Friday, June 30, 2023

fighting fear with truth

You came near when I called on you;
you said, ‘Do not fear!’
“You have taken up my cause, O Lord;
you have redeemed my life.
Lamentations 3:57-58

The most abundant command in all of scripture is repeated for us right here in this passage: “Do not fear.” I’ve done the biblical research and this is a fact. God knows our hearts. He knows we need His presence and person with us. And when He comes near He comforts us with this reminder to not be afraid. So how does this fit into biblical lament?

I am surprised at how much fear has come to me along with grief. They are not a pleasant combination, in case you were wondering. In fact, confronting fear has been the biggest task I have needed to do in order to now gain momentum and a sense of a good future. It is usually what I wind up talking to my counselor about, in one form or another. It is what has made me regularly seek God in my struggle. It has gripped me in a few sleepless nights along the way. I need this command to not fear! 

I am grateful to Ed Welch and his book, “Running Scared”, for this insight: Deliverance from fear starts by naming our fears, shining God’s truth on them, and knowing what fear is saying to us. Often what I fear is not based on known fact. It is a fabrication of my imagination gone wild. When I counsel others on fear I ask them to name the fears and write out what the fear is saying, to then refute the lie. And so, here are a few fears I’ve had to confront. They don’t overwhelm me anymore. They do still like to pop up in tired and weak moments.

“I will always be alone.” This is the worst one. And it tends to grow bigger at night. But the truth is… I am never alone! I never have been alone! Jesus is with me always. God’s Spirit lives in me. To combat this fear with the truth I 1) recognize God’s presence. 2) pray out loud (it really does help). 3) cultivate friendships and talk with people a lot more than I used to. 4) stay active because physical activity seems to generate a healthy perspective, particularly when I can do so outside and in a natural setting.

“I just depress other people.” Again this is a big lie. The truth is every day I am surrounded by people who honestly care for me, even when there are moments I am obviously a little sad. And they often tell me how I encourage them. And more times than not, I have good news to talk about. So I combat this fear with truth and make myself spend quality time with people. I do need to cultivate SOME solitude, but if I am finding it dragging on me, I try to find a new friendship. It is very healing.

“I’m just stuck here… it will never change.” No… I am not stuck. I am waiting on the Lord. There is a big difference! And that perspective turns the experience into a time and place of beautiful and powerful worship. God will lift this fog of uncertainty. God will build the bridge forward a few planks at a time as I continue to trust His engineering! God will be my courage. These fears will not rule my heart when I am clear on the truth and driven by it. And so fear is fought with God’s truth!

Thursday, June 29, 2023

God brings the grief


For the Lord will not
cast off forever,
but, though he cause grief, he will have compassion
according to the abundance of his steadfast love;
for he does not afflict from his heart
or grieve the children of men.
Lamentations 3:31-33

These observations about God need to be understood in the context of God’s judgment. Nonetheless, there are insights into God’s care for the hurting that apply in other pains. We need to read these insights with three truths specific to Jerusalem’s historic judgment in mind: 1) At this point in biblical history, Israel had for several generations rejected God’s rule and His law. 2) God patiently and passionately warned them through prophets. There were several small cycles of repentance that slowed His judgment of them. 3) God’s judgment, when it did finally arrive, was severe in spite of the generations of patience on His part. So their suffering ended up being severe as well. They only had themselves to blame at that point.

I am not sure that I can fully know then the exact kind of grief that Jeremiah laments in this book. Christ has taken all my judgment on the cross. I DO NOT believe that any of my present difficulties are a divine judgment upon my sin. But I do still have a level of suffering. Yet even with this faith perspective applied to my situation, I see in the promises made here several comforting principles rooted in the character and the purposes of God.

1. Grief is only a season. It does not last forever. Any difficulties now are temporary in the light of the big picture of my life, and certainly not even a blip on the timeline of eternity. I am hopeful that just as winter always changes into spring, this season will turn slowly and beautifully because God does not cast off forever. 

2. God takes responsibility for our seasons of suffering. This passage directly says God brings what causes grief. He knew what He was doing! He knew how I would be right now and in His wisdom and in His love meets me in the grief I have from what He has caused. He is in control then, and though I may not like where I am, I love that He is always here with me!

3. God brings compassion and grace to what He has caused. And this is the insight with the most comfort! It is why Job could say, “The Lord gives… the Lord takes away… blessed be His name.” I have known God deeper and better in life’s hard times than I have ever known Him when it has all been so easy. This is a precious thing!

4. Even judgment is not God’s first desire. He is patient. He does not willingly grieve or afflict us. I trust His heart on this, and believe that this is the case. I refuse to EVER be angry at Him or with Him, knowing these things about Him.

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

I’m waiting…


“The LORD is my portion,” says my soul,
“therefore I will hope in him.”
The LORD is good to those who wait for him,
to the soul who seeks him.
It is good that one should wait quietly
for the salvation of the LORD.
Lamentations 3:24-26

Coming on the heels of conviction that God is gracious, loving, and faithful, this next set of lamentations observations provides perspective on the hardest part of suffering… the hardest part is endurance. And the hardest part of endurance is waiting on the Lord. If I am honest, this is where I am now, and have been in various capacities since January 4, 2023.

There are two strategies for waiting that I see in these three verses. The first strategy is what I call “corrective self-talk”. Jeremiah instructed his own soul first… “says my soul” is a personal strategy. We must force ourselves into litanies of faith, putting a certain playlist on repeat in our minds. We should be rehearsing without stopping true songs of hope! Jeremiah just repeats two mantras: “The LORD is my portion.” “I will hope in Him.” And that is what one must do while working through grief and suffering. While waiting well, we engage faith. We refuse to let our souls dwell at length upon negativity. We slap ourselves to faith’s reality. “I WILL HOPE IN GOD!” This corrects our tendency to deep dive into the murky depths of the coldness of our misery.

The second strategy is to “concentrate on goodness.” The LORD is good to those who wait. In the moment, while I am waiting, God is (present tense) good! Yes… He is! We will bring good. He will reward the waiting. He will Himself be that reward. He cannot be anything less than holy, loving, gracious, and merciful as a Father to those who hurt. But we must wait. Also, as hard as it is to accept, the truth is that verse 26 is the infallible Word of God: It is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord. It is a good thing, even in pain, even in lament, to wait for God’s time of healing and salvation.

When Joni was first diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, we knew all we could do was wait. We waited together in hopes that perhaps medicine could give us two more precious years. When that was not what God had for us, we waited for what extremely precious words and time we could have… to fill our remaining days with as much love and faith a possible. And now I wait alone, with God, for God to continue to help me understand and unfold what my future holds. I said at the very beginning of all this that the rock star Tom Petty was an insightful theologian: “The waiting is the hardest part.” But now I really do trust in this: The waiting, even after loss, will be the good part. God says it is so. I believe it. I am starting to see it. I know it is good, not because I enjoy the wait, rather it is because I am upheld by the God for Whom I am waiting, and He is very, very good!


Tuesday, June 27, 2023

“… therefore I have hope…”

But this I call to mind,
and therefore I have hope:
The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases;
his mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
Lamentations 3:21-23

Lament, when truly focused on God, will make a sweet refreshing turn to hope. That is what Jeremiah did as he languished over all the death and destruction in his life around the fall of Jerusalem. He wept and mourned. He poured out his grief, his disbelief at the appalling remnants of pain, his feelings of confusion at God… all of these were directed to God as Jeremiah flooded heaven with his memories and mourning. And God’s Spirit brought to mind a hope for him that overpowered even the most persistent pains.

It is important to realize that in choosing lament, we also choose hope. Jeremiah mourned with frustration, fear, and heartache while simultaneously turning to the God of hope. The pain was real. And thankfully, so was the hope! So when we mourn and lament what feels so very awful, we too can eventually experience a real, consistent, and lasting hope.

Let’s briefly unfold this fourfold hope. In the perspective God provides we can move beyond lament to a true hope because:
1). God’s grace never ceases. The steadfast love of God (Hesed in Hebrew) will not cease, even in the sinking, seeming finality of our losses. God will still be gracious to us as we look to Him, even if the best that our souls can find in prayer is complaint. God will always be gracious. Always! This is very important to know and believe.

