I wrote this more than 20 years ago. The sentiment is unchanged. This essay is part of my second book, Lessons Along the Journey.
-------------
Though
our feelings come and go, His love for us does not. It is not wearied by our
sins, or our indifference; and, therefore, it is quite relentless in its
determination that we shall be cured of those sins, at whatever cost to us,
whatever cost to Him. – C. S. Lewis
My son disobeyed, so I had to discipline him. But that bothered me because I wanted him to go to the ball game as much as he wanted to go. Maybe more so.
"This is going to hurt me more
than it hurts you," I said, jabbing the air with my finger.
I don't know how many times I said
that to our children while they were growing up in our home. Hundreds of times,
I'd bet. And every time the words flowed across my lips, I knew from their
eyes, they didn't believe me. I understood their skepticism because each time I
mouthed those words I could hear my mother say the same thing to me so many
years before.
I never believed her either.
After all, I was the one restricted. Not her. I was the one disciplined. Not
her. I was the one . . . always. Not her.
Mom did many things in those
years while my sister, Andrea, and I were growing up . . . many things that
hurt her more than they ever hurt us. In 1955, when our father deserted us for
another woman, single mothers had little recourse to government aid. Welfare,
as we know it today, didn’t exist. There were no food stamps, Medicaid, or rent
assistance. Mom, an attractive twenty-eight-year-old woman, could have packed
us off to an orphanage and gone on with her life. Instead, she went to work.
Not one job, but two.
I didn’t know it then, but Mom
struggled to raise us. After Albert left, our family hovered near poverty. Yet
we always had food – even if it was spaghetti with ketchup, or boiled potatoes
and butter. We always had clothing, even if we used cardboard to cover the
holes in the bottoms of our shoes, and our cuffs rose above our ankles. And I
especially remember we always had warm arms to snuggle us into bed at night . .
. before she left us with a baby sitter and hurried off to her night job.
"This is going to hurt me
more than it hurts you." I now understand the sentiment more than I ever
could as a child. I understand because loving my children sometimes means
sacrificing things important to me. Sometimes it means giving up my own time
and money and dreams and desires so they might benefit. Sometimes it means
giving when there is no more to give. And yes, sometimes it means saying no
when it would please them – and please me – to say yes.
"This is going to hurt me
. . . ."
That is why I often think of
another Parent who spoke those words, at least in principle, so many centuries
ago. Who can ever really understand His sacrifice? Who can fully grasp the
horror of an absolutely holy God offering His back to the Roman whip so our
sins could be forgiven? Who can really understand the heartache of the heavenly
Father as He watched His creation shake a collective fist in His face and turn
a deaf ear to His love? Can you and I ever hope to adequately understand texts
such as Romans 5:8, "God proves His love for us in that while we were
still sinners Christ died for us"?
As I grew up, and for years
after I left my mother’s home, I never knew my sin hurt my heavenly Father so
much more than it hurt me. I never knew my rebellion bore so much more heavily
on His shoulders than it ever did on mine. I never knew it was my guilt that
hammered spikes into His flesh. But in learning those truths, I found myself –
and still find myself – increasingly grateful for His love, His forgiveness,
and His sacrifice for me.
Someday my children may have
children of their own. And I suspect that, as the need arises, they too will
say to their sons and daughters, "This is going to hurt me more than it
hurts you."
I can only pray that saying it
will remind them of the King of Glory who said it most clearly on Golgotha –
and waves of thankfulness will wash across their hearts.
3 comments:
It sounds like you had a wonderful family, Rich. Even though you might not have known it at the time as you know it now, you were richly blessed.
It is an honor to know you even if it is just online.
Gabrielle
Thank you, Gabrielle. And yes, I do have a wonderful mother (and sister). I only know it better as I get older.
Wonderful post full of meaning. Thanx.
God bless you and your whole family.
Post a Comment