Offering Comfort To The Grieving

“I have heard all these things before.
    You men give me trouble, not comfort.
Your long speeches never end!
    Why do you continue arguing?
I also could say the same things you say,
    if you had my troubles.
I could say wise things against you
    and shake my head at you.
But I would say things to encourage you
    and give you hope.

“Nothing I say makes my pain go away.
    But keeping quiet does not help either. Job 16:1-6

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Weeks into our grief a friend asked me, “What kind of things do people say that aren’t helpful?” Well, I’ve been thinking on that for the past 4 months. I can say that I crossed paths with a lot of Job’s friends.  But I was also touched by some remarkable and gifted comforters.

Some interactions were honestly cold. Some where well-meaning, but still hurtful. When someone loses a child don’t try to sell them Amway. Really.  Don’t say you understand if you don’t. Don’t make unequal comparisons. Losing dogs and grandmas is not the same pain as holding a dead child in your arms. Don’t say you can’t imagine. Don’t say you wish you could take the pain. Don’t speak until God puts the words on your lips.

At first I thought the only people that could offer true hope were other moms who lost a child. But as I sit here and meditate on my many comforters I see that isn’t so. I was touched by many hands of love from all over. I want to introduce you today to some of the comforters that blessed me in my darkest hour. May you be blessed by them today as well.

My comforters weren’t afraid to weep with me, hold me or sit beside in silence.  They girded themselves for the battle trenches and climbed in a deep hole with me. As they came and went, they picked up a piece of my burden to make their own.

My comforters offered few words and much heart.

One woman sat behind me during the visitation to cover me in prayer.  She just touched me. Her eyes spoke sympathy. Her words to me were few, but her words to my Father were many.

By the end of the visitation night, hundreds of people came through. My arms hugged them all.  My energy was drained. But there were a few memorable people who poured energy into me as they held my weary body and kissed my salty cheeks.  There was a  woman who knelt down to me. She got  on the floor and folded me into her embrace. She gave me what she had to give- her strength.

I received a letter from a stranger in Florida who prayed all night because God put my name on her heart. Another woman sent me a locket with ALL of my babies birth stones in it. Another sent a necklace with Azaiah’s name and birthday inscribed.

Many of my brothers and sister offered themselves continuously for weeks. They managed my home, fed my children, washed my clothes and lifted the burden of every day life.

Just this morning one of my comforters posted this on Facebook:

“Sitting here this morning reflecting on the last several months of death that have surrounded so many people I know and love. As a person who is usually full of words, I can’t seem to find anything to say.”

As one of the people who has been surrounded by death, let me offer this encouragement today. No words are necessary. In fact sometimes it’s best. Offer your heart. Offer your time. Offer your sincerity. Offer your tears, your hands and most of all your most fervent prayers.

The words of our brother and apostle, Paul, speak a beautiful truth:

“Your faith makes you give your lives as a sacrifice in serving God. Maybe I will have to offer my own life with your sacrifice. But if that happens, I will be glad, and I will share my joy with all of you. “

Phil. 2:17

Family Pictures

Our family pictures.

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2003

Whole Fam

2006

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2009

Our Clan

2011

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2012

As the reality of baby #7 soaks in, so does the reality of what I have lost. The past couple days I have grieved over the fact that I will never have a complete family photo again. I just grieve.

Today I don’t have any super epiphany to share with that. I have no “Ah-ha!” moment that has brought me to my senses. I have no magic words to dispense to other hurting moms who feel the same way. I am just sad. I am sad that my next family photo will have a piece of me gone.

How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul,
    with sorrow in my heart every day?

But I trust in your unfailing love.
    I will rejoice because you have rescued me.

Psalm 13

 

The Truth About Prom

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Chaperons don’t enforce morality; they force immorality to be discreet.  ~Judith Martin

My Facebook feed has been buzzing with response to a timely piece, “But It’s the Prom” by Steve Higginbotham.

So I figured, I might-as-well weigh in with another perspective.

Twenty years ago… oh that makes me feel not so youthful… I was a brand new Christian straight out the world. My first two years of high school were spent immersed in wickedness. My life was full of drunkenness, violence, vulgarity and sexual immortality. I associated with drug dealers and criminals.