2) God’s mercies are endless. That means even if I struggle to properly worship God, to keep my heart where it should be, God understands. He forgives in mercy because in my confused seeking He still loves me. It is never a bad thing to turn to God… never! It is always the best thing to do, and we will find mercy!

3) God’s loving grace and mercy are both new every day. I get no leftovers in His love! God pours out new morning mercies… fresh, vibrant, and pure just for our unique needs. He counts us as precious in our pain, custom tailoring a mercy to fit our experiences!

4) God’s faithfulness is great. My faith often slips. My hope fades. My trust can be so meager in my pain. “Oh me of little faith!” But God cannot be less than greatly faithful to those who are in Christ! He keeps covenant! He calls me back in my weakness. He loves me still in my faltering. It is not up to me, but ALL up to Him and that is why I have hope! Great is His faithfulness in all lament.

Monday, June 26, 2023

Remember my remembering.


Remember my affliction and my wanderings,
the wormwood and the gall!
My soul continually remembers it
and is bowed down within me.
Lamentations 3:19-20

Biblical lament cannot remain mere complaint. It must focus reflections and remembrances of suffering to a better place. It must bring them to God. This lament marks a turning point in the book of Lamentations. The prayer here starts to move biblical lament to that better place. It does so by praying that God would remember what the sufferer remembers.

What is remembered, and what is asked of God to be remembered are experiences of pain in the midst of grief. Four defining sorrows are asked to be remembered by God. Two are actual descriptions of experiences, two are metaphoric, all of them are personally painful.

1. Remember my affliction. The first appeal is for God to see, understand, and recognize suffering. The word used here for suffering denotes primarily the mental misery that is suffered. It might be more accurately translated: “Remember my depression.” God… my soul is troubled, sad, miserable, wrapped in negativity, and broken.

2. Remember my wanderings. One is tempted to see this as confession, something like, “Lord, my soul has moved away from You.” But the word used for wandering is more akin to the concept of an outcast. A more realistic translation is this: “Remember I am a refugee.” God… my soul is homeless. I am lost. Suffering and loss have so transformed my landscape that I feel I am a man without a country of my own.

3. Remember my wormwood. Wormwood is a very bitter herb. Likely hemlock, a poison, Hebrews used it as a metaphor for being cursed. God… I am bitter, untouchable, undrinkable, a wormwood curse to those around me who struggle to touch me as they fear they too might have to know my pain and misery. I am a poison because in me they see the potential for their own loss… a pain they cringe to ever receive. I used to be the same way.

4. Remember my gall. Gall was used as a numbing agent. It was mixed with vinegar and offered to Jesus on the cross. He refused to be numbed in His suffering. But grief may lead us to try unsuccessfully to numb our suffering in a multitude of appealing ways. Sirens sing to allure us with beauty and false songs in an attempt to numb us, only to wreck our souls further on the rocks of misery. God… You know my many unsuccessful and sin-filled attempts at relief. I am disappointed that I have disappointed You. By seeking to briefly numb my pain, I have only made it worse.

Bringing these experiences to God is indeed the turning point in lament. I accept that all of them have been true of me, and the next loss I experience, I will be tempted to see them amplified in me. I must trust that praying for God to remember what I remember begins to bring a new way to me… a way of healing… a way of mercy… a way of new life. Thus in turning to God, I engage faith, which is the only way out of these four defining sorrows.



Friday, June 23, 2023

Lament is not for the weak.


Their heart cried to the Lord.
O wall of the daughter of Zion,
let tears stream down like a torrent
day and night!
Give yourself no rest,
your eyes no respite!
Lamentations 2:18

True lament is a cry rising up from the deepest of emotions. It is a cry from the heart. It cannot be manufactured, faked, or forced. It must well up from our deepest grief and sorrow. Lament needs emotions to truly drive it… emotion and fathomless loss.

The emotions that fuel lament can vary. Sadness is not the only one. Lament is often a witches brew of various feelings: anger, outrage, injustice, pain, grief, comparison, frustration, loneliness, bitterness, depression… virtually any personal, powerful negative feeling. Bubbling up from a soul that has reached its emotional boiling point, the heart cries. Lament focuses itself though. It focuses specifically WHERE and to WHOM the heart cries. 

The Lord is the direction of true lament. I cannot lament to others. They may lament with me. More likely though, others will watch my lament in emotional impotence, for rare is the friend who shares enough of the same emotional ingredients of my personal lament. MY heart cries out. MY heart has the hurt. MY heart laments. Yes, corporate lament can happen (it does in this verse: “THEIR heart cried to the Lord”) but only those who truly feel the depths of emotion will really lament together.

And the stream of tears pouring down the faces of lamenters are unmistakably intense because lament is not for the weak. A raging torrent of sorrow and pain floods the faces of those in lament. And the call of this verse is to NOT hold back (very counter-culture, especially for masculine stereotypes)… let the tears flow… give it no rest… open the hydrant of tears day and night in relentless lament for as long as you need to do it! And as long as the cry is to the Lord, the tears will flow in the right direction. Crying out to people alone just turns into self-pity and a desire to manipulate sympathy. I have had to repent of this motivation, and I still fight it. But in strong lament, from strong emotion, feeling powerless to see change, I can in lament begin to gain a better strength. Crying out to heaven thus brings a sense of purpose… it engages a tear-filled form of faith, and is precious to God as lament turns to the only place to find some beginning of relief, some bit of perspective, some thread of hope.

Thursday, June 22, 2023

the precious things that were


Jerusalem remembers
in the days of her affliction and wandering
all the precious things
that were hers from days of old.
When her people fell into the hand of the foe,
and there was none to help her,
her foes gloated over her;
they mocked at her downfall.
Lamentations 1:7

In 1931 Salvador Dali painted a bizarre dreamscape of surreal melting watches across a wasteland entitled “The Persistence of Memory”. The painting is a masterpiece of modern art, drawing the viewer to contemplate not only the passage of time, but the plastic nature of our memories over time. It has always interested me that the artist chose the bleakest of desert landscapes to capture this message. It conveys the reality that the memories that persist may be tinged most with loss, regret, pain, and difficulty. And so it is with biblical lament. Difficult memories should be expressed in our cries to God… especially when we feel them coming from our driest places.

In this passage the broken, widowed, limping Lady Jerusalem remembers her worst loss. She weeps in her affliction in the aftermath of traumatic assault. She mourns those fallen at the hand of the foe. She grieves that no one came to help her and instead she was gloated over, humiliated after her assault, and mocked at her ruin.

Sandwiched in the middle of all this pain-filled lament is a tenderly tragic mental anguish: She remembers “all the precious things that were hers from the days of old.” This is heart-wrenching. It is exactly what happens to those who grief the people they have lost who are dearest to them. It is what is left after a major traumatic event. The city of Jerusalem, pictured throughout the first lines of Lamentations as a once noble princess, has been beaten, raped, traumatized by watching her defenders killed in front of her eyes. She has been mocked, stripped, and ridiculed by cruel attackers. Yet in her head, unable to be consoled, are countless precious memories of what once was… the past splendor… the past beauty… the past joys… the past loves… the precious things. Her attackers might leave her wounded, naked, unsheltered, and alone, but they cannot rob her of those precious memories. The best things that still persist in extreme loss are precious memories. 

Biblical lament must recognize that remembering those precious things we have lost, taking persistent memory to the Lord both in gratitude for having had them, and in tears for having lost them, is a way to find His perspective in the loss. It helps us to persistently hold onto His good in what is still precious to us. It helps us to mourn. The “precious things that were” become helpful anchors to hope IF we will pray into those persistent memories, thank God for them, mourn for their loss, accept that things have changed from those days, own ways in which we have wrongly idolized the memories or disobeyed God during those times, and release to God a willingness to trust Him that new precious things can emerge from what He will renew from our loss.

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

reasons to lament


How lonely sits the city
that was full of people!
How like a widow has she become,
she who was great among the nations!
She who was a princess among the provinces
has become a slave.
Lamentations 1:1

Three themes emerge quickly from the opening verse of the book of Lamentations. They set the tone for what Jeremiah laments as he processes the pain of the destruction of the city of Jerusalem. They show us now seasons in which God’s people should also voice complaint and sadness, turning to God for perspective in crisis, hardship, loss, and personal pain.

