Our thoughts turn to change in the
New Year. We want to get out of the old
ruts we have gotten ourselves into and find newer, better paths. Out with the old and in with the new!
I like change and then again I don’t. I have learned that change done well can be
good, and change without thoughtful intent can be burdensome and a waste of
time.
Most of us know right away what needs to change but we
are fearfully aware of the unknowns that often come with change. Change is hard enough on its own, and walking through unknown territory can be
nerve racking. It takes great faith to
change course and walk a new path.
I sometimes wish that I could be transported a few months
down the path of good change and see all of the benefits that new habits can
bring. But, I have not discovered how to
time travel and so I must rely on faith.
Faith can come by hearing, and hearing from the right people.
One of the most incredible graces that God has given me is
the older, wiser people in my life.
People that have lived some life and still have a grace and a peace
about them are beautiful. To know an
older man or woman who has a calm and joyful outlook on life is to find a real
gem. And in these gems one can mine for
treasures of wisdom that can save us from heart ache and prepare us for the
future.
As with many good things, we do not know how long we will
have them. Time is a precious commodity. When I am in the presence of my elders, I go
treasure hunting with prayerful grace and tact. When they speak, I listen. When I am with them, I slow down. I open my heart and my mind and let their
words of wisdom pour into the reservoir of my soul.
In 1919, a couple
in Kentucky had their first born son, my grandfather. My grandfather will be 95 years old this
year, but to me he has never changed. I
still picture him slowly opening the
foyer closet, taking down his hat and walking out the door to go about his
business, with a “howdy” and a smile on his face. Slow yet determined, precise but gentle,
steady and kind.
A couple of weeks ago I found a moment to sit down next
to my Pop Pop and talk with him about life.
I had asked him what he had been reading and he told me he was still
working his way through the latest Microsoft Windows manual. I continued to ask him what else he had been
reading and he said the newspaper. I
challenged him to find a book of some kind that he would enjoy. He told me he did not have time for that kind
of reading. I laughed and so did my
grandmother. “If you don’t have time to
read Pop Pop, than neither do I!” But he
was serious. He needed to spend time
working on the computer and so practical reading was all he could do. But I continued to press him, ”How will the
next generation see the importance of reading if they do not see you
reading?” And then I saw a glint in his
eye. “That is not my job. That is the parents’ job, they bring up the
children.” I saw his point. He knew where true jurisdiction resided. And then the wisdom of his years began to be
unearthed.
“Parents need to make sure they are leading their
children in good ways of learning. They
need to give them good opportunities to learn for themselves. If you have a baby and there is garbage in
front of him he is going to naturally go toward it. But if a parent keeps steering him away from
the garbage over and over again he will eventually learn to avoid it , to
choose something else.“
“But that takes
time Pop Pop and so many parents don’t want to take the time to do that. It’s hard, I know. ” Then he placed his hand on my arm and told me
how thankful he was that I take the time to teach my children. I told him I don’t do anything special, I
just do what I know I ought to be doing as a parent. Nothing special in that. “But so many parents don’t do what you do
anymore. It used to be so common. You know people do what they have been taught
to do themselves. Like my parents
taught me and now you teach your children.”
It was then that I knew I was on holy ground. He was going back, not forward. He was not directing me to a new way, but an
old one.
“The most important thing you can
do for your children is to introduce them to the Lord. That is what my mother did for me. She always had time to talk with me about the
Lord. From time to time I was allowed to
look at and read a children’s Bible that we had, and when I came to something
that I did not understand I would go and find my mother and ask her about
it. She would stop whatever she was doing
and sit down and talk with me about what I was reading.” I saw great emotion well up in his smoky blue
eyes. A great love for a woman I never
knew, who had stopped her world to raise up a man who would be a model to me of
a faith and trust in God that runs very deep.
“I wish you had known her, that you lived in the same time. She was very much like you, you liked the
same things.” And with a grateful and
trembling voice I told him, “We will Pop Pop.
We will live in the same time and it will be for an eternity.” The biggest smile broke out on his face and
he laughed. “Well, you got me there!
Yes, you are right, you will!” I
leaned over and hugged him and kissed the top of his balding head and I told
him I loved him three times over. And
with all the strength he had he hugged me back and told me that he loved me
too. His words were more precious to me
than diamonds or rubies or sapphires. A
man of so few words told me he loved me, something he never needed to say, I
have always known that my Pop Pop loved me.
It was a moment of grace that I will hold in my heart for a long, long
time.
As I walked down the stairs of my parent’s home I was
filled with hope and strength for the days and weeks and months to come. A simple word, but a true word, forged in the
fires of the hard lives of my grandparents and great grandparents. Our conversation held precious rubies, words
of wisdom to help me find my way. “Stand
by the roads, and look, and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is;
and walk in it, and find rest for your souls.” Jeremiah 6:16
I have not walked all of this path, but I do know that it
is a good way, a way to find rest in a weary world. Like my grandfather acknowledged, it is not
an easy road to walk, but God loves the reformer. “Return to me, and
I will return to you, says the Lord of hosts.” Malachi
3:7 What a promise, in returning He
meets us. There is no mention of
perfection or having it all together, just return.
And so, as I take down my Christmas decorations and turn
over a new calendar page, I am seeking more ways to return to paths that are
ancient and old. I may not be raising
chickens and planting corn like my Grandmother Rhoda did, but I too find myself
interrupted by little souls who are longing to know and understand who God is
and what He has done. I, like my grandfather’s mother, hope to set
aside my dish towel, my laundry basket, my lesson plans, and die to myself,
that another may live. And when my
granddaughter comes to me one day with her own questions about life, I want to
smile and touch her arm and tell her of the paths that I have walked, not the
new, but the beautiful and the old.
~ Your Fellow Sojourner
Pop Pop's 90th birthday. |
“Legacy”
I can taste the fruit
of Eve
I’m aware of sickness, death and disease
The results of our choices are vast
Eve was the first but she wasn’t the last
And if I were honest with myself
Had I been standing at that tree
My mouth and my hands would be covered with fruit
Things I shouldn’t know and things I shouldn’t see
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
She taught me to fear the serpent
I’m learning to fear myself
And all of the things I am capable of
In my search for wisdom, acceptance and wealth
And to say that the devil made me do it
Is a cop out and a lie
The devil can’t make me do anything
When I’m calling on Jesus Christ
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
To my great, great, great grand daughter
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand son
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand daughter
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand son
Live in peace, oh, live in peace
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
I’m aware of sickness, death and disease
The results of our choices are vast
Eve was the first but she wasn’t the last
And if I were honest with myself
Had I been standing at that tree
My mouth and my hands would be covered with fruit
Things I shouldn’t know and things I shouldn’t see
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
She taught me to fear the serpent
I’m learning to fear myself
And all of the things I am capable of
In my search for wisdom, acceptance and wealth
And to say that the devil made me do it
Is a cop out and a lie
The devil can’t make me do anything
When I’m calling on Jesus Christ
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
To my great, great, great grand daughter
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand son
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand daughter
Live in peace
To my great, great, great grand son
Live in peace, oh, live in peace
Remind me of this with every decision
Generations will reap what I sow
I can pass on a curse or a blessing
To those I will never know
~ Sara
Groves
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