Time and Time Again

One of my favorite singers, Eydie Gorme, sang a song so thought-provoking that several years ago I wrote out the lyrics and filed them in a manila folder under “Time”, which was the name of her song.

She sang, “Back when I was young and summer was forever, ‘good’ was your first name.”

For most people, good times fill the youthful years, along with hope for a happy future. I love looking at this picture of Nate taken in early 1971, because seeing him there in our first apartment, dressed as he is, floods my mind with good-time-memories. I can even remember the tickle of his mustache when he kissed me. It seemed as if we were playing house while he finished law school and I taught first grade. Although we had very little in the way of possessions or money, we had priceless fun together. It was all good times.

And then the clock began moving, ticking even as we slept. Nate graduated, we moved, he became a lawyer, I became a stay-at-home mommy. The kids grew up, went to college, moved away and made us proud. We had weddings and then grandchildren. And in what seemed like a quick minute, time ended, at least for Nate. And my time as his wife ended, too.

Eydie sang, “Time, when did you begin trading your tomorrows for worn out just-todays?”

In mid-winter of this year, when I’d been a widow for three months, I remember sitting in a chair at twilight, my hands in my lap, doing absolutely nothing but listening to the tick-tock of a wall clock. Immobilized by sadness, I didn’t know what to do next. It seemed appropriate to just “be” and to listen to time slipping away. I was worn out by grief, and life had morphed into a series of “worn out just-todays.”

The wall clock is still ticking, but I’m feeling much better these days. Sitting in a chair doing nothing isn’t something I want anymore. I remember Mom saying, as a new widow, “Life will never be the same.” That statement seems obvious, but I think I know the deeper meaning of what she was trying to say: “Without my beloved, life will never be good again.”

I’m sure that thought floats through the mind of every new widow or widower who has had a satisfying marriage. It dominated my thinking for a long time, too. But I no longer agree with Mom on that. Although life can’t ever be the same again because Nate is gone, it can become good again. I know I’ll never stop wondering what today, tomorrow or next year would have been like had Nate remained with us, but today, tomorrow and next year can hold spectacular blessings and positive surprises. Three new grandbabies have already proven that.

Eydie sang, “Time, you rolled into years, years that left me walking, when you began to fly.”

Time is definitely flying, and I may be walking rather than running, but sometimes a long walk can turn out to be a really good time.

“The race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong… but time and chance happen to them all.” (Eccl. 9:11)

Power over Sugar

I love sugar, especially candy. Cake and cookies are right behind it. I call them my “Three C’s,” and if I could remain healthy doing it, I’d eat nothing but.

The sad truth is that none of these are good bodily fuel. None provide energy, strength or nutrition, and I know this from trying it. As a 22-year-old teacher in the Chicago public Schools, I packed my lunch every day: a bag of Chips Ahoy, Oreos or Pecan Sandies, followed by a Snickers bar or a Baby Ruth. Although everything tasted good going down, afterwards I didn’t feel very well.

But, I reasoned, God made sugar. He knew my mouth would love it more than anything else so must have meant for me to enjoy it. I was willing to leave the gravy and butter to someone else, along with the chips and dips. My love affair was with sweets. Although I’d try to eat right again and again, eventually I’d end up back with the Three C’s.

Frustrated with this on-again, off-again eating pattern, I finally approached God, seeking a solution. His instruction didn’t beat around the bush: “It’s not good to eat much honey.” (Proverbs 25:27a) Although he made sugar to enjoy, he never meant me to go whole hog.

All of us have our weaknesses. I believe God deliberately designed us this way so we’d have areas in which to practice control. If life was about self-indulgence, how could we ever develop self-discipline?

Food control is an issue for many of us. Reality tells us, “Eat some, but not too much. But definitely eat.” It’s like telling Jack, “Chase that squirrel to the tree, but stop when you’re half way there. But definitely chase him.”