THEME ONE: From full to empty — the lonely city. How interesting it is that emptiness and loneliness are the minor key opening lyrics to this song of sadness. Nothing evokes more emptiness than city blocks abandoned in rubble. It is a picture of decimation. And Jerusalem had been ransacked. By the time Babylon came in, the strongest warriors were dead, the brightest minds were taken captive to exile, and the people who were left in the ruins were too feeble to make the forced march to Babylon. And that imagery moans mournfully in all the lonely today! Loneliness is the worst. Personally, it feels like every day, one is walking through the carcass of an empty city where once life thrived. All around is the death of so much… so much potential, now dead… so much vibrancy, now lost… so many memories of social interaction… all gone… all alone.

THEME TWO: From married to widowed — lost prosperity. Jeremiah grieves the fact that, in judgment, God has widowed Jerusalem. Widows were the poorest of the poorest, reliant completely upon family and charity. And in an empty city, a widow stood no chance of survival. Her life’s love? Gone. Her provider? Gone. Her position? None. There is no greater earthly grief even today than the loss of one’s spouse. Consolation comes slowly, but never fills the void left behind. Emotional and relational bankruptcy are the result. A soul is left begging for something… anything… that helps.

THEME THREE: From princess to slave girl — loss of respect. One horrible outcome of grief is the way in which other people often have no words to give the grieving, struggling to find a way to relate. Jerusalem, once the royal city, is a smoldering ruin. What could be said to try encourage survivors used to prestige, but now worse than slaves? And slave girls tended to be used for one thing — forced prostitution… the souls of the grieving can feel like they are trafficked from vain hope to vain hope… looking for any love, support, or help. Taking what they can get, then forgotten. The grieving can feel used sometimes. For Jerusalem, there was nothing left to respect. God had leveled it all, so that He could become everything to His people again. No pride can stand in lament then… just humble acceptance… low position… eyes off of what people can do since they cannot satisfy like God does. Thus looking up from the bottom of the soul, the grieving person looks heavenward where hope can be found. God can make a slave-girl a princess again.

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

two places to shout “Hallelujah!”


Praise the LORD!
Praise God in his sanctuary;
praise him in his mighty heavens!
Psalm 150:1

By mentioning two places of praise, the very last of the Psalms invites us from it’s opening lines into a very personal, very powerful worship of the Lord. It leads us from two places of praise into a deeper awareness of the practice and purpose of praise.

Let’s begin at the places. This opening stanza tells us there are two of them. The first place is sort of a given: the place built for His worship, the temple. For every Jew, traveling to Jerusalem to worship on Mount Zion at God’s temple was a privilege and an obligation. Feasts and celebrations regularly required pilgrimages from all over Israel to assemble at the temple. Even Jesus Himself participated in these worship holidays. There the worship was festive, communal, and buoyed by family tradition! There was something spectacular and also very fulfilling about gathering in a large crowd to worship Yahweh. This is still very much the reason we do not forsake gathering on Sunday as Christians at a local church for worship. We need these experiences. They are vibrant and life-giving, but are not the only place of worship.

God is also worshiped in “His mighty heavens”. This is more than just a poetic reference to the direct presence of God in His heavenly throne room. It is a way to call us to worship God anywhere in His universe. There is no place in heaven or on earth where we cannot worship God. If we had the ability to be on the farthest edge of the most distant galaxy, there we would praise the King of Heaven! Praise is universal in its location. Any time, any place, anywhere… we are called into worship. This is more personal and individual. We cannot forsake corporate worship and neither should we shrink from personal worship under His heavens!

And what is the practice of praise we must do in either of these two places? It is simple: we shout out “Praise the Lord!” The opening three words of Psalm 150 in English translations are only one word in Hebrew: Hallelujah! And the exclamation point? Well it is written into that word! Hallelujahs are always loud and expressive! God’s praises should be joyful, loud, emotionally-packed, filled with our grateful wonder and joy! We do not mumble Yahweh’s name… ever. We should have hearts that shout out “God be praised!” in any experience, in any time, in every place, in every victory and in every deep loss, God is with us and we must praise Him! With His people gathered we shout: “Praise the Lord!” Under His heavens, perhaps alone, minuscule and humbled by the sheer magnificence and wonder of God’s person and works we shout: “Praise the Lord!”

Monday, June 19, 2023

fill my days and nights


Let the godly exult in glory;
let them sing for joy on their beds.
Psalm 149:5

My heart rejoices.
Fill this day with Your praise.
In every way may my voice raise
in exultation
     to the God
          of my salvation.

You make me holy.
You call me godly, though I am so unworthy.
What You have done, Lord, in me
solely for Your splendor and glory
     prepares me even now
          for eternity.

Oh my soul sings loudly!
My spirit exults proudly for You are worthy!
I cannot keep back grateful tears from my face
in the light of Your saving grace
     falling down upon me
          in Jesus’ embrace!

My heart rejoices.
Fill my nights with happiness.
As in Your outrageous joy I rest
with satisfaction
     in the God
          of my salvation.

Your Spirit makes me happy.
You have made me holy, though unworthy.
The joy You bring, Lord, to me
satisfies and completes me
     soothes me now
         tonight, resting sweetly.

Upon this bed I will sing.
Praises to my pillow bring.
I will not hold back my praise
but humming songs of Your sweet grace
     I rest my joy-filled head
          upon my bed, and closing eyes, 
               see Your smiling face.

Friday, June 16, 2023

Principles in the cauldron



I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go;
I will counsel you with my eye upon you.
Be not like a horse or a mule, without understanding,
which must be curbed with bit and bridle,
or it will not stay near you.
Psalm 32:8-9

This is the third and final installment of my brief excursus into my grief. You can rejoice that my blog will return to regularly scheduled programming on Monday. I have been cooking in this cauldron long enough and it is time to begin to see what God is remaking through His refining graces. I am attempting to track lessons along the way. There will be plenty more I am sure. Here is my current list in no particular order:

God often does what we do not ask, in ways we do not want, to make us into what we never thought we could be. And in the end, we will be better, happier, and thankful.

God’s periphery is eternal and purposeful. What He is doing is beyond our scope of vision. Faith trusts this.

My self-pity and anger are broken lament. The path forward must rely on biblical lament. This is true, both in micro moments (a temporary first or an unexpected feeling of my aloneness) and in macro awareness (the permanent reality of widowhood’s experience). So I need to learn to regularly rely on scriptural lament rather than self-pitying complaint. How I lament:

1. Name my disappointments with honesty before the Lord.

2. Do something that reminds me of God’s care for me.

Even what is most wonderful in life comes with agony. Children are conceived in the height of rapturous joy, born in tremendous pain. And grief MUST be the birth-pangs of something wonderful to come, if I will only bear with it.

There are three experiences that must constitute my response to death: Grief, Mourning, and Memorial. 

1. Grief just happens. It is the response to any loss. It comes in waves. It is both to be expected around dates and events, and it is unexpected, driven by a feeling. Right now grief is related to my “firsts without her”. Eventually those diminish and the grief waves get smaller.

2. Mourning is intentional. When I see a wave of grief coming my response should be a planned time of mourning. This involves strategically remembering, enlisting good friends or family to help, being aware of dates of remembrance, and owning my response first, rather than just letting it happen out of my control. Biblical lament is often part of that mourning and always a good first tool to use to mourn well. 

3. Memorial is the gift that is left from grief. It might be an object of memory. It might be going to a place that was special. It might be journaling about the experience of mourning. It provides a firm “Ebenezer” to reframe grief into a visible reminder of God’s grace and comfort.

Grief itself can become like an idol. It brings no happiness. It demands my attention. It briefly feels good to wallow in the self-pity and play out the false scenarios of being a martyr of grief. In the end though, this takes my eyes off Jesus and must be repented of! I confess this has happened in my heart all too often the last 4 months. 

I must die to my grief in a way. Why? Because Jesus is my life, and always has been. I must remember Jesus’ own words: “… unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” Refusing to die to my wants, holding on to the ghost of a person keeps my grief from falling into the earth and dying. No wonder I feel alone. Grief must die, and then it will germinate and grow into fruitful life again.

