(Matthew with his Mom and Dad)
(Our engagement photo)
(Our 10th wedding anniversary)
So flash-forward 20 years and here we are married for 18 years, parents to six awesome children, and creeping closer to that May 4th date of his 44th year of life. Today I am 42 and Matthew is 41. I have kept the emotions and struggle in trusting the Lord at bay for most of this time. Remember I said we've added SIX kids to the equation so that doesn't allow much down time to worry over it for too long. Also my faith in the Lord has grown by leaps and bounds through these years. Jesus has clearly shown me that He knows the length of each person's days (Psalm 139:16). I have come to a full understanding that I could very well die before Matthew by means of cancer, heart attack, or getting hit by a truck. It all did start hitting a little closer to home as I turned 40 and then Matthew 40 the next year. We were actually in our 40's now. My 41st birthday shook me emotionally as I was still grieving my own Dad passing away and I was pregnant with our 6th child, Ezra.
The opposite side of battling fear over possibly losing Matthew at an early age is barricading my heart in an unhealthy way in case it were to happen. This mindset was extremely exaggerated after watching my mom Patty emotionally and spiritually hit rock bottom after my dad Rich went to be with the Lord. Seeing the horrible pain she went through that first year and still feels some days, I began wanting to avoid that at all cost. The solution: not love Matthew as much as my mom loved my dad. Of course I would be a faithful wife and take care of all he needed, but my heart would take a step back and prepare for the worst. However God would not let me stay there as His plan for human marriage is for it to be a model of the love relationship between Christ and His church (Ephesians 5:22-33). His church has no reason to prepare for the worst. Christ is always faithful, always truthful, and always ALWAYS. He is eternal.
The sermon at church last Sunday sealed this whole contemplation in my mind. Pastor Hank preached from James 4:13-17 and explained how we should make life plans while still keeping in mind the uncertainty and brevity of life. The Bible says in verse 15, 'Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.”' Pastor Hank explained why we should say, "If the Lord wills" in connection to the plans of our life. First because God is in control. We see His hand at work all through the Bible and even today if our spiritual eyes are looking for it. Second because God's plan is best. He knows us more intimately than we know ourselves and also knows every moment of our lives including those that have yet to happen. And third because we can trust God. He is the only one who never changes, never lies, and never stops loving us. Even when we claim not to love Him.
The sermon helped me to see that if the Lord wills Matthew to pass away on May 4th at the age of 44 (or any day between now and then), God is in control and I can trust Him to walk beside me, even to carry me through the heartache. However if the Lord wills for Matthew and I to grow old together into our 80's or 90's, my position should be to grow more in love with Matthew each of the days we have together. As Christ desires for the church to grow more in love and dependence on Him, He wants me to feel more like that towards Matthew. Understandably, first and foremost dependent on Him but fully committed to Matthew in our holy marriage covenant also. A sweet woman at BSF whose husband passed away a few years ago was telling me about the loneliness she feels. I said, "I can't imagine what that must be like." She said something I didn't expect. "Don't. Don't think about what it would be like at all. Just love your husband every day you have him." That is good advice and what I want to do. The last verse of James 4 says, "So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin." If I hold back part of my love for Matthew it would be sinful. I will cling to the verse that has carried me through many situations, "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding" (Proverbs 3:5). Each year when May 4th arrives again and I consider all that has been and all that might be, I want my faith in God to grow deeper too. And I want to celebrate my marriage for the wonderful blessing it is. I also want to encourage you in whatever hard, long-standing, worrisome situation you might be living through, Jesus is faithful and Jesus is enough.