Even though I knew better I was trapped. I sunk deeper and deeper into the pit of guilt and shame. I was hurting, broken, hopeless and helpless.

Then I found the Healer.

He picked me up off the ground. He covered me. He spoke life, “Now go and sin no more” (John 8:1-11).

I was rescued. I was redeemed. I was changed. I was also quickly convicted of how much I owed my new Master. My life was now indebted to a cause and to a Man much greater than myself.

He changed my life with these words:

As they were walking along, someone said to Jesus, “I will follow you wherever you go.”
But Jesus replied:

“Foxes have dens to live in, and birds have nests, but the Son of Man has no place even to lay his head.”

He said to another person: 

“Come, follow me.”

The man agreed, but he said, “Lord, first let me return home and bury my father.”
But Jesus told him: 

“Let the spiritually dead bury their own dead! Your duty is to go and preach about the Kingdom of God.”

Another said, “Yes, Lord, I will follow you, but first let me say good-bye to my family.”
But Jesus told him: 

“Anyone who puts a hand to the plow and then looks back is not fit for the Kingdom of God.”

I was now a teenage girl on mission. I unashamedly spoke the same truth that had just saved me. Instead of getting into fights in the hallway I got into bible studies. Instead of cursing, my lips spoke praise. I stumbled but I believed Jesus’ promises to be worth getting back up for.

I was honored to join the ranks of teens who desired to serve God in biblical proportions.

  • Joseph- 17 years old who fled sexual sin
  • Daniel- 15 years old who rejected the delicacies of the King
  • Mary- 14 years old who carried the Savior in her womb

So what’s that have to do with going to the prom?

Well, I’m just about there.

I wasn’t interested in dancing. I was interested in following Jesus. I wasn’t interested in high school drama.  I was interested in preaching the Kingdom of God. I wasn’t interested in loud, worldly music. I was interested in setting my hand to the plow and not looking back.

I didn’t spend my final days of high school planning my outfit for prom. I did spend my last days of high school planning for my first missionary trip to the Philippines.

Even more, with my new-found faith I had no desire to go and watch my friends and classmates drive the nails deeper into the hands of my Lord. I knew what most people would be doing there. There would be girls offering their bodies to boys. There would be girls experimenting with girls and boys with boys. There would be lust. There would be drunkenness. There would be drugs. Their would be filthy talk.

I had no desire to hear filth pour from the hearts. I had no desire to watch their lewd and lustful behavior. I had no desire to keep on participating in the sin that I had so recently been set free from. There are times that I had to be in the world, Prom night was not one of them.

I had enough of sin.

You have had enough in the past of the evil things that godless people enjoy—their immorality and lust, their feasting and drunkenness and wild parties, and their terrible worship of idols. 1 Pet. 4:3

There is no go-to Bible verse that declares an eternal truth, “Thou shalt not go to the prom.” It’s not carved on a stone tablet some where. Prom doesn’t make the glossary of the New Testament.

 But all the stuff that goes with it does sure does.

Surely you know that people who do wrong will not get to enjoy God’s kingdom. Don’t be fooled. These are the people who will not get to enjoy his kingdom: those who sin sexually, those who worship idols, those who commit adultery, men who let other men use them for sex or who have sex with other men, those who steal, those who are greedy, those who drink too much, those who abuse others with insults, and those who cheat. In the past some of you were like that. But you were washed clean, you were made holy, and you were made right with God in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God. 1 Cor. 6:9-11

Let’s remember this prom season, whether you are a teenage or the parent of one, our kids in Christ have been washed clean and made holy by the blood of Jesus. Let’s honor that as holy and sacred. Let’s not justify sin by saying we can be a good example in the middle of Sodom. Let’s keep our hearts, our hands and our eyes pure before a righteous God who sacrificed a lot to make you his.

Can I Trust the Bible?

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Hold firmly to the word of life… Phil. 2:16

In American schools we teach the works of Aristotle as authentic. Did you know there are 49 copies of his work in existence today? The closest one dates 1,400 years past his original writing.

How about Homer? His work is mandatory for most high school students in the United States. There are 643 copies of his work dating 500 years after his original work.

The authenticity of the Bible is often under a much different microscope.

