Monday, April 27, 2009
Happy Endings
Some women like dinner in a fine restaurant. Some like a picnic in the park. Some like a darkened theater and a tub of popcorn.
I also like these things when my husband and I get a few cherished hours to ourselves. I've had many a good date with my love doing all of the above.
But if he really wants to impress me, he knows to take me to a haunted house and cemetery, as he did this past Saturday afternoon.
If you've read more than a post or two from this blog, you probably aren't a bit surprised to hear of my affection for the morbid fantastical. It's not really morbid in my mind. I like old houses full of history and stories, so the Thurber House in downtown Columbus caught my attention and provided me with an afternoon of reveling in the quiet halls of the past. I like cemeteries, especially very old, very creepy cemeteries like Greenlawn in Columbus for sort of the same reason: history. My mind goes into blissful overload as I imagine who Cornelia August Weller was and why she died at the age of 21 in 1842. It just sweetens the experience when I read in fascination that "Those who knew her best loved her most." Was she lost to a cholera epidemic? Did she catch pneumonia? Did she give her life in vain to bring a stillborn child into the world?.
And what of Georgie Bowland who lived for only two short days in dismal February in the year 1852? What anguish did his parents experience as they laid their little son below the snow?
As we wandered on, we came upon the imposing stone mausoleum of the Hayden family that was built in 1904. Beautiful copper green with age elegantly lined the roof, and ornate metal covered the antiquated wooden doors. Chilled air blew between the dark opening and met our skin in a shocking difference to the 85 degrees of the air outside. I peeked in, and broken down stones and lonely oppressive atmosphere was my only greeting from the floor of broken tiles to the moss covered stain glass in the ceiling.
My husband and I began to talk about our own eventual mortality, should Jesus not return in our lifetime. Since I sincerely believe He will, I don't take death as seriously as my engineer minded husband. I told him in all truthfulness that I would like the eeriest looking statue that could be found to be placed atop my tombstone, so that in two or three hundred years I could creep out every visitor that came near. Since he would be sharing a stone with me, he was going to have to come to terms with that idea. He said that was fine. He asked me what I wanted written on my tombstone.
I thought of Cornelia, who was loved best by those that knew her most. I thought of Georgie, whose parents love lives on even after their own demise. I carefully mulled over the idea and finally said. "With Jesus." I decided. "Or maybe 'Finally.'"
No matter whether Jesus hasn't returned in hundreds of years. Whether I meet him in a cloud in the air, or I cross the darkness and enter His welcoming light through the shades of death, either way I will be with Him. Forever.
I guess that's why I like happy endings. No matter how sad the story is, no matter how fraught with trouble and heartache, if there's a happy ending, then it's all been worth it.
For every moment will be worth it all - when I set eyes on my Savior.
The first picture at the top is the haunted stairwell of the Thurber House on Jefferson Avenue in Columbus, Ohio. Well substantiated experiences of people including James Thurber himself report pacing in the dining room followed by the sound of someone running very quickly up the stairs. The rest of the pictures are from Greenlawn Cemetery in Columbus, which was opened in 1848.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Reflections of a Daughter of Jerusalem
In observance of the Easter holiday, I'm posting some excerpts from my first novel, "Daughter of Jerusalem," which I wrote in 2004. The story is from the perspective of Mary Magdelene, and we are joining her as she stands before the cross. I hope you enjoy!
The next few hours seemed to move in slow motion. I felt as if I were drifting under water, so powerless and weak I was. I stood helplessly as the one who had given me my life back gave up his life. He did this without a word of protest or indignation. The soldiers crucified the criminals and then turned their full attention on Yeshua. They stripped him of his clothes, and mounted him on the wooden frame. Carelessly they strapped his arms down and one of them brought forth large metal spikes.
Yeshua cried out in agony as the soldier steadied the spike at his wrist and gave it a swift bang with the hammer. I cried with him, standing as near as the soldiers would allow. The others remained quiet, watching in sorrow as our dearest friend and son was nailed to that Roman cross, and then raised and dropped into the hole that had been dug. As the cross fell rigidly into position, his body shuddered in unimaginable suffering. Yet his words caused the soldiers to stop in their tracks and look at him.
“Father, forgive them. They don't know what they are doing.” he prayed.
“I knew this day would come. Somehow, I've always known.” I heard his mother whisper circumspectly.
The crowd began to disperse as the soldiers finished their motley duty and sat down in a huddle to play games in the dirt, casting lots over who should win the garment that Yeshua had worn. I saw Mary’s tears fall anew as she beheld the clothing.
