeds a pain they’ve been blessed to have not felt before. They will mourn as we all must mourn. They will struggle with doubt and the value of their prayers. They will wonder of God’s love.
And they, too, will find that He is indeed never distant. That He is in fact closer to them now than they’ve ever known. Each heart must be broken against the hardness of this world, broken and pieced together and then broken again, that His light may shine through the cracks and illumine the world.
They will know that one day.
But it will not be today.
A conversation with God
I was at the book fair the other day and found a copy of The Prayer of Jabez for $2.99. I’d completely forgotten about that book. Which is odd considering how popular it was ten years ago. Seemed like everyone had a copy of that book. Or the Bible study. Or the journal. Or the workbook or the copy for teens or women.
It was quite the industry really, and the reasons for it were pretty apparent. Say a little prayer, and God will bless you in abundance. It almost seemed too good to be true, but there it was. There was even a verse to back it up.
I never bought a copy. Didn’t even buy the $2.99 copy at the book fair. Not because I didn’t (and still do) want to be blessed in abundance, but because once upon a time I said my own version of Jabez’s prayer without knowing it. The answer I got was a little different than his. And though that prayer was uttered at years ago, I still remember that conversation between God and me.
It was like this:
“You there, God?”
I’m always here.
“Can I tell You something?”
Of course you can.
“I have dreams.”
Wonderful! Everyone should have dreams.
“They’re great dreams. Really great.”
I should hope so.
“Yeah. So, I was wondering if, You know, You could make those dreams come true.”
Of course I can. Why else would I give them to you?
“Oh, I don’t know. Lots of reasons, I guess. Wait. You gave my dreams to me?”
Where else would they come from?
“I don’t know…me?”
I give you the desire. You do the work. Life is a partnership between you and Me. Not 50/50, though. More like 100/100. You give your all, I give Mine.
“Great! So I can have my dreams?”
If you work and you believe, yes. But certain things have to be done first.
“Like what?”
Great dreams require great people. So first, I must make you great.
“Now I like the sound of that. So I’ll be popular and rich?”
Popular and rich doesn’t equal greatness.
“Then what does?”
Love and kindness, faith and trust. Trust especially. You need to understand that it’s not your happiness I want, it’s your trust.
“Okay.”
Are you sure? This isn’t going to be easy for you.
“Sure it will. I can be that sort of person if it means I’ll have my dreams.”
You don’t become that sort of person to get your dreams, you get your dreams because you’re that sort of person. There’s a difference.
(Silence.)
You think your dreams will bring you success, but some of the most miserable people in the world are the ones who’ve gotten everything they’ve always wanted. Stuff doesn’t bring joy. Only I do.
“Oh. So maybe my dreams aren’t all that good for me?”
Parts are. Not all. But that’s okay. I can give you better things than those.
“When I become great.”
You don’t have to be great for Me to bless you. But for your dreams, yes. You must be great.
“I still want to be great, even without the dreams. But the dreams would be nice.”
Wonderful!
“So…when can we start?”
We can start now.
“I was hoping You’d say that. Then I pray You’ll give me love and kindness and faith and trust and make me great.”
Good. But remember, there are two things that I must give to everyone in order to make them great and realize the dreams I have for them.
“Grace and blessing?”
No. Time and trial.