Death to grief is NOT death to mourning or to memorial. I will mourn Joni, miss Joni, smile at her memory the rest of my life. But I will not celebrate the sadness forever! She is happy now. I can join that joy by looking to Jesus!

God brings resurrection even now. Memories celebrated are a kind of new life. New relationships and friendships resurrect my heart. It is not the same life it was. But it is not shrouded in the worst parts of death.

The ultimate response in grief should be worship. Job tore his clothes AND worshiped. Until I have truly worshiped God in grief, I have made my loss my god.

Here are the things I should NOT do when I am sad:

1. Isolate myself. This is self-destructive and sucks me into a vortex of pain and grief.

2. Drink alcohol. Personally, I have found it easy to avoid this, given my family history, but drinking while sad is more than just the recipe for a country song, it creates a dangerous vortex as well. There have been a couple times I have been tempted to do that. Good friends keep asking me how that is going, and that keeps the cork on the bottle. Literally.

3. Ignore my feelings. A few times I tried to push through, act happy with friends, and probably made them miserable. Instead I should meet with people and I should tell them right up front: I am feeling sad today. 

4. Attempt to plan my future. I tried that. It didn’t work. It led to a fatalistic sort of view of my future that was all alone, pathetic, and dripping with ugly self-pity. Sadness will cloud perspective. Instead, list out what I HOPE to eventually plan and decide, and save the decision for a better frame of mind.

And here are a few things I am learning to do in my grief:

1. Journal. Writing has been the most healing part of my current journey. I share it a lot, and for those of you who read it, I hope it is not over sharing. Believe me, I have other writings I will not let you read. My first response when processing negative feelings was to hand write a little journal I call “The Barf Bag”. All the raw feelings are there. I hold it up before God regularly because I know He has read “my little book” even as He is writing my life’s “big book.” I would be embarrassed to share the “Barf Bag” with anyone other than the very closest of companions. Capturing my experience in words clarifies direction. I begin to see God’s hand. I find sovereign patterns. Eventually there is some joy. And by God’s grace, some of these feeble words have encouraged fellow sufferers. Praise!

2. Go out. I force myself out the door nearly every day still. And I just own the fact that I must soldier on. Married friends invite me to dinner. I accept the invitation. I am the third wheel (or the fifth wheel). It is awkward. So what. My life is going to be awkward for a while. I can choose my response to the awkwardness. God, in His wisdom, has made me a widower. It is His purpose for me to show His grace to those who need to see how His grace is there for these seasons. So I go out. Sometimes alone. Sometimes with friends. Sometimes to make a new friend.

3. Embrace old relationships, create new friendships. I feel like there is this gaping hole in my heart, a Joni-shaped vacuum. Grief, mourning, and memorials help fill the void only partially. Other friendships begin to brick in the gap… person-by-person, conversation-by-conversation, event-by-event small little bricks start to slowly close the gap just a little. New friendships strangely seem to provide bigger bricks to fill in more. I don’t know if the entire hole will ever be fully patched. If it is, it will look like a patch, and not at all like her. And that alone would be special, and lovely. My life is a patchwork quilt of salvaged bits of myself and others anyway. Grace sews them together. Relationships are key to moving forward.

4. Prioritize personal worship. I’ve always made worship of the Lord, time reading, reflecting on scripture, and prayer my start of the first hour or two of every day. It has been even more essential now. And my tear-filled worship is more precious to me than when I was unaware I would lose my wife. I will take the tear-filled worship over dry eyes any day! God is dearer now more than ever. Each tender drop of His care feels like it overflows my cup. Any glimpse of His light as I tunnel through the valley of the shadow of death warms my soul like the noonday sun. If I lost this, I’d lose my life right now. I praise God that He is here. I only wish I had known this kind of grace more with Joni. I know she experiences even more of it than I do right now. I am often comforted knowing that in my tear-filled, honest worship every morning, she is singing right along. Worship brings me close to Jesus, and through a thin veil I almost see us worshiping together. I know that in worship I am closest to what she is doing at this very moment. Worship makes us “ONE” again. 


Wednesday, June 14, 2023

elegy odyssey for HE and SHE


“… a book of remembrance was written before him…”
Malachi 3:16

PART ONE: taking the Crown

The morning began with an argument. Granted HE was arguing with Siri, the most prominent and influential female voice in his life currently, but it was a justifiably fine argument nonetheless. 

“Hey Siri, play some 1980’s music.”

“Working… I’m sorry there is no app for that.”

“What do you mean there is no app for that? You play music for me all the freakin’ time! C’mon, get with it. Hey Siri… play some 1980’s music.”

“Working… I’m sorry there is no connection.”

“Oh good grief! You can be so impossible! What is wrong with you? Women! I thought you wanted me happy, Siri… guess not… OK… let me see… Hey Siri, play 80’s essentials playlist on Apple Music.”

“OK, Master and Commander, playing 80’s essentials playlist on Apple Music.”

HE shoots! HE scores! And bonus… Siri was in her place again. 

After SHE had died, HE had, on a whim decided it would be soothing to his male ego to have Siri more subservient. I mean, HE would never ask any real live flesh and blood woman made in the image of God to call him Master and Commander, but Artificial Intelligence… that’s a different story. Siri was gonna be his babe to control, and she would know her place! “Under My Thumb” was Siri’s new theme song as far as HE was concerned. And HE had just won his first argument in months. It was going to be OK today.

The next business at hand was to put the car in drive, and start this day of remembrance, this “Solus Anniversarius”, this 37th wedding anniversary that was now a solo expedition. Toto’s “Africa” cranked to 11 set him on his way to the first stop on his expedition to reclaim Kansas City from the sickening “firsts” HE had been experiencing.

They married in 1986. They had dated for nearly four years before that. HE first asked her out in October of 1982. Remembering this, HE thought there was no better music to make this day go well than the 1980’s playlist. “If you think there is better music than what the 80’s gave us, well, you are just wrong!” With that conviction, HE headed to Midtown. Duran Duran sang Hungry Like a Wolf. 

HE had been avoiding the city in general, and midtown with a prejudice since SHE had died. They had spent so much time there in their early years. From 1982 to roughly 1991, that section of town was a relational playground for them. And the epicenter in his mind: Crown Center… and the Westin. When they first married they both worked at Commercial National Bank. SHE was a customer service rep. HE worked his way up from the basement computer room troubleshooting the telecom network, eventually responsible for the management of a statewide ATM network. Just across the river from KCK where they worked and lived, Midtown beckoned as an epicenter of KC’s social life in the 80’s. They had spent so much time in the Crown Center square… free concerts, fumbling attempts at ice skating in the winter, shopping in Crown Center, dinners in the restaurants midtown, and thanks to a business relationship, half-price weekend rooms at the Westin which had been a regular escape on Friday nights. The first few years of their marriage had been emotionally, romantically, conversationally, and personally tied to that stretch of real estate. HE had to start taking back that territory. 

Once at Crown Center, HE made his way down the parking lot steps to the ground floor with restaurants and snack shops. It was an hour from lunch and HE wanted to scope out their favorite bagel shop. HE was disappointed to find the bagel shop now a Kansas City themed T-shirt shop. So much for the bagel with lox that would have been the lunch they would have traditionally shared. HE decided to make his way through Crown Center to the link to the Westin. It would be great to find their secret spot in the indoor garden. As HE entered the lobby that familiar hotel clean smell hit his nostrils. “This place smells like every fine hotel… and I swear it smells exactly like it did the first night we ever stayed here.”  Taking the escalator up from the lobby, HE was disappointed a second time. The indoor garden with its three story waterfall and walkway was there. It looked and sounded the same,,, just like it all smelled the same. But a grand piano was shoved up against the locked gate to the steps leading up to the garden walkway. HE wasn’t going to be able to get to the secret spot this way. 

