July
11, 1993, at seven minutes after five in the morning, Dave and I drove out of
Port Angeles. My mother stood beside our car with her arm around Karen, only
twenty-one years of age, and together they waved goodbye. Tears streaked down
their faces. I choked on my own sobs. How could I survive four years without
seeing them? (from Chapter 2, Grandma’s Letters from Africa)
Recently I told you about my mother’s strong—even
desperate—objection to Dave and me leaving our kids and our home and moving to
Africa. (Click on You’ll need a Kleenex: When parents don’t want their kids to go to the mission field.)
During the application process for working
with Wycliffe Bible Translators, my mother went through an intense time of wrestling
with her own will, her daughter and son-in-law’s will, and God’s will.
Somehow, within the months of wrestling and
begging and weeping and soul-searching, my mother recognized she had to let God
have her daughter.
You see, when she was pregnant with me, her
doctor feared she’d miscarry so for months she prayed, “Lord, if You let my
baby live, I’ll dedicate her to You.”
And He let me live.
And later He would ask my mother to follow up
on her promise to Him about me.
That time had come.
That was in 1993. Fast-forward to 2014 when,
after my mother died, I found the following in her Bible: a photo of the driveway
scene I wrote about in Chapter 2, above, and paper-clipped to it was this William
Cowper poem in her own handwriting. (See photo below.)
O
Lord, my best desire fulfill
And
help me to resign
Life,
health, and comfort to Thy will.
And
make Thy pleasure mine.
Why
should I shrink at Thy command
Whose
love forbids my fears?
Or
tremble at the gracious hand
That
wipes away my tears?
No,
rather let me freely yield
What
most I prize to Thee
Who
never has a good withheld
Or
wilt withhold from me. (William Cowper)
My heart broke and bled
when I grasped the message—my mother was offering me up to God so that Dave and
I could serve Him, despite the severe pain she and Matt and Karen had already suffered—and
would suffer even more in the coming years. “Let me freely yield what most I
prize to Thee,” she had written. Discovering that in her Bible after she died
was a very emotional experience for me.
And I was puzzled by her handwriting—it had
gotten sloppy toward the end. That surprised me because her handwriting had
always been so perfect. It took me a couple of years to realize why her handwriting
got shaky: It was because she was crying when she wrote. No doubt tears
streamed down her cheeks and her hand trembled.
I’ll never know the magnitude of my mother’s
heartaches and the costs she paid. But God bless her for the sacrifices she
made—for me throughout my life, and for Him. I choose to believe that He also
brought her blessings and joys as a result of her sacrifices, her yielding to
His will.
P.S. You really don’t want to miss You’ll need a Kleenex: When parents don’t want their kids to go to the mission field.)