"La Bible - Tamar Belle-Fille de Judas" by Marc Chagall. |
Though there were plenty of tears, we enjoyed laughter together as well, and I came home tired but grateful for the two days of worship, friendship, and reflection. Coming home, as so often happens, immediately made the theme more real. Suddenly, life was not as neat and tidy as it had seemed at a conference center in the mountains, where we showed up to 3 meals a day on the table, snacks offered at all hours, entertainment, schedules, and cleaning all provided for us. I came home to a very sick husband (fever, probably some version of the flu). After a couple of hours of getting him fed and taken care of, I reluctantly went to church. There, a woman who has been worshiping with us for a few months came into the chapel saying she desperately needed prayer.
(stock photo, google images) |
That's the hard part. You can't fix crisis-- your own or anyone else's. Hearing personal testimonies and lessons about God's faithfulness for two days did not temper the sadness I felt on hearing our friend's story. She was - and continues to be - a woman in crisis. She does not have many options. My only hope is in the God who redeems our imperfect options. Whether Tamar, Rahab, the widow of Zarephath or our friend in her wheelchair, God enters into unlikely lives. God knows crisis. And sometimes we know God best when we have no other choice - when we are caught in times of crisis.
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