Not to be dissuaded, HE started tapping his memory for just how to get to the upper end of the garden walkway. Making his way to the glass skyline elevators, HE took one up two floors. And just like HE remembered, there was the crossover skywalk to the fitness center. So what if HE wasn’t a paying guest. He would sweet talk his way into the fitness center if HE had too. What monster would deny entry to a widower wanting to grieve his wife on their first anniversary apart? Crossing the skywalk, HE was delighted to find the fitness center devoid of employees. HE was then disappointed yet again. The gate to the upper entrance to the garden walkway was locked. A sign informed him that the garden was closed to guests. The chain and lock meant business. His reaction: “No doubt a Covid shutdown that the hotel is too lazy to reopen!” HE was furious, but then realized that was ruining the moment. From the skywalk HE eyed the secret spot. And leaning on the rail looking longingly at that rocky alcove in the corner, where a table and chairs used to be kept, where HE and SHE had so many private moments —-their place, where HE used to write college papers while SHE read craft magazines, —-their place where they first talked about really wanting to have kids, — their place, where HE would ask for her feedback on how SHE thought their marriage was doing. Their place was now nobody’s place. And then HE smiled and thought: “Well, that’s OK. If we can never have it again, I hope nobody else ever does either.” And that thought gave him an unexpected peace… a kind of sovereign gift from the God Who had dealt so many good cards still,,, even in this losing game of poker that had been the past few months.

HE gave himself the obligatory tour of Crown Center. Making his way outside, HE went to the square with its fountains, its public stages, its tourist draws to the aquarium and Legoland. HE sat down for a while along some steps, enjoying the June sun, watching young parents with kids excited to see some exotic fish or play with Legos. There was an intercity preschool being led through the square, probably a highlight of their summer. HE remembered how much fun his own kids had here in what felt like just a couple of years ago. But it had been decades. 

HE went back inside, made his way through each level of the mall area, and hit the top floor and Halls department store. HE smiled as HE remembered how much SHE enjoyed shopping at very special occasions at what SHE considered a luxury store. After forty years together, HE was flooded with glimpses of her trying on outfits, coming outside of the changing room to model them for him… many times just for the fun of it… and a few times, because SHE deserved something fashionable and fancy, HE would insist she buy something. It really wasn’t her style to spend on herself, but HE insisted and SHE looked so delicious in the lines of a nice dress. Neither of them had ever been fashionistas. HE was most comfortable in outdoors casual. SHE was… well… sensible, more happy in budget friendly fashion. But when SHE needed a nice dress for a wedding or event, Halls it was. HE imagined her waltzing out of a dressing room at that very moment. HE thought HE would buy the entire stock of the whole store at that moment to have that happen again. HE had on occasion since her death sat in her closed closet, inhaled the intoxication of the remnants of her perfume on her dresses, and missed going out someplace really nice with her at his side. Thinking it a little weird that HE was spending a little too much time wistful in the women’s wear, HE made his way to lunch. Well at least it was pride month. It would be rude to make an old man leave the women’s wear if he seemed to enjoy it, right? HE smiled to see the benefit of political correctness briefly turn to his favor.

Time for lunch. Since the bagel shop was already off the list, HE had settled on Mediterranean. They had always loved that cuisine. And the gyro with a Greek salad sounded about right. It would have been their agreed upon second option. But the Mediterranean restaurant was a strikeout… a sign calling for cash only was at the register. Bummer. Crown Center was starting to feel like a conspiracy against his best memories… no bagel… no secret spot… and good grief, no gyro? Really? So giving into the culinary adventure that used to lead both of them, HE opted to be “sudamericano”. There was a South American kitchen across the way that specialized in empanadas. HE ordered up a beef and a chicken empanada, a double order of black beans for the side, and enjoyed a nice lunch. The beans were seasoned with almost a floral tinge… not spicy, but with an unusual, what tasted like a middle eastern spice. The empanadas were filling. And the habenaro sauce was pretty solid with the heat. HE had learned that any sauce a certain shade of orange was going to “bring it”. The salsa did not disappoint. HE imagined that if SHE had been with him, HE would have found a way to wet his lips with that salsa, steal a kiss, and watch her light up, probably call him something she’d later apologize for, only slightly outraged at his orneriness. The kiss would have made it better. HE felt slightly odd for even thinking up that fantasy. But it would have happened that way. It had before. So even though it was his third choice, and SHE would have never gotten into the salsa, HE was glad to have had lunch with her memory… in a way. HE had the South American kitchen validate his parking pass, and then made his way back to the car for his next stop. Pat Benatar belted a tune past the parking gate.

PART TWO: true love’s first kiss

HE pointed the car down Main Street, enjoying the city skyline, and working his way in traffic toward the old Inter-City Viaduct to cross from the Missouri side to the Kansas side… back to the streets of his teenage and young adult years. Exiting the Viaduct to Minnesota avenue, HE was greeted by the monolith of the old Commercial National Bank building. SHE had worked on the 6th floor, HE on the 4th floor. As HE drew closer to the building HE noticed construction fencing and debris on the west side where the old part of the building had stood. Then HE noticed that the building was boarded up all the way around at the ground level. No doubt, the entire building was coming down. That insight punched him in the gut like another kind of death. Soon there would be only memories of that building, just like there were now only his memories of her. “Is it all dying?” HE thought.

HE drove to a coffee shop not far from the city services building and parked there. SHE had found that place on Yelp a few years back and it was an interesting little oasis in an old gas station in the inner city. He headed up the street to Huron Park behind the KCK public library. It was a special place. It was their place as well. They had shared many lunches outside in the garden when they worked at the bank. And before that, it was the place where HE boldly followed his heart to dare to give her their first kiss. HE walked up the steps to the remnants of the rose garden. It was in pretty pitiful shape. There were easily a half dozen homeless dudes hanging around in various stages of intoxication. HE walked over to the corner of the garden where, on the night of her high school graduation, HE told her “I have a very unique graduation gift for you.” HE found a rose bush in bloom and looked into the middle of the garden at the rock gazebo where taking her hand he had uttered those words. It looked pretty sketch to go anywhere near the gazebo, even at one in the afternoon. So HE satisfied himself with a quick photo, and paused to remember that first kiss.

HE had talked her parents into driving her from the graduation ceremony, held a few blocks north of the rose garden, to her brother’s house for her grad party. The rose garden was an easy stop along the way. SHE had agreed to a quick May evening walk around the garden. HE had been very deliberate about just how the romantic aspect of their relationship progressed. HE had made a promise to his mother. Because his father had temporarily been out of the picture most of his high school years, his mother had been his primary educator on how to treat a woman. It was just how it had been. Nothing can change that past. HE promised mom HE would only kiss a girl HE would seriously consider marrying. His mom told him a kiss was a very serious thing for any girl. Yes, that was old-fashioned. But his mom had died his junior year in high school and now that promise felt like a very solemn vow. So although HE was in a very serious relationship, HE wanted the right occasion for that first kiss. And her graduation felt like that moment.

HE had a video playback memory of that first kiss. HE briefly hit play in his head and for a split second remembered how as HE placed his hand on her cheek and lifted her face to his SHE said… “Oh boy… here it comes.” And then the briefest of kisses, followed by laughter from them both. 

“What did that mean: Oh boy… here it comes?”

“Well, I was kinda wondering if it was ever going to happen.”

If you are keeping score at home boys and girls, that is SHE: 1  HE: 0

HE was sure that the final score has her in a commanding lead. HE was absolutely glad to know that. HE would have given anything to let her score another point because the game was always the very best thing. HE missed playing the game. HE thanked God HE got to play the game at all.

And by the way, there were a lot more kisses after HE figured out SHE liked it.

HE headed back down the hill from the garden. HE went into the coffee shop. HE was greeted by the many-noseringed, tribally tattooed, frosty-dreadlocked young man who was the barista. The young man had that incredible multi-ethnic mocha Frappuccino skin hue that HE had always envied. 

“What’s your boldest roast?”

“We have a dark roasted Brazilian blend that I think is pretty good.”

“Can I have that with some oat milk? And how about a blueberry cake donut to go?”

And then HE pumped the caffeine into his system and headed to tour the Wyandotte streets of his youth and their early days.

HE pointed the car up Ann street. HE drove past the apartment house his parents had owned when HE was in high school. The Spanish stucco architecture of the place was the same. The neighborhood however was about as run down as HE had ever seen it. HE had thought about parking at the funeral home next door and walking the sidewalks of his old neighborhood, but seeing the condition of it, decided on a safer drive-by instead. Four decades of urban decay were not a pretty sight. HE thought about how HE had spent the first two years of their relationship living in that upper studio apartment. HE remembered the time HE had an abscessed tooth and SHE had brought him soup for three days in a row while HE mended. 

