One of a parent’s hardest things is to see a child go
through times of difficulty, sorrow, pain, hardship or want. And yet we do not see the future, we do not
know for what purposes God has chosen that falling out of providence, perfect
in plan but packaged rough and wrapped to hide the blessing for a time.
It was in a rustic bookstore in some little Michigan town,
stuffed amid piles of used books, mostly cheaper novels and cookbooks, that I
found it. On the red spine in faded gilt
I read Lives of the Three Mrs. Judsons.
That couldn’t possibly be Adoniram Judson’s wives? Reading To the Golden Shore together has been
one of my favorite memories, and I am fascinated by this first missionary to
Burma who laid wives and children in the grave one after another and saw no
fruit from his work for seven years.
(Can you imagine how poignant it was, recently to see photos of Burmese Christians
– now Myanmar—loving and serving God under persecution?) Anyway, the book’s price read $90 and I regretfully
put it back. But the store owner wanted
me to have it and sold it to me for $20.
It is indeed a treasure.
His second wife was as intelligent and skilled with the pen
as his first. Both were amazing,
cultivated women of great talent. In reading
on his second wife, Sarah, the biographer comments on the fruit of hardships in
young years:
“Her parents not being wealthy, she was early trained to
those habits of industry, thoughtfulness and self-denial which distinguished
her through life. Children so situated
are sometimes pitied by those who consider childhood as the proper season for
careless mirth and reckless glee; but hey often form characters of solid
excellence rarely possessed by those to who fortune has been more
indulgent. Their struggles with
obstacles in the way of improvement, and final triumph over them, is an
invaluable preparation for the rude conflicts of life; their ingenuity is
quickened by the hourly necessity of expedients to meet emergencies, and the
many trials which are unavoidable in their circumstances, and which must be met
with energy and resolution, give habits of patient endurance, and noble courage…
It is not one of the least of the compensations with which
the providence of God abounds, that the very lack of favorable circumstances is
sometimes most favorable to the development of latent resources….her whole
career shows that her mind had been early trained and disciplined in that
noblest of all schools, the school of adverse fortune."
Someone who was very concerned for the continued safety of
their child asked me recently, were I to go back and change things, if I
would my eldest daughter not have broken her leg. Six years ago now, the break was a bad one –
at the femur, just as her growth plates were developing; and for months there
was a question as to whether she would have to have a hip replacement as a
teen. When I reflect on all the ways
God grew her through this into a young woman of godly grace, heart-luminous,
how could I say I would choose differently than God had chosen?
“Some things cannot be done in a day. God does not make a sunset glory in a moment,
but for days may be massing the mist out of which He builds His palaces
beautiful in the west.” (author unknown)
“Palaces beautiful” reminds me of Psalm
144:12—“That our daughters may be as pillars sculpted in palace style”. Oh, that we would stay our hands from
grasping God’s to pull it away from His sculpting work; we are assured that their
growing beauty will be perfected under His loving eye.
Thank you, mother, for leaving us to Him, for not shielding us, for encouraging us to stand firm and not pampering our self-pity. You gave us a great gift in that and I am so grateful to you. I love you so much!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post, thank you! I too have loved Psalm 144. I have prayed this verse often over our six beautiful daughters. Know that corner pillars for a palace would carry extra weight as well as be beautiful! They would be fashioned by our Great and Mighty God with great detail inside as well as out. May all our daughters be prepared to bring glory to Christ all the days of theirs lives. I have equally loved Psalm 144:12. Plants full grown will be strong, healthy and producing much! May all our sons be as full grown plants in their youth for His Glory forever!
ReplyDeleteKimberlee,
ReplyDeleteI am always delighted when you post a comment, for you are so thoughtful and add much beauty to the conversation. I love your added imagery of carrying extra weight - encouraging and strengthening to others as a help meet, mother, friend...and also your addition of the words for our sons, who, Lord willing, will bear much fruit. You enhance my life richly with your thoughts and your godly heart for all things pure and true.
ML