God in the wilderness

After our twins died, mothers from all over wrote to me.

They had lost babies before birth, after birth, in childhood, and beyond. They wrote to me with love and compassion, empathy’s impulse to reach out in shared suffering, even to a stranger.

And to a person, they all said the same thing.

God was with me so powerfully in the moments and days surrounding my child’s death.

Later, my experience of God became the wilderness.

If this happens for you, I understand. I am here. 

They knew well enough not to declare it would happen for me, having been on the bereaved receiving end of supposedly-helpful declarations of How Your Grief Will Be and What Will Happen To You Because I Know Best.

They told me it might. They told me it could be hard. They told me not to lose hope.

I read their words and was grateful for their compassion.

(Secretly I told myself it would not happen to me.)

God would not leave me to the wilderness.

. . .

Maggie and Abby died four months ago. The luminous, palpable presence of God that carried us through the early days of raw grief is gone.

I try to pray but I don’t know how.

The rote prayers that got me through the crushing moments of pleading and petition before the girls were born – Our Father, Hail Mary, Memorare, repeat – still cycle through my mind. But they do not sink into my heart.

The deep surrender of complete abandon into the heart of God that surrounded my whole being in the days of their deaths is now a memory. Strong but distant.

I am not angry at God, not bitter or despairing. I am simply in a different place.

It is the wilderness.

All those mothers were right.

. . .

I think back on times in my life when God felt absent. The cruel pain of perceived abandonment, the dark despair that everything I thought I believed was false.

This is not the same thing. Wilderness is not absence. God is here, too.

But everything is different.

There is an abiding presence, more subtle and mysterious. It has never left my side.

Wilderness is by definition a wild land. I will not romanticize it. The terrain is barren and harsh. Stripped of familiar landmarks. Disorienting and dark once the day’s last slivers of light disappear. Lurking dangers unseen, even the shivering threat of death.

The wilderness is a powerful place and a potent symbol in Christianity. Where the Israelites wandered. Where Hagar fled. Where John began preaching. Where Jesus was tempted.

What I learn from their stories is this: even in the wilderness, God is not gone.

I return to Exodus: the pillar of cloud by day, the pillar of fire by night, a steadfast promise to lead ahead and protect behind. I don’t know what sense to make of the God-with-us in this wilderness, what shape or size, what element or direction. I only know that God is here.

The fact of this abiding – the fleeting moments of comfort, the growing acceptance of peace – is what compels me to keep going. We are being led from one place to another.

And this is what wilderness is. A passage between where (and who) we were and where (and who) we will be. We are not there yet. We do not know how long the wandering will last.

We just keep going.

. . .

Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?

I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. (Isaiah 43:19)

This is the surprising truth about the wilderness. It is still a faithful place to be. It is still part of the way.

There is grumbling and lamenting and despairing, of course. We are humans and we drag all this humbling humanity into the dark desert with us.

But each new morning there is surprising manna left for us to gather from the ground. We have never been abandoned or forgotten.

We are moving somewhere, changed.

The mothers who wrote to me from their own deserts were ancient ammas speaking wisdom to my hermit heart. And they were right.

When we are in the wilderness, God is still there, too.

My friend Shannon makes these beautiful gemstones necklaces for her shop. When I saw this one, it held the promise of dawn in the desert. Can you see it, too? 

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7 Comments

  1. Sara Kazlauskas on 4 July 2016 at 3:35 pm

    Thank you, Laura! I have been wondering what this stage was. I buried my stillborn son 3 months ago. I have followed your story and given thanks to God that you are there ahead of me on this journey. You shed light and put into words what I cannot. Hugs, brave mama!

  2. Kristin Lescalleet on 2 July 2016 at 8:30 am

    This is so beautifully written. And such an encouragement to me today. No matter how each of us arrived in the wilderness, God is still there. Thank you for sharing.

  3. Shelley on 30 June 2016 at 10:09 pm

    This is so beautiful. Thankyou again. You make me fear death less, Laura. That might be naive of me to say-I’ve had such little experience of it that I don’t really know what I’m talking about. But maybe that’s the point. I’ve avoided death all my life. It horrifies me so I skirt around it, avoid it, run from it. But your writing about death is so full of hope and honesty that it invites me to dare to be in the same room with it. Because if you have lived it and written it all out then I figure I can read it.
    Death-our own mortality-is the feariest fear of all. It’s the primal fear. I know objectively that if I faced my own fear of death then I’d be a better person but I, like the rest of western society, shrink from it and then run. I feel that your writing at the moment is like a friend who holds a steady hand on my back and says “STAY”. “Stay in the same room as death and just see what happens.”

  4. Patty on 30 June 2016 at 4:27 pm

    While I have not experienced the utter pain of loosing a child, I can relate to what you said Laura about being in the wilderness (God there too) in my own experience of a divorce, a different kind of loss.
    And yes we just keep going. Thinking of you and your family in a special way today 🙂 <3

  5. Rose on 30 June 2016 at 10:32 am

    Thank you for sharing this piece of your heart. When Jesus brings me to the wilderness, I am consoled by Revelations 12:6 “and the woman fled into the wilderness, where she has a place prepared by God, in which to be nourished for one thousand two hundred and sixty days.” He has prepared this wilderness for you and will nourish you! Also remember that flowers bloom in the desert!

  6. Kelly on 30 June 2016 at 8:24 am

    Thank you for putting words to some of the thoughts deepest and quietest in my mind.

  7. Melissa Borgmann-Kiemde on 30 June 2016 at 7:38 am

    Holding. dawn in the desert.

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