HE drove on in these urban streets. All the old haunts on State Avenue were gone. The drive-in where they used to cruise his ‘63 Chevy Impala on pretty much every Friday and Saturday night was now a bail bond and quick cash business. HE drove on to the their first home. SHE had been the money saver, and by they time they married, SHE had done the diligent work to make sure their was a down payment in the bank. Together they had bought a little 350 square foot single bedroom house they later nicknamed “The Love Shack” after the B-52’s song. He turned at the old Tower Plaza, and headed down 38th street to Oakland. 



There was the “Love Shack” in all its diminutive glory. And it had NEVER been in a good neighborhood. In fact they had lived there for 5 years, and the last two regularly had police chase thieves on foot through their back yard. “Good times. Good times.” HE looked at the little place that had been their first home. It was somehow even more “love shack-ier”. It had been re-sided with a bunch of mixed and unmatched siding. From all the clutter and lawn furniture in the lot, the refrigerator out on the front porch, and multiple vehicles parked there, it was clear that apparently an entire immigrant community now lived there.

HE remembered how that house had been robbed once. How desecrated they felt coming home to it. HE remembered how they had painted it, fixed the roof, fenced in the yard for their first dog. HE cringed at the wallpapering, the termite damage, the bathroom floor HE replaced. They had used a camp toilet for a week. SHE did NOT like that. HE recalled their first furniture, their first appliances, their first… well everything. And then HE remembered the reasons they called it “the Love Shack”. HE smiled that their small first place was still a home, and apparently a very active home, for another vibrant generation. He thanked God that memory was still standing, still around, still quite real. He turned around in the drive and headed away while Prince sang “When Doves Cry”.

PART THREE: Westward, Homeward

HE decided to drive down State Avenue. HE passed the rubble and vacant land of The Mall. It had been gone quite a long time now. It was literally wild to see it all just empty weeds and rubble now. There was still the very faded sign, still visible from the highway no doubt, but that fixture of 80’s lifestyle, The Mall, was just a memory too. It was there they had their first date. HE thought about that. HE had driven by the Old Church earlier. The stone building was still very much there. The last HE had heard, a Hmong Presbyterian church thrived there. HE thought about how in the basement Youth room of that Old Church in early October of 1982, as SHE sat on a piano bench (HE had interrupted her practicing some worship music) HE asked her something to the effect of: “Maybe you’d like to see a movie with me sometime?” SHE said yes without any hesitation. So the next Sunday afternoon, after church, HE and SHE took his car to The Mall, watched Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond”, and finished their afternoon together as they grabbed a burger, fries, and frosty at Wendy’s afterward. And the rest was the big story of his life. 

The Mall had been the place for so many later dates. With its movie theatres, video game arcade, shops, and restaurants, it was the natural place that everybody hung out. The Mall was where they bought their wedding bands. It was there one mid-October afternoon three years after that first date HE proposed to her. HE had no ring. HE had no credit history to buy a ring. But the jeweler had told him that if his fiancé would also apply, they could purchase a wedding set. And The Mall wasn’t the most romantic place, except that HE reminded her that SHE and HE had their first meaningful relationship talk right in that same Mall parking lot one Saturday night after a movie. HE wanted to ask his most important question right where SHE had begun to be a voice HE always wanted to hear. SHE said yes in what had to be the most unromantic setting in all the world to get engaged. God knows, SHE really did love him to sign on to a lifetime gig in a… mall parking lot. An hour after that proposal, SHE was showing off a ring.

HE drove on down State Avenue, past Wyandotte Plaza, which was still thriving as a shopping area. It was close to her old home. HE decided against driving to her old place. It was gated and guarded, and even though back in the day the security guard knew his car and let him right in, there was no reason for an old man to cruise through those streets. That was another life any way. HE would never pick her up again for an evening together. HE drove on to The Park. This was his big purpose for the “ Solus Anniversarius” expedition anyway. They had married in The Park. Aerosmith belted out “Dream On” as HE drove down Leavenworth road.



HE entered the park, headed right toward the recreation hall. HE wound around the shady groves of trees that lined the road on both sides. HE remembered all the picnics, short trail hikes, boat rental rides, and fishing days they had spent at The Park. SHE loved it there. It was a natural oasis from urban noise. HE remembered lying together in a hammock strung between trees, squeezing her tight, and just dreaming dreams together. The Park was a great place to get married, and circumstantially when they did tie the knot, it was logically the best place. A few folks from church got their undies in a twist that they chose a “secular” location to say their vows. SHE didn’t care. HE wasn’t concerned. They had written their own vows that were literally quotations from scripture to one another. The church would be the people assembled on that day, not the building they met in. Christ would join them together, not a church building. And the recreation hall was built like an old stone lodge, solid, castle-like, romantic, and appealing to them both. 

HE got out of the car to walk around the recreation hall. A family was there setting up for something… maybe a grad party? Maybe a wedding reception? A smiling Hispanic woman came outside. 

“My wife and I were married here 37 years ago. Would it bother you if I just walked around outside here for a bit?” 

“Oh no sir”

“Thanks so much, I won’t be long, I promise.”

HE walked around the hall. HE remembered how unbearably hot June 14th, 1986 had been the afternoon they were married. SHE was a vision of beauty in the wedding dress her mother had made for her. HE wore an outrageously hot rented tuxedo with tails, and sweat like a roast pig over a campfire. After the wedding ceremony, they had planned a reception line outside on the beautiful stone patio. It was so hot, nobody would come out there! SHE and HE stood there for about ten minutes, as people stayed inside soaking up air conditioning. HE took her hand, and told her. “The plans have changed, baby”. And they walked into the crowded refreshments room. This wouldn’t be the last time the plans would change and together they would figure out something new. HE smiled and said a grateful prayer: “God, SHE could flex with the best of them. Thank you for such a willing partner who never let disappointment keep us from a new adventure.”

HE walked up the hill to a bench in the grove that shaded the walkway down to the recreation hall. HE sat down and did something HE planned to do at that spot. First, HE opened up the album of their old wedding pics on his phone. HE smiled as slowly HE remembered that day when it was just the two of them at the start of their big story. HE closed the photos app, and opened Facebook. HE went straight to the memories feature HE had been avoiding all day because HE knew there would a dozen years of posts celebrating her. SHE was not a huge fan of Facebook. SHE defiantly called herself a Facebook stalker, and rarely, to never posted. HE loved that about her. SHE was a social media iconoclast. It made him laugh right then and there. HE did notice that nearly every one of his previous anniversary posts had some kind of comment or like from her. That was a big deal from the woman who shied away from social media and told him it was ruining true conversation. SHE had been happy and proud to celebrate them even on “Fakebook” . Tears welled up. And for the first time that day, HE let himself weep. There was a hanky in his pocket and a spare one in the car. That celebration at the bench became the best part of the day. The tears were joy. The tears were sorrow. The tears were happiness. The tears were sadness. The tears were memories. The tears were wishes that it did not have to be all over. HE was not ashamed to cry these days. Even though HE joked that HE no longer had tear ducts, just testosterone release valves, and that his tears were sheer manliness leaking from his face, HE did not kid himself. This was the mourning HE needed to do today. And this was the best way to memorialize her. The phone snapped some pictures of the grove, and then HE pulled away from the wedding venue grateful for all HE knew was made on that day 37 years earlier. George Michael was singing “Faith” as HE drove further west.

His next destination was the tiny little Kansas town of Tonganoxie. Residents called it Tongie. And Tongie was the place of their first dream home. They had moved there in 1991, after enough crime encounters at the “Love Shack” made them wary of living in the inter city. Gangs were starting to be a problem. The house behind them was filled with skinhead bikers. Gunshots were becoming a regular sound. Her parents had recently moved to rural Tonganoxie, so there was a motivation to be near them. And as God would work it, they met a builder who was also a rental property investor. The builder agreed to purchase their home if they could not sell it and to build them a home on some land he wanted to develop in town in Tonganoxie. SHE was excited to build the home they would start their family in. HE was too. And so HE decided to revisit the dream.

