I’ve
been reading Margaret Feinberg’s Fight Back With Joy: Celebrate More. Regret Less.
Stare Down Your Greatest Fears, and I find this:
“Joy
flows out of unsuspecting, and often daunting, places,” she writes. “It’s
illogical, irrational, downright crazypants to think that great adversity could
possibly lead to a fuller life. Yet that’s what I’ve discovered over many
months of being poisoned, burned, injected, sliced, and diced.”
I
pay attention to what Feinberg says, because she is writing as a breast cancer
patient and survivor. She has been through the “cure is worse than the disease”
treatment, and she pointedly says she does not consider cancer to be a gift.
But
she finds joy, sometimes in the very belly of the cancer beast. Like when she
handed out red balloons to other cancer patients and their families.
Joy
is a word that we Christians often associate with their faith. Both we as
children sang and with our own children sing “I’ve got the joy, joy, joy, joy
down in my heart / Where? / down in my heart / down in my heart.”
The
fact is that joy is something that we can’t plan for. It’s something that
happens as a result, often the unintended result, of something else.
Standing
in silence Canterbury Cathedral in 2013 for the 3 p.m. prayer time, I was
nearly overwhelmed with joy by saying the Lord’s Prayer with 27 Japanese
tourists.
Sitting
in a church in Erfurt, Germany, interviewing a young pastor in 2002, joy
flooded me, the pastor and the video cameraman to the point of tears.
At
a church service at London’s Westminster Chapel, the time of “silent prayer”
was replaced by speaking individual prayers out loud at the same time, and the
church felt washed by joy as the voices rose and fused upward.
Or
the first time I heard my first grandchild say something that sounded remotely
like “Grandpa.”
Or
during a particularly dark time, receiving an unexpected note that said simply,
“I’m praying for you.”
Joy
comes unexpected and unplanned, often sneaking in and upending you.
I
can remember years ago, sitting next to my young wife and mother of my five-month-old
son while she awakened from surgery to remover a possibly cancerous thyroid.
When she awoke, her first words were, “Am I OK?” And the joy I experienced
telling her YES! was a wonder, for both of us.
Feinberg
is right. We find joy in often daunting places. It arrives unplanned. It brings
with it the ability to bear often great hardship.
It
is a gift.
Led
by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been reading Fight Back with Joy. To
see more posts on this chapter, “Where I Never Expected to Find Joy,” please
visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
Photograph: Westminster Chapel
in London, where the spoken aloud prayers went up and the joy came down.
As I've read your commentary on this book, I've thought how much it might be appreciated at cancer treatment centers. Good stuff!
ReplyDeleteJoy does come to us unexpectedly and is the greatest gift!
ReplyDeleteBlessings, Glynn!
I love getting to read one post after another. The joy I felt reading Sarah's increased as I read your post and I'm just filled with gratitude and awe. How good is our God? We'll spend eternity finding out. Thank you SO much, Glynn. :)
ReplyDeleteGlynn, I love hearing about the places and situations in which you experienced Joy!
ReplyDeleteSo.... beautiful. Thank you for sharing this journey of joy, Glynn.
ReplyDelete