That’s Life

Entries categorized as ‘God’

A Senseless Act

February 17, 2008 · 4 Comments

Yes, today I’m staying home. The past few days have been hard. My stepmother was murdered in her own home.

The facts are not important, except that a 70-year-old woman was vulnerable because of her age and because she lived alone in an inner city neighborhood.

Is this what we all come to as we grow older and lose our companions? Do we all have fear to look forward to? Must older people move from the homes where they’ve lived for decades simply to find safety in gated communities or residential homes (which usually include only one room, a private bathroom, and perhaps a kitchenette)? Just to be safe from the crimes that are aimed at the vulnerably elderly or disabled or those who have no obvious protection in this world where the consequences seldom deter the commission of horrid and violent deeds?

Where is God in this scenario?

I believe God is there, even during those horrible acts which shock and sadden us and strike fear into our hearts. He is there watching, sad at the way some people use the free will he gifted to us all. He does not allow these things to happen, but he does allow us to use our free will in whatever way we choose. I don’t blame God, nor do I feel he has let us down. I simply feel a bit of comfort knowing he is there for the victims, pulling them into his metaphorical arms and embracing them with his all-loving presence.

Back in the early 1990’s my mother in law was still living in a home she had shared with her husband until his death in the mid-1970’s. They bought the home in 1963, their dream home in a modest middle class neighborhood. Then in the 1980’s the neighborhood began to change. Some of her neighbors passed away, and the the owners of the homes did not seem to care enough to keep their houses in good repair. I remember that among the new people who moved into the neighborhood, there was one family who cared and watched over her as much as they could. The father in the family was a fireman, and he told us that he had come to check on Jim’s mother several times when she called him afraid and yet hating to have to call upon someone. The culminating events that led to us encouraging her to move into a residential village for elderly persons was when not once,  but twice, gunshots hit her house. Though she didn’t want us to worry and didn’t say anything about these events, the evidence was clear in the picture window in her dining room… where she sat to eat her meals daily. It was a sad day when Jim and his brother and wife and I gathered to help move her into a secure home. The home was nice, the nicest around, but still, it was a substitute for a home she owned, a home where she could have children and grandchildren visit and stay overnight, a home where she could cook her own meals, a home where she could enjoy having friends over for cards or just to visit.

Now with the tragic and senseless death of my stepmother I feel a bit of inner rage. The shock is gone. An underlying sense of sadness is settling into my soul. But at this moment in my personal cycle of grief is a rage. I want to take those three teenagers (yes, 15 and 16 yr olds) who broke into her house and I want to turn back the clock and find a way to shake some sense into them. I want to teach them the preciousness of life. I want to teach them respect for the elderly. I want to teach them to love others as God loves them. I’m so angry. I’m so sad.

I loved Pirkko, and only the knowledge that she loved God and now is at peace will get me through this grief.

Categories: God · Rants · death · family · grief

Communion

December 25, 2007 · 3 Comments

Some mornings five a.m. is as long as I can stay in bed. I have the soul of a 25 year old but the bladder of a 62 year old. Once that deep sleep is disturbed, there is nothing to do except get up. My mind slowly begins to function, and I can’t help but think of all there is to accomplish in the coming day. With conscious thought comes that wide awake state where I can lie there in bed only so long before I begin to squirm and stretch and by then, sleep is out of the question. So I am up.

What a beautiful Christmas eve we spent!

We had a Christmas eve service at church at five in the afternoon (early so families could come and then have the whole evening with each other afterwards). It was a brief service. We sang no hymns nor did we recite any liturgies. We simply came together to hear the Christmas story read by the pastor (my dh Jim) and then have communion. The church was decorated so beautifully, and this evening service just lent that special soft lighting of candles and tree lights which made everything special. During communion a trio of wonderful musicians played and sang: a pianist, a preteen violinist, and a vocalist. I was so touched, my tears started almost the moment my husband said his first words of welcome.

Sitting there amidst these most loving people I just began to weep. Not only the love and joy and unspoken embracing of a kinship of us all touched me, but the reason we were there. I’m not a very demonstrative person when it comes to my religion. I’m a private person with some things. My relationship with God is one of those things. I don’t often talk of it. I don’t often demonstrate it in more than quiet little ways. But I felt such a powerful one-ship with God and with all of those wonderful people all around me that I just wept from being so emotionally moved.

After communion and the dismissing with a blessing, the pastor (my husband of 42 years) moved among everyone with words of love and rejoicing and that special bonding of pastor and parishioners. The whole evening was so beautiful. And even the fact that he left his lapel mic open (forgot to turn it off) and stepped outside in front of the church to see everyone away to their homes… and his voice still echoed in the sanctuary with each word of farewell or soft teasing to a child about Santa or special words to someone who needed them… that only made those of us still exiting the sanctuary smile and chuckle. The feeling of family prevailed. For we are all of the same family. The family of God.

These thoughts are the ones that kept me from sleeping this morning. Nothing huge or no looming list of things to get done today. Just simple joy relived through thought… through remembrance.

May God bless you.

(As he has blessed me.)

Categories: God · church · communion · friends