Practice Writing 2-20-2025

We buried my father on the hill at Silver Lake Cemetery.

My mother turned to me as the committal concluded and said, “It’s my birthday.”

In all the chaos of those days, we had forgotten. Maybe she had forgotten too. I like to think so. It helps.

This was grief’s first contact with me.

Here is what I learned. Grief reveals chaos. Grief has no standard form or process. It has no absolute expression. It is inevitable. It is universal. It is inescapable, and it does not come with a verifiable end date.

For me, grief’s expression was not sorrow. I cried once during that whole time. That was because I realized my children would never get to know my father, and it was because I knew I would not… could not represent him in his full personhood to them. I had only just started knowing him as a multi-faceted being myself. My father’s death made me realize I had lost an opportunity, one that would never come again.

And so it was that the doorway to chaos first led me into a confrontation with my guilt.

Heaven Pt. 135: Where Does Your Grief Go?

crying eye

 

And when they raised their eyes from afar, and did not recognize him, they lifted their voices and wept; and each one tore his robe and sprinkled dust on his head toward heaven. Job. 2:12 NKJV

Job’s counsellors are oft criticized for their simplistic answers concerning Job’s tragic circumstances. Yet one thing they did right.  When they saw the man they esteemed and loved in his fallen state they were grieved and the Bible tells us they raised up a lament to Heaven. They didn’t turn their sorrow immediately to criticism. They didn’t stomp around and blame the government or Job’s wife. The Bible doesn’t even tell us they blamed God. We have no record of them ever charging God with folly. They just grieved and they pointed their grief toward Heaven. For seven days they sat in the presence of God and grieved with Job.

When your life is headed down the mountain what do you do with your grief? Do you direct it in anger and blame towards your loved ones? Do you create sorrow mines that blow people out the water every time they try to get near you? Do you blame God?  If so you need to know there remains another choice. Instead of being angry with your family, the world around you or the Lord you can take your grief and present it before the throne of God asking Him to bring you the comfort you so desperately need. He will hear you and He will comfort you in your trouble. I am certain He will. Because He comforted me in my sorrow.

3 All praise to God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. God is our merciful Father and the source of all comfort. 4 He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us. 5 For the more we suffer for Christ, the more God will shower us with his comfort through Christ. 6 Even when we are weighed down with troubles, it is for your comfort and salvation! For when we ourselves are comforted, we will certainly comfort you. Then you can patiently endure the same things we suffer. 7 We are confident that as you share in our sufferings, you will also share in the comfort God gives us. 2 Cor. 1:3-7 NIV