Did you know there are 5,686 Greek manuscripts of the New Testament in human hands today? Those manuscripts date just 100 years from the original texts.

God’s truth stands firm like a foundation stone… 2 Tim. 2:19

The Bible is actually quite an amazing collection of writings. The word bible comes from the Greek work biblos, which means book of many books. That’s a better description of what the Bible really is. It’s one book that contains many books, 66 to be exact.

Those 66 books were authored on three different continents (Africa, Asia and Europe) by 40 different authors. Those 40 authors penned the books over 1,500 years in 3 languages (Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic). And there are no contradictions within those books.

All scripture is given by inspiration of God… 2 Tim. 3:16

In these diverse writings there is a common theme- the creation and fall of man. God’s redemption of his people and is unfailing love for humanity. Throughout the book, the promise of  salvation is declared to all who obey the word of the Lord.

But those who obey God’s word truly show how completely they love him. That is how we know we are living in him. 1 John 2:5

There are over 300 prophecies in the Old Testament that were fulfilled by Jesus in the New Testament, centuries later. Those prophecies concern his place of birth, mother, home town to his manner of death. MIT conducted a study to determine the odds of one man fulfilling just eight prophecies. You want to take a guess on the odds? 1 in 1 trillion.

The scroll of Isaiah the prophet was handed to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where this was written:

 “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
    for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released,
    that the blind will see,
that the oppressed will be set free,
and that the time of the Lord’s favor has come.”

He rolled up the scroll, handed it back to the attendant, and sat down. All eyes in the synagogue looked at him intently.  Then he began to speak to them. “The Scripture you’ve just heard has been fulfilled this very day!”  Luke 4:17-21

What about the apostles who wrote the New Testament? Were they reliable witnesses? Did they really believe what they saw to be true? Did you know that most of the apostles were martyred for their beliefs? They were so convicted by what they saw and what they wrote that they were willing to face prison, their own crucifixion and beheading.

After the scriptures were collected and translated into Latin, a period of time came when the common man did not have access to the scripture. Then a radical and fatal restoration of the word took place among the best scholarly men of the day. Beginning with John Wycliffe of Oxford University in the 1380′s to William Tyndale in the early 1500′s, these men risked heresy.  These “heretics” were exiled and burned at the stake to make sure that the Holy Scripture could be accessible and understood in a common language. They did it so I could have a Bible.

The simple fact that nearly everyone who paved the way for the Bible to be in my hands was persecuted or killed for it tells me something very important. Some one doesn’t want me reading it. And the cost to overcome that opposition was the blood of many men.

I trust the Bible with all my heart. I will walk by its statues. I will commit to its way. I will honor its God. And I will face every challenge of my day, knowing there is a Creator who orchestrated a beautiful story of redemption to pass on to me. And my spiritual ancestors believed in that story so deeply they paid the ultimate price to pass that life-giving message on to me. Amazing.

Now, are you too busy to read it?

I pondered the direction of my life, and I turned to follow your laws. Psalm 119:59

Previous posts: We Revere the Bible But We Don’t Read It and Overcoming the Barriers to Bible Study

“We Revere the Bible But We Don’t Read It”

“We revere the Bible but we don’t read it.” – George Gallup

 

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During a Facebook conversation, one of my friends said, “Too many Christians — or people claiming the title — are largely Biblically illiterate, unloving, lacking tact, and even boorish.”

Biblically illiterate. Whoa. Why are we known to the world as unloving, lacking tack or boorish in our beliefs? Because we are largely biblically illiterate. We don’t read the book. We don’t know the teachings of the Master. We may wear the name, but we haven’t really become a disciple or a follower of Jesus the Christ.

Did you know?

  • 92% of American own a Bible.
  • 75% believe it is the word of God.
  • 64% of Americans do not read the Bible because they are too busy.
  • 80% Think it is too hard to understand.

From Gallup to USA Today, National Studies show:

  • 50% Don’t know the 1st book of the Bible.
  • 1/3 of Americans know who preached the Sermon on the Mount. Some credit Billy Graham.
  • More Americans can name the 4 Beatles over recounting one single commandment.
  • 50% of high school seniors think Sodom and Gomorrah were married.
  • Most Americans can not chronologically order Adam, Moses, David and Jesus.

