My uncle, barring divine intervention, is
on the brink of death as I write this. I
knew last spring, when I saw him for my birthday, I was seeing him for the last
time. I thought I had come to terms with
that. I have not. I’m still weepingly sad. I’m still begging
God to intervene and heal him completely and make his body strong and
whole. In the same way that Abraham knew
that even if he sacrificed his beloved son, Isaac, the son through whom God
promised Abraham’s descendants would outnumber the stars, God would STILL be
able to keep his promise, I know that God is able to change what seems to rational
thought inevitable.
But that is what we do. We fight death. With every measure of strength we have, we
fight death. We know at our very deepest
part that death is NOT part of who God made us to be. Death is NOT RIGHT.
I remember reading Genesis 3 as a young
person and thinking, “If God said if they ate from the tree he told them not to
eat from they would die, then why didn’t they die when they ate from it?” In fact, according to Genesis, Adam lived 930
years! The first death recorded in the
Bible wasn’t even Adam or Eve, but Abel, and this was before Adam was 130 years
old.
Clearly, the fruit was not poisonous, and
death did not come into the world by natural law. God chose death as the consequence of
sin. But why? Why death?
B. D. Napier, in a little book of poems
called “Come Sweet Death”, writes about the fall, “…let us be free of you—or
let us die! It is the same, you say, you
stubborn God?” and later, “Sweet Eve, you say you thought you heard him
laugh? I heard him say, “how can I give you up? How can I hand you
over?” Then a word about another
silly little tree—an antidotal tree, redemptive tree. And then—this must be when you thought he
laughed—I think I heard him sob. I
think he wept.”
Sin brought a separation between God and
man. A big separation. A separation it would take another death to bridge. When we
feel the pain of separation that death brings us, that pain is an echo of the
pain God feels at the separation sin brings between Him and each of us. That’s why death is the fitting consequence
of sin. It causes the kind of pain in man that sin causes in God.
And when I miss a loved one who has died,
I will remember that it is just a ripple thousands of years past the first wave,
and just an echo of the pain my own sin has caused. And I will think about the second tree, where the
death occurred that made the pain of separation a temporary thing.
I’m still praying for your miracle, Bill,
because the pain is big. But if it doesn’t
come, I’ll be looking for you at the reunion.
I love you so much. I’m so
thankful for the privilege of knowing you, for all you have done for me for half
a century, for your faithfulness, for your legacy. I will carry your smile and your laugh and your
voice in my heart the rest of my life.
With immense love and the utmost respect, dedicated to
William Oscar Richter
November 11, 1948 to February 25, 2013
2 comments:
Praying for you this day. May God be with you and your family.
Blessings, Aimee
I have read some of your past posts and wow, you have SO MUCH going on. I pray that you can be a comfort and joy to your uncle and your whole family during this time.
PS Referred by ABeka homeschool group. :)
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