“I made that tunic for him, when he left home.” She explained with great sorrow.
I saw the centurion in charge turn slightly as she spoke. He stole a glance at her, and I thought I saw some sort of emotion on his face. We made our way closer, and stood underneath the cross as a thick darkness settled over the city, like the darkness before a storm.
Yeshua suddenly became aware of our presence. He looked upon his mother, who lifted sad eyes to watch her firstborn die.
“Dear woman,” he said to her between heaving gasps for air. “Behold your son.”
She looked at John, who stood beside her.
“Here is your mother.” Yeshua managed to say to John before he began to cough and struggle for air. His eyes fell on me as well, and though he said nothing, I could read his heart.
“Trust me, Mary. Trust me even when everything seems to be lost.”
He had a short conversation with the other criminals, and then his expression turned anxious. He lifted his eyes to the sky and searched back and forth in great agitation.
“Eloi, Eloi lama sabachthani!“ he shouted in a mournful and forsaken tone.
“What did he say?” I asked John in a whisper, unable to discern his words.
“I think he asked God why he had forsaken him.” John replied ruefully.
“I am thirsty.” Yeshua spoke again, his voice raspy as he heaved for breath.
Mary sprung into action, demanding that the soldiers give him a drink. They smiled tolerantly at her and did not move, but a man came and lifted a sponge that was soaked in wine vinegar to Yeshua's mouth. He took a small drink, then moved his head away from it. He lifted his eyes again to the heavens, recognizing something that we did not see or hear.
“It is finished.” He spoke judiciously, great relief seeming to relax him.
“No,” I whispered hopelessly. “Don't give up, Adonai!”
Yeshua bowed his head and spoke one final, slurred sentence.
“Abba, into your hands I commit my spirit.” He prayed, and then he went limp.
Never have I felt such anguish and complete desolation as I did in that moment. I fell to the ground, no tears left to cry, no emotion that could express the depth of the grief that tormented my soul. He was gone. The one we had followed, had trusted, had given everything up for was dead. Broken, defeated, and dead.
Not a split second after he died, the wind began to blow, and the sky went completely black as night. Thunder rumbled and lightning shot across the sky in a display I had never seen before. John futilely tried to herd us to shelter, but it was no use. The rain pelted us and the ground began to shake with a tremulous earthquake. Screams went up everywhere as terrified people ran for cover. We huddled together and waited for the dark despair of the earth and sky, which seemed to lament the loss of its Creator, to once again be calm. It seemed that all of nature protested the crime that had been committed, so that even the hardened Roman centurion who had callously ordered the spike driven into Yeshua's healing hands was the one who summed it all up the most eloquently.
“Surely this man was the Son of God.”
Two days later...
On Sunday morning, before I even saw the first glimpse of sunrise in the eastern sky, I woke the other women. We prepared the spices that Lazarus had gone home to Bethany to bring to us, to take to the tomb. We set off on our terrible duty, silently and reverently making our way out of the city to the garden where Mary and I had returned from a few hours before.
Mary and I arrived first, hurrying ahead of the other women.
“How will we move the stone?” Mary was asking as we turned the corner to ascend the steps to the tomb.
She stopped suddenly, her hand going out to stop me.
“Look!” she whispered in fear. My heart skipped a beat as I turned to behold what she saw. A chill went up my spine as I saw the dark entrance to the tomb, and the huge stone rolled away! Beside the heavy stone were two Roman guards, lying on the ground, looking very much like they were dead!
“They've taken him!” I breathed in reply. “We've got to tell Cephas and John!”
Dropping the spices where they were, I raced back to the place where the disciples were. I passed the other women on the way, and they gave me a strange look.
“Cephas! John!” I practically screamed as we threw open the door and fell into the room. They jumped to their feet.
“What's wrong?” Cephas asked as he punched his arms into his cloak.
“He's gone! He's gone!” was all I could manage at first.
“What?” John replied in disbelief.
“They must have taken him! We don't know where they put him!” I tried to explain breathlessly.
Immediately they brushed past us and ran for the tomb. I took a deep breath and ran after them. I had to know.
John got to the tomb first. He stopped short in front of it, leaning down and peering inside, but suddenly afraid to go any further. Cephas wasn't afraid, however, and hurried past him into the tomb. A few moments later both of them came back to where I stood.
“Is he there?” I suddenly felt the lump in my throat and the tears stinging my eyes. Cephas shook his head and walked on, muttering something to himself. John stared thoughtfully back at the tomb.
“All that is there is the strips of linen he was wrapped in. Just sitting there like he just vanished into thin air.”