Christians, those are dismal statistics. Maybe you fall into those stats somewhere. That’s OK. It’s Ok to start there, but it’s not OK to stay there.

Our ignorance is leading us to social decay, immorality, the destruction of family and ultimately separation from a Holy God.

“God overlooked people’s ignorance about these things in earlier times, but now he commands everyone everywhere to repent of their sins and turn to him.” Acts 17:30

God now expects us to repent. Do we know of what? Do we even know what sin is anymore? We are supposed to turn to him. But how?

Read his letter to you.

Now the Berean Jews were of more noble character than those in Thessalonica, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true. Acts 17:11

Tomorrow I’m going to talk about “Can I Trust the Bible?”  Til then you can check out “Overcoming Barriers to Bible Study.”

 

Does God Work in the Lives of His People?

 Just as you cannot understand the path of the wind or the mystery of a tiny baby growing in its mother’s womb, so you cannot understand the activity of God, who does all things. Ecc. 11:5

 

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Then on the seventh day the child died. David’s advisers were afraid to tell him. “He wouldn’t listen to reason while the child was ill,” they said. “What drastic thing will he do when we tell him the child is dead?”

When David saw them whispering, he realized what had happened. “Is the child dead?” he asked.

“Yes,” they replied, “he is dead.”

Then David got up from the ground, washed himself, put on lotions, and changed his clothes. He went to the Tabernacle and worshiped the Lord. After that, he returned to the palace and was served food and ate.

His advisers were amazed. “We don’t understand you,” they told him. “While the child was still living, you wept and refused to eat. But now that the child is dead, you have stopped your mourning and are eating again.”

David replied, “I fasted and wept while the child was alive, for I said, ‘Perhaps the Lord will be gracious to me and let the child live.’ But why should I fast when he is dead? Can I bring him back again? I will go to him one day, but he cannot return to me.”

Then David comforted Bathsheba, his wife, and slept with her. She became pregnant and gave birth to a son, and David named him Solomon. The Lord loved the child and sent word through Nathan the prophet that they should name him Jedidiah (which means “beloved of the Lord”), as the Lord had commanded.

My journey continues. Many of you followed my steps through my pregnancy, birth and loss of my sixth child, Azaiah Stone. He was most certainly a gift from God. In his time with us and apart from us, he has been an instrument to transform our hearts. He hasn’t stopped there. His life and legacy have transformed the hearts of near strangers, turning them to Jesus.

Through many tears, I have watched the Lord. I stand in awe of him and I am amazed.

In the gripping moments of our grief and our pain, the Lord has continued to wash us with his mercy. For centuries, the Lord has given children as a testimony to his presence and provision. From Abraham and Sarah to David and Bathsheba. God says, “I AM!” through the seed of life planted within a womb.

  • I AM the God over your circumstances.
  • I AM the God over your pain.
  • I AM the God of great promises.
  • I AM the God over the grave.

Last week my husband and I found out that God has yet again placed life inside my womb. This seventh child is due on our precious Azaiah’s birthday.

Does God work in the lives of his people? Undoubtedly YES!

For when they see their many children
    and all the blessings I have given them,
they will recognize the holiness of the Holy One of Israel.
    They will stand in awe of the God of Jacob. Is. 29:23

What Do I Do When I Am Mad At God?

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His wife said to him, “Are you still trying to maintain your integrity? Curse God and die.”

A few weeks ago my mom was talking to a woman who lost her child about a year ago. The woman said, “I’m still so angry with God. Isn’t your daughter mad at him?”

This idea keeps popping up. I keep hearing things like:

  • Why did God do this?
  • Why did God let this happen?
  • God could have stopped this if he wanted to?
  • This isn’t fair?
  • If God loved me he wouldn’t do this to me.

But these feelings aren’t limited to those of us who have experienced death.  The loss of a job, marriage, house, abuse or about a thousand other bad things that happen to us leave us blaming God. Before we blame God, there are some really important truths we have to consider.

Death is our fault. 

Sin, death and all the damage that comes with it was ushered into the world, not by God, but by humanity. God didn’t want it this way. God tried to protect us from all of this. But we just wouldn’t listen. If you have never read the story of the beginning, now would be good time check out Genesis 1-3.

