Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Early Morning Reflection on a Life Well-Loved -- Keith Korstjens

My church's old sanctuary with its beautiful, strong pillars
When I think of a "godly man" I initially picture someone who walks into a room and the crowd separates, making a way for him, all standing in awe.  I see someone to be looked up to.

But a godly man -- one we at my church called a pillar, in fact -- died last night.  And as I reflect on his life in this very early morning hour, I'm remembering Keith Korstjens, considering who and how he was.  Not someone to be admired, pedastaled high above the less righteous, rather he was a man who "dwelt among us," as it were.  Keith walked alongside, sat alongside people in pain, people who doubted, who cried, "Where is God in all of this?"

His words were wisely thought out, and  he was not eager to put the bandage of a pat answer on people's struggles.   I do have a few Keith-and-Mary sayings jotted down in my journals.  And I bring them to mind often.   My husband and I still say, "Remember what Keith taught in our engagement class," and reflect on the useful information he gave. Yes, a handful of quotes are forever in me to be recalled when needed.

But with Keith it was more about the presence.

As he visited with, grieved with, listened to, sat with others -- with me, with my family, we had a sense that we were with Jesus.  Keith and Mary came to Loma Linda late one evening, along with many others who loved my family, because we had been told we were going to lose my dad that night.  Twenty-plus people all sitting really closely in a tiny waiting room, being present to God, to the moment, to each other.  I noticed Keith in the doorway (they couldn't fit into the jam-packed room) starting to tell people goodbye, pushing Mary away in her wheelchair.  I ran up to them to thank them, to get one last hug.  "I can't go through my life without my dad," I said.

Again, listening, again, loving.  Tenderly one of them said, "Oh, sweetie, God will give you enough faith for today.  You cannot borrow faith from tomorrow."   Mary shared as they departed, "We're leaving you in very capable hands, the hands of Jesus."  And they entrusted us to Him.

 I read something recently challenging me to set aside a few minutes while in a public place and to look for God in every face I see.  This was new to me.  I've often asked God to help me see others through His loving, merciful lens, but to look for Jesus in the face of people I encounter was different.  I tried it while in line at the post office.   Looking critically, harshly at the postal workers as I waited, wondering whether any of them washed their hair that day, noting the ways each was using time inefficiently -- you know, those days when you just see what's wrong with everyone around you -- when God brought to mind what I'd read that morning.  "Getting a hint from what the psalmist wrote -- 'Come,' my heart says, 'seek his face' -- practice looking for God in every face you see."

This practice had immediate, transforming effects!  My gaze softened while seeking reflections of Jesus Himself in others' eyes.  And you know what?  I saw Him there!

I guess it's this thought that compelled sleepy me out of bed early this chilly, wet morning.  Often it's said of Keith that we saw Jesus in his eyes, felt the heartbeat of Jesus as Keith hurt with us, heard Jesus in the things he said.  But today I close my eyes and picture times with Keith and know undoubtedly he was looking for Christ in my face, in my pain, listening for Him in my tears, sensing His presence the times I thought God was surely absent.

We saw Jesus in Keith's life, while He was looking and listening for Jesus in ours.

This is so going to be one of those funerals that could never, ever be long enough to fit in the stories of memories -- memories of Keith, of Mary, of "KeithandMary."

Thank you for listening to just one reflection of mine.  







Sunday, December 16, 2012

Sunday Morning After Friday Massacre

Many of my days have ended in tears, but today my pillow absorbs fresh cries upon my waking.  I scan in my mind over the three other bedrooms in my home, rooms once occupied by my four full-of-life children, children, now grown, tucked safely in their own beds, their own homes.

Twenty-eight hundred and eighteen miles away from me, parents are waking, if they were able to sleep, to the raw new reality of that empty bed, that empty room, that empty  hall in which footsteps and laughter of their children will never be heard again.   An echo of their grief reaches me from the other side of the country.

Most often I can block bad news out, way out, far away, not my reality, protecting my heart, my mind.  Not so now.  Not so.

Can we create a new app, somebody, please?  One that flips the calendar backwards?  Can we put an undo button on this mess, this blow-to-our-guts horror?

Some Sundays I don't want to go to church, choosing to watch the sermon online, but today am drawn there.  Gosh, I want to be early.  I long to sit with other people, all with huge question marks in our eyes, carrying what-the-hecks on our hearts.  A.  Time.  To.  Mourn. Together to listen for that voice of hope in this seemingly completely mad world.  A time to pray and wail, to weep and wait, to listen, to be comforted.

Some days the questions seem a whole lot bigger than the answers.

Merciful God, meet us here with the reality of your hope amidst the reality of our anguish.