Third grade; eight years old. I was standing at the classroom’s art table, completing
my piece of a mural about Brittany. The rest of the class was doing the regular
classwork. I had been allowed to finish my piece because I was leaving school
early that day and would be gone the rest of the week.
It was cool,
even for New Orleans, so it must have been in late November or early December. My parents came to
the classroom to get me; the teacher smiled and nodded; and then we left. I had my book bag in hand. We headed straight for the highway that would eventually
take us to Shreveport.
We were going to
a funeral, a funeral for Debbie, my two-year-old niece, the first and only
child of my half-sister and her husband. She had been born looking absolutely
normal but had turned out to have severely messed up internal organs. The
prognosis had been poor from the beginning, and it was something of a miracle
that she had lived for two years. Her brain and everything else about her
looked normal; she smiled and laughed and cried and talked like any other child
her age.
The significant outward
physical differences were that she never walked; she seemed to stop growing at
about nine months; and her skin was yellow in color, likely a result of the
jaundice she seemed to have had her entire short life.
I barely
remember the funeral. It was at a Baptist church; the family sat in a large
side alcove off the altar area. I can remember standing next to my mother when
the family was called forward to the tiny casket. I don’t know why I remember my
mother wearing a long green coat, but she was.
The funeral
ended at a cemetery, and the casket was placed in a the same plot that held my
grandfather and would some 25 years later hold my grandmother.
Afterward, the
family went to the home of one my aunts, and it was a somber, quiet gathering.
My half-sister
is now 76 years old. Debbie, had she lived, would now be about 57, possibly a
grandmother herself. My sister would later have two sons, both normal and
healthy. Somehow, she got through those first awful days after Debbie’s death.
But I don’t know how she or anyone else would have “gotten over” the death of a
much-loved child. One thing she clung to was her faith.
Christa Black Gifford |
In Heart
Made Whole: Turning Your Unhealed Pain into Your Greatest Strength, Christa
Black Gifford tells a story of pain, the pain of discovering that a much-wanted
child was born with anencephaly,
with part of her brain and head missing. The little girl, already called
Goldie, didn’t live long after her birth. And Gifford knew in those first
horrifying moments after her child died that this was one of those life events
that could change everything, wreck a marriage, and destroy a family. That
potential was fully there.
And she decided
that she couldn’t let that happen, right there in that moment of awful pain.
She deliberately chose not to let that happen.
“The very place
of my deepest pain,” she writes, “miraculously became the starting point of my
heart’s greatest healing.” And she discovers that this wasn’t only true about
the loss of a child, but applied to all of the pain a single life can hold.
For the next
several weeks, led by Jason Stasyszen and Sarah Salter, we’ll be reading Heart Made Whole. Consider reading along
and join in the discussion. To see what others are saying about this chapter, “The
Broken Heart,” please visit Jason at Connecting to Impact.
Photograph by Kai Stachowiak via PublicDomain Pictures. Used with permission.
There's something so unnatural and out of place about babies or children dying. Death is ugly no matter what. But to find healing in the midst of such pain? That's an incredible gift of God. Thanks so much for joining us, Glynn. Always appreciate your thoughts. :)
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