God never wanted us to experience death, tragedy, suffering or loss. God created us for a beautiful fellowship with him. After he created Adam and Eve in the garden he said it all in a few simple words, “It was very good.” 

But all these centuries later most of  us wouldn’t describe life on earth as “very good.” We describe our existence as everything from dismal, stressful, painful, lonely, sad to unsatisfying. At best we find a moment of peace in the chaos. Why?

When Adam sinned, sin entered the world. Adam’s sin brought death, so death spread to everyone, for everyone sinned. Rom. 5:12

Why is our first inclination as humans to get mad at God for something we did?

We sinned. We brought all this trouble on ourselves. In the parenting world I think we call it “natural consequences.”

Now,  if I’m God and I told the people I just created what to do and they couldn’t listen to one simple “DO NOT TOUCH” warning, I’m pretty sure I would say, “You deserve what’s coming to you.” I’m pretty sure that my predetermined plan wouldn’t have been to fix it.

Lucky for you, I’m not God.

He didn’t just say he’d help us fix the symptoms of our sin. He didn’t just say that he’d ease the burden we carry. He said, “I will carry it for you.”

The God I serve doesn’t do things to me. The God I serve does it with me. He doesn’t watch me suffer from his place on high. He dwells in the pit of the grave carrying me, carrying my grief, carrying my sorrow.  He doesn’t just take my pain, he takes away the source of my pain. He takes my sin and offers healing and forgiveness in its place. That is colossal.

Soak this in for a moment:

Yet it was our weaknesses he carried; it was our sorrows that weighed him down. And we thought his troubles were a punishment from God, a punishment for his own sins!  But he was pierced for our rebellion, crushed for our sins. He was beaten so we could be whole. He was whipped so we could be healed. Is. 53:4-5

We can blame God for the things that are our fault. Or we can surrender our anger and realize he suffered a great deal more to fix our mess.  In place of death and its sorrow God will make us whole and healed.

For the kind of sorrow God wants us to experience leads us away from sin and results in salvation. There’s no regret for that kind of sorrow. But worldly sorrow, which lacks repentance, results in spiritual death. 2 Cor. 7:10

 

City of Grief

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They drew near to the gates of death. Psalm 107:18

Since my son died, I have been granted access into a sacred world. The world of parents that bury their children. I always knew before that I lived on the outside of the gates. I felt it with every interaction I had with a mother who lost her child. I wasn’t in that world. And I really didn’t want to be.

But now, in my short time as a citizen of this community I have learned, we don’t want words of comfort from people who fain understanding.  We don’t want to be told what we “should” do or how we “should” feel. We don’t want people who don’t live here to say “I can’t image your pain.” The truth is we can’t imagine the pain either. But it is where we dwell. This is where our citizenship now lies.

And so, since divine authority granted me access into this world, as a fellow citizen, I feel I must speak divine  truth to its people.

Since I have been in this world I see mothers who boldly reject the idea of loving God. I have met mothers who run into the bed of a man rather than into the arms of a holy Jesus. I have met mothers who serve themselves and feed their whims rather than see the pain in their husbands or their children. I have met mothers who give lip service to Jesus and beg for his healing while rejecting his call to give up everything and follow him.

I have met you face to face. I have cried with you. I have held you in my arms.  I have agonized with you. I have brought your name to the throne of God even when you didn’t want me to.

And today, I tell you with all the life and love that is my body, you will never heal apart from your Creator. You will never find peace in your quiet moments without serving the God of the Holy Scriptures. Your pain will only multiply the longer you run from him.

Today, stop worshiping your fear, your anger, your doubt, and your grief. Yes, you live in the City of Grief. I do too. And what I have seen with my own eyes, is God lives here too.

His arms are out stretched. His voice is calling. Drop what you are doing. And run. Run to him.

 Then Jesus said, “Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.

Fighting the Depression Trap

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One thing I have learned in the past three months is that depression begets depression.

  • Fatigue
  • Restlessness
  • Sleepless nights
  • Lack of focus
  • Anxiety
  • Not eating
  • Letting things go

Someone asked me the other day how I deal with the obvious feelings of despair and dread that come with losing a child. The truth is some days I don’t deal very well. Some days I let the beast swallow me. Some days I don’t.