As HE entered Tongie, HE noticed the growth. Small towns aren’t staying small these days. Even though they had only lived in the dream house three years, HE instinctively knew how to drive through town to get there. And there it was, looking a bit different, but still the same. HE remembered their joy there. HE remembered their challenges there. It was in that house that they wanted to conceive a child. It took nearly three years of fertility visits and treatments, but God brought to them their daughter there. It was the home that had a nursery. It was the home that had a family. HE smiled as HE remembered nights with a newborn, how SHE took so naturally to motherhood. How HE never thought she looked better than holding a child. And HE was thankful again that over the course of their lives God had blessed them with a girl for her and a boy for him. They had stopped at two because neither of them felt comfortable running a zone defense when it came to parenting. But that Tongie home had been the place where family started. The greatest joy of their lives had been making, raising, loving, and celebrating their kids. It was amazing that the kids were adults now. Wasn’t HE just a few years ago holding their hands to cross the street? HE thought about how much HE leaned on those adult kids now, because they were a real part of their mom left for him. They held his hands now to cross this street of grief. HE could still very much love their mom, hold a part of her, feel her with him when HE was with his kids. God gives us a generation behind us to comfort and strengthen us. “God, thank you for these kids! I never deserved them. At times I thought I might not get them. They are a mercy for me now. SHE gave them to me through You. They are my most precious gift. They are a way SHE is with me.”

HE had one more stop to make. It was late afternoon now, and the Winery was on the way home. REO Speedwagon affirmed “I’m Gonna Keep On Loving You.”

The Winery was a favorite spring, summer, and fall hang out for them. It was just a pleasant place to hang out, talk, share a glass among the roses and the vines, a great little place to make time to be together. They had never been big drinkers and certainly were not close to connoisseurs when it came to wine. SHE loved the Tailgate Red here though. HE thought it was nearly as sweet as grape Kool-Aide, but dry wines where never her thing. SHE liked Muscatos and dessert wines. A fitting end to the day had to figure in a bottle of Tailgate Red. So he went into the tasting room. The young woman inside was sweeping up. They were just minutes from closing for the day. HE bought a chilled bottle, put it in the cooler bag in the car, and decided to take the back roads along the river home to De Soto.

HE drove those roads as Phil Collins reminded him something was “In the Air Tonight”. HE did his own drum solo when that big drum fill came at the crest of  the song. Thankfully the country roads had no traffic and no one to wonder why the old dude was making the dashboard his personal drum kit.

HE drove past the intersection where a younger friend HE had mentored for years died in a motorcycle wreck just a couple years earlier. HE felt the sting of the loss, the sudden reality of death that came in the middle of the worst of the pandemic. HE prayed for his friend’s widow who was a couple of years down the same personal road HE was now on. HE asked God to give her special grace on her own “days of remembrance”. HE made a mental note to check in with her, keep praying for her, and that reminded him once again what an odyssey this day had been.



The sun was sinking low as HE pulled into the driveway and parked the car. HE took the chilled wine upstairs to the kitchen. HE found the corkscrew, opened the bottle with a satisfying pop, and poured half a goblet for her, half for him. HE went out on the deck with a glass in each hand. He did not care if the neighbors saw him “double fisting” a little alcohol tonight. There was a reason for it. HE took a sip of the red. It was so sweet! HE made a face, but imagined how much SHE would have loved it. A hummingbird came to the feeder just a foot away. HE picked up his glass and toasted their anniversary as the hummer buzzed and fed. HE slammed it down the hatch like a cowboy in an old western slams three fingers of red eye. HE decided he would just sip her glass at dinner. HE smiled at the thought of how much SHE loved an anniversary dinner. It was going to be venison steak tonight. John Cougar sang… “a little ditty, ‘bout Jack and Diane… two American kids growing up… in the heart land…”

This was indeed a great day. HE would be able to do more of these solos because “oh yeah… life goes on.” SHE was still right there with him in many ways.

Walking THROUGH the valley


Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death…
Psalm 23:4

Normally this blog is solely dedicated to my personal reflections that are daily part of my careful and purposeful reading and study of the Bible. But for the rest of this week these posts will be really different. This post will attempt to explain exactly why.

In January of this year, the trail of my life entered the valley of the shadow of death. My wife of 36 years, Joni, was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer that had spread to a point that treatment options were only available to manage her pain and perhaps extend some time to us. This was a rapid free fall into the valley with no warning, no parachute, just a hard crash landing into a hard place, with all the attendant emotional brokenness and shock. She died February 17th. But the valley remains… the valley has been the location of my journey still.

My internal GPS wants so badly to navigate through this valley. The map looks manageable. As a pastor and biblical counselor I think I know EXACTLY what the map should look like to journey out of this canyon shrouded in sharp rocks and little light. Indeed, at times the box canyon widens enough to let in me have a view of blue skies above me, and yet this valley ahead seems to stretch uninterrupted into the horizon. And there is only one direction out. It is walking THROUGH the valley. And the valley is made up of GRIEF, MOURNING, and MEMORIAL.

I must confess that time is the element of the journey through the valley that I had not anticipated. And everyone who loses a loved one, in my case, THE LOVED ONE, takes a slightly different route and pace through the valley. I have tried to run at maximum pace a few times with the hopes that just pushing myself harder will get me out of grief and on to great new things. This just creates emotional and spiritual exhaustion. It is because for the first six weeks of this valley, as I cared for Joni, I saw the darkest sights, pushed beyond them, doing things I never thought I would do because they had to be done, and hey, everything I did caring for her in her humiliating sickness and death, was time our souls had together. After her death, I was emotionally spent when I was left alone in the valley. No way could I run. It was stupid of me to try. And there were moments where I experienced full on mental and emotional breakdown… what were brief (thankfully) insanities (including very brief and frighteningly intense breaks from reality), some minor episodes of dissociative, almost catatonic paralysis , honest flashbacks that to this day felt exactly like I had travelled in time, and an awareness that unresolved griefs from my childhood came back with horror movie vengeance. That was the darkest part of this valley and was at it worst in February and March. The valley was a claustrophobic tunnel back then. It is much wider, and I am more aware of the trail back out of the valley today.

In April I began to think through what I needed to do. And I knew grief would just keep coming in waves. So many “first time without Joni” moments hit me regularly. They are like waves or swift current. They pick me up and carry me. I’ve had enough whitewater training to know that I must turn in the direction of the current, fend off the rocks with arms and legs out, and let it carry me to an eddy of peace. And every grief wave has done this so far. It drops me down into a peace-filled memory of Joni and our life together because it was really that good. I have found that through active mourning, that is trying to get ahead of an anticipated event or upcoming memory, the grief is actually kind of fulfilling. It is intentional and under much more of my control. And once I have mourned well, I can create a memorial, whether it is a photo I snap while at a place that used to be one of “our places”, or it is stopping to journal a little about how I feel right now, that memorial seems to take all the energy out of grief’s wave. It slowly collapses then at my feet in the soft sand and I can journey further… faster… through the valley.

This week is a series of mournings and memorials. I knew this week would be rough. June 14th would have been 37 years of marriage for us. This is an anniversary alone, by myself, without her. Nobody wants that experience. I don’t want that experience. The valley has narrowed into a tunnel again and I want to see sunlight. The only way I know to do that is to purposefully mourn, reflect (for me that means to write), and reach peace with the reality that at least for this present time I am humanly alone. And so I have strategically organized a personal retreat for this week.

It began yesterday. I spent the day reading through resources. I want to manage grief well and reading helps. I want to share a couple of resources on grief that I am currently walking with through the valley. One resource is a GriefShare notebook. Last week I joined a local GriefShare group. It meets at a church near me that is a gospel witness in its community. This is a support group for those in grief and it is generally well-reviewed, for me importantly in the biblical counseling world it is a recommended resource by some trusted voices. The group gathers to watch videos and share stories. There was a short prayer at the meeting I attended. The video was insightful. The stories of the participants of course seated around me were heart-rending. My caregiving and counselor heart was immediately wanting to help. I want to be a part of it because I believe moving forward with something like GriefShare will always be a part of my ministry. I am not sure churches are as intentional as we can be in helping this kind of hurt.