Once we define the areas of our lives that lean into exorbitance, it’s probable we’ll be skirmishing there for the rest of our lives. That reality makes me groan with discouragement. When Adam and Eve lived in the Garden, they didn’t have this problem. But how long did that last? Maybe a couple of weeks?

They had to square off with self-control immediately after God kicked them out of Eden. The harsh reality for all of us is that lack of moderation is the result of jet-black sin. That’s why giving in never satisfies. After one sleeve of Chips Ahoy, a second will always be needed. Whenever I melt into temptation with the Three C’s, its sin that needs removal just as tumors need removing with surgery. The only real satisfaction comes through denial.

Did Jesus crave sweets? Or gravy? Or anything? Our impression from Scripture is that he didn’t eat regularly or much. We also know he fasted, one time for over a month! He was probably skinny, and food was most likely a low priority. But was this easy for him? Probably not. No one likes to feel their stomach growl.

When I think of my love for the Three C’s and my love for Jesus, sugar quickly falls into its proper place at the bottom of my list. Although my mouth will continue to demand it until the day I die, denying it is a chance to become more like Christ. His desire was not to satisfy his earthly appetite but rather to please his Father, God. And mine ought to be the same.

” ‘My food,’ said Jesus, ‘is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work.’ “ (John 4:34)

Holy Energy

All of us have friends in different categories: childhood pals, work associates, neighbors, church acquaintances, siblings and relatives who are friends also. Then there are the dearest few with whom we share our deepest secrets. This weekend two women in that last category visited me at the cottage, coming all the way from Colorado and Arizona to do so. It’s been four and a half years since we’ve been in the same place at the same time, and it was a good feeling when Sue, Gaye and I finally melted into a group hug.

What is it that tightly bonds certain people to each other? In our case, although we’ve been wives and moms together, what really glues us is a shared philosophy of life centered in our personal commitments to Christ. And because that’s true, group prayer is as important as group hugs. Actually, more important. Even when we’re separated by thousands of miles, when we pray for each others’ families, we meet “in God’s throne room.”

Today we took advantage of being together by having an hour-long prayer time on the beach. Jack rolled in the sand and enjoyed the creek as we sent our requests heavenward, praying over each of our children, children-in-law and grandchildren, 30 in all. We also covered those of our parents still living, all struggling with health issues. And we prayed for ourselves as well.

The enormous, empty beach that had been freshly washed by a spring storm was the tranquil backdrop needed for concentration on prayer and the God to whom we were speaking.

When we opened our eyes, a new storm was forming on the horizon, painting the sky in shades of blue and purple. It was too attractive to turn away from, so we continued our conversation. Sue said, through tears, “I can pray when I’m  by myself and of course I do, but when I hear you two praying for my family, a powerful sense of encouragement comes over me like nothing else.”

Gaye and I nod. We know it’s true. But why?

When a friend takes time to hear the concerns of another mom for her children and then takes more time to pray over them, it’s a gift of love. Sometimes a person wearies of praying the same things again and again without seeing results. Waiting can be debilitating. She can become spiritually dry and wonders what else she can pray that she hasn’t already said.

When she hears the fresh prayer of another woman over the same set of circumstances, a new vigor comes to her soul. As Gaye said, “Its prayer back-up. When I hear someone else praying about my concerns, I’m no longer alone in the battle.”

There’s another reason the prayer of a friend is a treasure. A woman may be stuck in a rut as she prays month after month for a problem to be resolved, but then the Holy Spirit moves her friend to pray a specific Scripture over the dilemma, and suddenly a new avenue of communication with God has been initiated. A discouraged pray-er has new promises to claim.

God has said that when two or three people come together with the intention of praying their requests to him, he not only listens but comes to sit among them. Can there be any greater privilege than communing with Almighty God and then having him respond by coming right into our little group of three? Today we experienced that priceless phenomenon, and we have all been changed.

“Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” (Matthew18:20)