An open evening stretched before us and instead of reading, finishing up laundry, and catching up on accumulated unread emails, my husband suggested a quick game of Scrabble.
We dug out our box of National Park Scrabble, set up the
board, and grabbed a handful of tiles, not knowing what random letters we would
have to work with. I placed my tiles
upright on the tiny wooden stand. I
stared at the tiles. I stared at the
board. How can these unrelated letters
possibly make sense at all?
My brain froze in place.
My vocabulary was reduced to that of a toddler.
My initial few words were slow and monosyllabic. On his third turn, when Bill chuckled, I knew
I was in trouble. He carefully set down on
the board the word “sequoia.” Where I
saw separate little squares of wood,
Bill saw monumental words. Those seven letters of his were so
strategically placed that he gained a whopping 48 points from that one word. I was doomed.
He was on a roll.
As the game progressed, I realized that I was not playing
Scrabble, but a despairing game of “If
only…” I didn’t play with what I had. I was waiting
for new letters to magically appear and come to me. “If I only had an “N,” if only I had two “A’s,”
if only I hadn’t used up my “B” on my last turn. But in reality, with the tiles in front of
me, I had many other words I COULD have composed.
What can I do with
what I have? If anything I learned
from my grandmother, that was it. She
modeled that for me in so many dimensions of her life.
Throughout that same day, I had been praying about a
difficult situation much deeper than a not-so-quick game of Scrabble. As we retired to bed, I thought about that
simple game, learning how to look for new
patterns in the letters I had. I prayed about my hard situation, “O LORD,
show me Your way. Help me to seek YOU in this.”
I just lay there in
the darkness, sleep playing yet another game of hide and seek. I needed a nice long run to sort it out, to
pray it through, to follow God into it, and as Scrabble reinforced—to look at my dilemma differently.
How am I approaching this tangle of letters in my life? This
hard place?
Fear says you have
no other options. There is no way
out. You are stuck. You are already defeated.
But trusting God
opens up a universe of possibilities. How else can I see this? God always has something far deeper going on.
Look at what God has placed in front of you. Seek Him through it. Sometimes the answer is
not so obvious. Follow Him into it, even by the thinnest scarlet thread,
through impenetrable scrabbled letters where there appear to be no solutions at
all, through the miry bog, one bend in the road after another, step by step,
tile by tile.
And there is God,
right before me after all.
When I arose this morning, I had a completely different
mindset. God did not lead me to a
particular answer. He is leading me to Himself.
And that changes everything.
And I will lead the blind
in a way that they
know not,
in paths that they have not known
I will guide
them.
I will turn the darkness before them
into light,
the rough places into level ground.
These are the things I will do,
and I will not
forsake them.
Isaiah 42. 16
A couple of days ago, I found this piece hidden on my
computer, written ten months ago, unfiled
and unposted, waiting as it were for the end of the story. I struggled with that particular dilemma for
about a year. I had no idea at the time
of that writing how it would be resolved, what would happen, how in the world I could make it through. And
indeed, God led me on paths I had not known, in ways I knew not, places I didn’t
want to be, with a strength that was definitely not mine to claim.
And at the end of it, it was not that an answer
appeared. It was not that I was the hero
with “sequoia” to my credit. But God led
me to a deeper place where “the answer” was irrelevant. What mattered, as it always does, was my
relationship with Him.
1 comment:
As usual… so timely and so comforting! Thank you for the wisdom!
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