But this support group was, at least for me, a real train wreck. It is being led officially by a couple of well-intentioned, rather soft-spoken female seminary interns. I have absolutely nothing against women in this role, in fact they may be superior at it as natural nurturers. They were just so quiet and so soft. It collided with the harsh realities of the grieving. But that was not the train wreck. The train went barreling off the tracks when an older gentleman who was in charge of the opening discussion, the video presentation, and who spoke the most in the “free time” sharing announced that this was his seventh time through the program and he was still very angry at God. He shared how he regularly would get so mad at God at home that he’d drop to his knees, curse at God, scream his anger and unfairness accusations. He shared how he had not been in church for three years because he was mad at God for taking his wife. I thought to myself, “nobody wants to challenge this guy? There is a couple right next to me grieving the suicide of their teenage son just a few weeks earlier and the best this dude can do is share his bitterness and tell us God can handle us cussing at Him?” Dear God in heaven, be merciful to this man. And please, don’t let me ever become him in any category! I hope that wasn’t Pharisaical, but this man’s root of bitterness was springing up to defile many and nobody stopped him from doing it. I spent 40 minutes with him after the meeting trying to point him to biblical lament and telling him I have learned that my anger and self-pity is broken lament that needs to be fixed by biblical lament, using God’s Words to voice my complaint and trusting God is graciously using even my most painful loss to make me better, not bitter. I am still going to attend this group through the rest of the summer. But I think it will be more of ministry to others as it ministers to me. It confirms my suspicions that we leaders in the church need to teach biblical lament and grief to our people.

The second resource has come to me in the most gracious of circumstances, through the recommendation of a new friend who has been through this valley longer than I have. It is a book, written by a Jewish rabbi, and I read through it twice yesterday. It is full of wonderful understandings of the nature of grief, the need for self-care, the need to travel at your own pace, and the power that is ours as we accept the reality of the death we never wanted to know so that we can grow beyond it. “Living When A Loved One Has Died” by Earl A. Grollman has been around for 45 years. It is in its third edition. It is a small paperback… a kind of inspirational book. I read through it in less than an hour. Than I picked it up 30 minutes later and read through it again. And in many ways it has been the most helpful resource to start this week of intentional lassoing of grief. Some nuggets of wisdom:
  • Concerning asking “why” this happened: “There is no answer that bridges the chasm of irreparable separation. There is no satisfactory response for an unresolvable dilemma. Not all questions have answers. Unanswered “why’s” are part of life.”
  • Concerning the past: “The past still travels with us and what it has been makes us what we are.”
  • Concerning leveraging grief for the future: “Try to strike that delicate balance between a yesterday that should be remembered and a tomorrow that must be created.”
  • Concerning new relationships moving forward: “Are you using the time to build a life with new friendships? Is there an upward slope of improvement? YOU must help time to do its healing.”
  • Concerning the balance of alone time with social time: “Solitude is not loneliness; loneliness is the pain of being alone. Solitude is the glory of being alive. In solitude you find time to think and take stock of your life.”
I am so grateful for this book coming into my life through a new friend’s care for my story. Reading it twice got my first day of intentional retreat off to the right start.

And so my hope is for the valley to keep widening this week. I will daily share that experience here. And if you made it to these final sentences, congratulations and thank you for being a friend who cares with me. I hope one day I will show you the same care if you find yourself walking through this valley feeling alone.

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

What You Command


…fire and hail, snow and mist,
stormy wind fulfilling his word!
Psalm 148:8

What You command Lord
comes to me…
all by Your love and tender decree
fire to purge me of my dross
hail to humble me in my loss
snow to freeze my world all around
mist to keep me on the ground
stormy winds to blow me toward
the refuge of Your comforting Word

What You command, Lord
is good for me…
You are preparing me for eternity
endless ages without tears
no more grief and no more fears
when with Your saints around Your throne
my heart is captured, bound to You alone
redeemed, regathered with all those I love
in an embrace forever together with You above

What You command, Lord
I will receive…
ready by faith to always believe
this fire will not burn all away
this hail will not trample what You want to stay
this snow will brighten all my landscape
this mist will quench thirst, my soul to sate
this stormy wind will bring trembling thunder
and I… I will worship in all this wonder!



Monday, June 12, 2023

A bigger perspective


He heals the brokenhearted
and binds up their wounds.
He determines the number of the stars;
he gives to all of them their names.
Psalm 147:3-4

These two stanzas of musical magnificence encourage me with two important understandings about God. They show me a God Who is as completely perfect in the span of a minute as He is in the outstretched awesomeness of eternity. The scope of God’s reach is more than I can take in. These verses move me to wonder and to worship as the Holy Spirit sings them softly in my heart right now. Let me attempt a meager explanation as to why that is…

God cares tenderly. He never misses a broken heart. No sorrow is concealed from His loving eyes. He made us. He knows us. He cares for us. He seeks to heal what is broken in us. He wants hurts healed. He moves to make our lives better. He binds our wounds like the most caring of physicians. He nourishes us and nudges us on and tenderly cares for our souls. He heals our brokenness. And in Jesus what was broken most in our hearts was remedied at the cross, healed by His resurrection from the dead, and renewed by faith as the Holy Spirit regenerated our broken hearts when we believed the gospel. There is no care more tender than that! And God knows, my wounds right now are bound in His healing salve. God knows my broken heart rests in His healing hands, awaiting, and receiving His constant tender care. 

God controls intimately. God’s sovereign love leads even the stars of the universe. Our Milky Way galaxy has around 100 billion stars. It is estimated there are roughly 2 trillion galaxies in the universe. God has thus intimately known, and named 200 BILLION TRILLION stars! That vast amount of control (He determines the number of the stars in this psalm) coupled with His intimate care (He gives ALL of them their names) gives us insight into the character of God. He does not need to be intimate at that level. And yet He simply is. God is never distant. Not even with stars! He is intimate, even as He is vast, unquantifiable, and beyond the scope of our mind-boggling immense cosmos! The universe is just one of His thoughts. So I think my little day-to-day concerns are in good hands when they are in His hands! God has got this. Really. I just need to trust His perspective, His care, and His control.

Friday, June 9, 2023

God help us.


The LORD sets the prisoners free;
the LORD opens the eyes of the blind.
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down;
the LORD loves the righteous.
Psalm 146:7b-8

God meets us in our deepest needs, reaches into our deepest pains, delivers us from our worst experiences, and loves us with an everlasting love. What more could we really want? These are all things that our souls crave. This is what we need most. And it is the nature of God to act on our behalf. Those who come to Him in Christ are never cast out and do not need to feel cast down.

Encouragement comes as we see how God helps us in this short stance of Psalm 146. First, God liberates. “The LORD sets the prisoners free.” So many things can imprison our souls. Sins and weights can hold us in addictive captivity to them. Jesus died to set us free! Feelings like anger, hate, grief, and sorrow can lock our souls in despair’s dungeon. But Jesus has the key, has opened the doors, broken the bars, and set us free! It is for freedom that we are set free. And so we can live!

God enlightens. He brings sight to the blind and opens their eyes. We see this profoundly as the Holy Spirit helps us understand His Word. We can know truth, and it sets us free. In His light we see light, beyond our former blindness when we only lived in this world of night!

God encourages. “The LORD lifts us those who are bowed down.” Anxiety and depression are the new normal for many people now in a post-pandemic world. I see this more and more in the opportunities to counsel others. Jesus defeats this! He calls us to not worry but instead to trust in the sparrow-watching, bird-feeding, flower-dressing God Who supplies all our need and lifts up our tired hearts to Him. He gives perspective. He provides. He strengthens. He encourages.

God loves. “The LORD loves the righteous.” Do we need to languish for any other love than this? No! There is no earthly romance to match His love for us. God’s love is the ultimate passion. He pursued us all the way to a cross to die in order to have us be HIS forever. Could any lover woo us more? Would any touch be more intimate than one that died for us? There is no greater joy than His passion for us as we accept it and love Him back!

Lord,
You are my liberator. Thanks for my freedom! 
You are my encouragement and hope. Thanks for my perspective!
You are my light. Thanks for this direction!
You are my soul’s lover. Thanks for Your tender, intimate, almighty passion for all who come to You.
Amen