He left me and walked down the path after Cephas. I was left alone. I stepped closer to the tomb, and boldly dared to peek within. I was astonished to see two people, shining brightly in white clothes and smiling at me. Only as I looked back on it later would I realize that they were angels. They were sitting where Yeshua's body had been laid.
“Why are you crying?” One of them asked cheerfully, as if crying were an absurd choice on such a happy occasion. I stared at them in complete and utter disbelief.
“They have taken my Adonai away,” I stammered. “And I don't know where they have put him.”
I heard a sound behind me and swung around, seeing the form of a man but unable to make out whom it was because of the tears that were flooding my eyes. I assumed it was the gardener.
“Woman, why are you crying?” he asked in a strangely familiar voice. I was too preoccupied to notice to whom it belonged. “Who are you looking for?”
I sobbed and came closer to him. “Sir, if you have taken him away, tell me where you have put him, and I'll go get him.” I knew the words didn't make sense. But my mind was so confused by the events of the day that I was completely beyond sounding coherent.
There was a long pause, and then I heard the sound that brought every inch of confusion into sudden and complete clarity.
“Mary.”
The same voice that had spoken my name in exactly that way so many times before was unmistakable to my listening ears. It was Yeshua! He was alive!
“Rabboni!” I cried out, falling to my knees before him and reaching for his feet.
“Don't hold on to me, Mary. Instead, go tell my brothers that I have risen and I will come to them!”
I beheld his familiar face, now whole again, free of the blood and the wounds and the bruises. He was simply my Adonai again. With a clean white robe and a light shining from his face that I had never seen before and do not possess the words to explain, he stood before me, smiling affectionately and still chuckling at my astonished joy.
“Go, Mary!” he said again, and I turned and ran as fast as I could to bear the news to the disciples.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Good Friday?
It is a day of remembering. It is a day to step back and really look at what we tend to take for granted, even as the beloved of Christ.
I look at the cross, and I see love. I see the love that came through time and matter and transformed into my own weak likeness for one simple mission. To bring me out of my helpless circumstance. Sin held me captive, forcing me like a slave to do its work. With love as a constant motive, he let weak humans beat him. Spit on him. Mock him. Nail him in shame to a cross for all to jeer at him. He had the restraint not to call down their doom. He had the patience to ask for their forgiveness. He had the love - for me - to stay there on that cross until the very last sin had been atoned. He bore the weight of all the horrific crime that mankind has been capable of in a few thousand years of history. All of that rested on his shoulders. How strong my beloved is!
I look at the cross, and I see peace. This world is a frightening place. There are earthquakes, tornadoes, murder, hatred, warring, cancer, disease, depression and addiction. That's just today's news. But in all of that, the sweet peace of Jesus is a constant balm to troubled souls. His peace exceeds my understanding. I only know it is there, and there is nothing that I should or must fear.
I look at the cross, and I see hope. Hope for those who have been bound too long in sin. Hope because he stands before every one of us, holding out his heart, his life, his love. There is hope that we don't have to stay where we are. That we will be eternally safe by simply reaching out and taking his hand. Hope is real, because we don't have to be clean or right or secure before he will accept us. He takes us as we are, and makes us beautiful by his touch.
What do you see when you look at the cross? Do you see an awful tale of woe? If you do, you don't understand. When you look at the cross, you are looking at your remedy.
Here we are
Here we are
The broken and used
Mistreated, abused
Here we are
Here You are
Here You are
The beautiful one
Who came like a Son
Here You are
So we lift up our voices
We open our hands
To cling to the love
That we can't comprehend
Oh, lift up your voices
And lift up your heads
To sing of the love
That has freed us from sin
He is the one
Who has saved us
He is the one
Who embraced us
He is the one who has come
And is coming again
He's the remedy
Here we are
Here we are
Bandaged and bruised
Awaiting a cure
Here we are
Here You are
Here You are
Our beautiful King
Bringing relief
Here You are with us
So we lift up our voices
And open our hands
Let go of the things
That have kept us from Him
He is the one
Who has saved us
He is the one
Who forgave us
He is the one who has come
And is coming again
He's the remedy
Oh, I can't comprehend
I can't take it all in
Never understand
Such perfect love come
For the broken and beat
For the wounded and weak
Oh, come fall at His feet
He's the remedy
He's the remedy
So sing, sing
You are the one
Who has saved us
You are the one
Who forgave us
You are the one who has come
And is coming again
To make it alright
Oh, to make it alright
You're the remedy
Oh, in us
You're the remedy
-David Crowder Band
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