I was
a child in the 1950s, that era of Eisenhower and Elvis Presley and new
technologies like home televisions and air conditioning. My parents were the
Great Depression/World War II generation, and they were shaped by both those
experiences. One of the things that life in a middle class home in a middle
class suburb meant was that you never argued in front of the kids.
The
one time I can remember my parents arguing had to do with me. I was eight. My
father was to take me for a Saturday outing to the French Quarter, just the two
of us.
A
few years before, he had started his own printing business, and he worked every
day, often for 12 hours or more. It was not unusual for me not to see him for
weeks at a time. He would often be gone by the time I woke up in the morning
and not return until after I was in bed at night.
The
night before our French Quarter visit, he told me mother and me that he had to
work that Saturday and he couldn’t take me as planned.
I
don’t remember how I responded. Disappointment, likely. I don’t think I threw a
tantrum, because I wasn’t a tantrum type of kid.
My
mother got angry. She blew up. He blew up. They sent me to my room to get me
out of the way (but not out of earshot). Later, my mother told me that the trip
to the French Quarter was on, and my father and I would be going.
I
remember the day as gray and overcast, leaning to the cool side. I know it was
February 1960 because a Jackson Square artist did a pastel drawing of me, and
signed and dated it. I still have the drawing, pastel on black paper. It’s a
side view of my head and shoulders; he drew me wearing a white t-shirt. We ate
coffee and doughnuts at Café DuMonde; and we visited the Cabildo and St. Louis
Cathedral. I don’t recall much else, but it was enough. It’s the one time I can
remember as a child spending an extended period of time with my father.
That
argument, and that event, came to mind as I read the chapter entitled “Our
Father” in Brennan Manning’s The
Furious Longing of God. “Only Jesus revealed to an astonished Jewish
community that God is truly Father,” Manning writes. “If you took the love of
all the best mothers and fathers who have lived in the course of human history,
all their goodness, kindness, patience, fidelity, wisdom, tenderness, strength,
and love and united all those qualities in a single person, that person’s love
would only be a faint shadow of the furious love and mercy in the heart of God
the Father addressed to you and me at this moment.”
Many
say that it is our fathers who shape our understanding of God. For me, for a
long time, God was someone who was there but not actually involved in my life. And
I didn’t live my life like he was actually and intimately involved.
It
was a shock to learn that God not only loved me but that He was actively
involved in loving me, that He considered me his much-loved child and that He
was all over me.
It
was frightening when I understood that. It still is occasionally. But over time
the fear diminished and the confidence grew. No matter what happened or what I
did, He was going to be there.
My
father loved me. Like so many of his generation, he had a hard time showing
that to his children. And while it hurt for a time not to be sure, it prepared
me for love of God that was waiting for me.
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’re reading The Furious Longing of God. To see more posts on this chapter, please
visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
My father worked long hours, too. I never got to see him as much as I would have liked to, and, like you, it took me a long, long time to realize that God loved me as His child.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful review and reflection!
This strikes true. Reading currently the book by John Eldredge "Fathered by God" so this post drew my attention from the start. Thanks!
ReplyDelete"For me, for a long time, God was someone who was there but not actually involved in my life. And I didn’t live my life like he was actually and intimately involved."
ReplyDeleteMy childhood was somewhat identical, Glynn. I didn't have a great example of a dad and that has made an impact on my life, even today.
Glynn, I thing God is truly enjoying tearing apart any preconceived notions you had about Him as Father, swamping you with the fury of His love!
ReplyDeleteI loved that quote about parents. Establishes again that you can't comprehend this kind of love. We may have had good parents, bad parents, indifferent parents, whatever. We still have to experience the truth of the Father and His love and He calls us into that blessing. Wonderful post, Glynn. Thank you.
ReplyDelete