1. Throw Out Self-pity

“It’s not fair.” “I didn’t deserve this.” “Other people still have their babies.” “No one understands what I am going through.”

I actively barricade those thoughts from my mind. From the beginning of my journey into grief I made a conscious decision to let go of self-pity. God put me in this place. I have a choice. I have a choice to fight him or surrender. I have choice to resent him or trust him. I have a choice to wither away and die or bloom where I am planted.

Did my child die? Yes. Do I miss him in my arms? Every day. Do I still cry? Every day. Do I believe that God’s plans for me are for good and not disaster? With all my heart.

 For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. Jer. 29:11

2. Wake With Purpose

The days that are the hardest are the days I do nothing. Breathing doesn’t qualify as purposeful living. But the days that I have set a goal, even the night before, are much better, even joyful.

I have to admit, my goals are not always lofty. Yesterday my kids didn’t have school. I was struggling to find a reason to get out of bed. I decided to use the box of hair color that had been sitting on my bathroom sink for 4 days. It wasn’t earth-shaking, but it got me out of bed and my gray hair is covered up.

Some days I do set the bar a little higher, preparing a family meal, a bible lesson with my children, serving my husband, teaching a bible class or ministering to other hurting families. Some days I have to just let God be my purpose.

I cry out to God Most High, to God who will fulfill his purpose for me. Ps. 57:2

3. Be Real

Sometimes it is hard to go places where people don’t know me or the battle I am fighting.It’s  painful to wear a mask that portrays something I am not. But I do I find great relief in just being me. I have resolved to be transparent with where I am.  I answer the question “How are you doing today?” honestly. I hate the feeling of masking what’s going on inside because I feel like people can’t handle it. I may not give all the gory details, but when I’m struggling I let whoever is around me know.

I have embraced the fact that If I cry through the whole church service, that’s ok. If I don’t feel up keeping the house immaculate that’s ok. If we go out to dinner three nights out of the week, I’m good with that too.

If King David called himself a worm and the Apostle Paul called himself the worst of all sinners, I’m pretty sure I can be a sad mom and it’s ok.

4. Find An Outlet

Keeping in all the sadness, grief and emotion is a recipe for explosion. I have to get it out. I talk. I pray. I write. I blog. I cry.

5. Glorify God

Death will never be good, but there is away to glorify God even in the valley of death.  Simple trust glorifies God. Singing praise glorifies God. Ministering to other mom’s who have lost children glorifies God. Even if the face of death, grief and depression, God is still on his throne. I will still glorify his name.

No, the Lord’s delight is in those who fear him,
    those who put their hope in his unfailing love.

Glorify the Lord, O Jerusalem!
    Praise your God, O Zion!
For he has strengthened the bars of your gates
    and blessed your children within your walls. Ps. 147

Good Friday

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This morning as I reflect on the death of Jesus my eyes see this day from a  different perspective. Today I am seeing his death from the perspective of one of the spectators in the crowd.  This disciple followed each step of  the man who traveled the Via Dolorosa. This onlooker witnessed the senseless scourging, the brutal crucifixion,  his imminent death, and the abuse of his corpse.

Today I see the pain from the eyes of his mom.

It has not been that long ago that I held my son’s dead body in my arms. I am still haunted by that night in my thoughts and in my sleep. But my son he wasn’t betrayed. He wasn’t beaten. He wasn’t mocked. He wasn’t nailed to a cross like a criminal. My son died in his sleep. Mary’s son didn’t. My son died peacefully. In a way, her’s did too.

Jesus possessed enough power in his whisper to put an end to it all. Yet, he resigned. He surrendered. He died.

I weep with Mary for what she had to see that day.

I wonder how one woman could even physically endure such a day- the day of the death of the son she bore. The day her son took on the sins of the world.

I suppose Mary endured that day the same way I have. I believe it is not the end. I believe on the other side of death there is life. I believe there is life for my son because Mary’s son made the way.

For God’s will was for us to be made holy by the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ, once for all time. Heb. 10:10

They all joined together constantly in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers. Acts 1:14