Vitamin LOVE
Tonight, I have the sex talk with Jared.
Not overtly, of course. We've done that before. But gently,
mulling it over in the neutral ground of a discussion about a book I'd asked
him to read. It's called You're Almost a Teenager or something equally
inane, and it deals with the life choices middle school kids make every day -
including whether or not to stay virgins.
"So what did you think?" I ask my fidgety preteen,
hoping to keep the dialogue short. "Could you summarize the book in one
sentence?"
Jared screws up his face. "I don't know. Probably ...
stay pure?"
"That's great!" I enthuse, pleased with his succinct
synopsis. "Now, why does the author
think kids should stay pure?"
Again, the deep-thinking face. Jared's wide, green-blue eyes
briefly haze over, like fog passing by on the sea. "To have a better ... life?"
he finally offers up, looking pained.
"That makes sense," I press deeper. "Tell me
more." I know the book's author's a Christian, and I feel slightly piqued that
God hasn't crossed Jared's mind. After a few more leading questions, Jared finally
forms what I've been fishing for ... sort of.
"I should be pure because it's the right thing to do,"
he decides. "After all, I have to obey God. He's perfect."
I slowly exhale, the balloon of my hopes deflating with one released
breath. This must send a warning sign to my son, because he immediately snaps.
"Why is that so hard to understand?" he demands.
"Why are you asking me all these questions?" His tone escalates from frustrated to rude as he speaks -- a microscopic
monologue for most angry kids, but a massive oration for him.
Why, why, why?
His diatribe ends, but the question remains. Why can't I
just tell him the right thing to say
so we can kiss this pesky discussion good-bye?
Why, indeed.
The truth is, some things can't be taught - or learned - by repeating
the right set of words. I long to share volumes about truth, love, and God -
but I settle for a quick prayer and a reference to John3:16.
Then I send him on
a walk while we both marinate in our musings.
I, for my part, turn inward as I set to work making dinner.
I realize anew that doing "the right thing" is a burden I've shouldered
since childhood, something I hope my children never pick up. In an effort to
please parents, teachers, and yes, even God, I discovered that DOING right felt
deliciously similar to BEING right in the end. It felt so good that I forgot the
simple truth: LOVING Right (the Right that "so loved the world" in
the first place) really makes all the difference.
Oh, sure. I loved Jesus, loved Him deeply. And I knew (in my
head, anyway) that He loved me, too. But I clung for dear life to countless other
"right things" in order to ensure that I felt right, too! I was like a whore who, when presented with a respectable
husband, claims him - but clings to her seedy lovers, as well. And I held on
with a fierceness that, each time I encounter it even today, tells me just how
deeply I claimed them as co-Saviors, equal to or better than the Christ who calls
me Beloved.
What were my "right" things, my seedy lovers, you
might ask? The list is rather mundane.
- · Church-going
- · Bible-reading
- · Smile-making
- · Fight-fleeing
- · Busy-staying
- · Thin-remaining
- · Yes-saying
- · Home-maintaining
- · Forehead-tapping before every meal
Okay, that last one's a joke. But it's no more silly than
some of the things I could add to this list. Things like "canning even
when I really should take a break" or "making sure my kids leave a
good impression" or "never buying baby carrots."
Take your pick, fill in the quotes with anything you like,
even "Keeping the Ten Commandments Just So." The silliness factor just
won't disappear. That's because DOING right (even for Jared's noble reason,
"BECAUSE GOD SAYS SO") never equals BEING right before God. Scour the
Bible start to finish and you'll see. What God wants - wants desperately enough
to die for - is a responsive, unfiltered love from His creations. Nothing more,
and certainly not a whit less. (Micah 6:8, Matthew 22:37, Luke 9:23, 1 John
4:16)
THIS - this love-desire - is why I heave a small sigh upon hearing
Jared's response to my questions. This is why I resort to prayer instead of preaching.
And this is why, just as I send him out for his walk, I am primed to see a tiny
spark of the divine.
Just as he steps into the laundry room to find new batteries
for his headlamp, his little sister, Summer, appears on the scene. She's
probably like a moth to the flame a potential conflict in the works.
"I wish my brother could go with me," Jared mumbles
from around the corner, and I have a sneaking suspicion he's unnerved by the
dark.
"Ethan can't come," I respond. "he has
homework." Suddenly, I feel like a
heel for sending him out, all alone. "Maybe Summer would go with you
instead?" I cast a hopeful glance in her direction.
"Go where?" She raises her eyebrows while Jared grumbles
that he's sure she won't come.
"Around the loop," I respond, trying to keep the
hope from my voice. "Do you want to?"
Summer's face falls. Jared's potential disappointment strikes
like a tiny knife in my guilty heart.
"He doesn't want to go alone," I tell her softly. Then,
squelching the demon in my head that urges me to push harder, I screw my face
into nonchalance, and stare woodenly into my pot of soup.
A small pause. And then: "Sure! I'll go with you,
Jared!"
My heart leaps.
Together, the siblings set out. One silently brooding over
the mystery of Mom and her questions. The other blissfully free, happy to walk with
a boy who hadn't even believed she would come. In the end, though, they both returned
beaming - alive with the warm joy of a dark road, walked together.
No, Summer didn't have
to come along on that walk. But she wanted
to. Not because Jared showed himself worthy or even acted as though he'd enjoy
having her. But purely out of love for her brother.
It's this selfless love that brings a smile to Jared's face,
prompts him to praise her for her generosity, and inspires him to mirror that love
with kind actions of his own later on.
And this is the
divine spark of the night. This is how
I view my faith. It starts with Love. Love grows it strong. And Love -- not my
right actions -- keeps it strong to the end (John 10:28, Jude 24),
Yes, there are many lesser things I've left behind on this walk
of faith -- my religion, my career, my pride (at least the top layer, anyway), my
entitlement, and my claims to "rightness" -- along with my fear of
baby carrots. But the one thing I cling to
still is the One who holds tight to me. Everything else just can't compare.
"I consider all things a loss compared with the
surpassing greatness of knowing Christ my Lord." (Philippians 3:8)