I opened my door
on that blustery February morning and there it was – a book tied with a pale
blue ribbon. I could see the now iconic cover with the picture of a robin’s
nest holding two blue eggs. I traced the title script, One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are by Ann
Voskamp. My heart-friend had placed this gift on my porch. She told me it was a
book I must read. In the days and months
and years to follow, this little book became a map, a manual, a manifesto, leading
me through a new life of daring gratitude in the face of adversity. In short, this
book made a lasting impression.
After reading the first chapter of One Thousand Gifts, tears welled up. I knew this was exactly what I needed for this season
of life. Maybe even for the rest of my life. In One Thousand Gifts, my friend Ann uses the original Greek word
“eucharisteo” from the Bible to light her path to healing, to teach her
language lesson. Eucharisteo means “thanksgiving.” This word knits together two
other Greek words: Charis = grace and Chara = joy.
“Eucharisteo – thanksgiving – always precedes
the miracle,” writes Ann. These words, this thesis, this enlightenment-made-mantra
now penetrates me daily. I can’t stop thinking about it, seeing it everywhere
in the Bible, experiencing it in my footsteps. Jesus thanks God before he turns
five loaves and two fish into a feast for thousands. Twelve baskets of
leftovers sing of the miracle.
Through her poetic
prose and personal story, Ann unfolds a theology of gratitude. She dared me
(and now millions of others) to start writing down gifts – the daily graces in
my life that are pure love notes from God. “How do you count on life when the
hopes don’t add up?” she boldly asks. And then she taught me to “count
blessings and discover who can be counted on” (151).
During that first
read, I was in a season of waiting. Our
family was embarking on a new calling - moving to Haiti after the massive
earthquake of 2010 to serve with a non-profit my husband was leading called Christian Friendship Ministries. In the waiting, I clung to Ann’s words and
we crammed in Haitian Kreyol language lessons. We anticipated leaving our beloved
community and starting a new life in the developing world. While I waited, I
counted gifts. When our house wouldn’t sell after months and the roof leaked
through the rainy season, I counted gifts. I created a list in my journal,
shared it with friends, and began to post it on my blog and Facebook as an act of public, wild
gratitude to my God. My attitude and heart tasted redemption.
During those months of counting, I learned
to adjust my lens. Whereas before I might have followed my human instinct to
complain, put on a hat of cynism, even a robe of jealousy, now there were
grooves of habit prompting me to pray and see each moment as a gift. I learned
that it doesn't help to just put a positive spin on the hard parts of life. We
need to dig through the soil, unearth the painful shards of glass and see the
beauty in that traveled journey. I learned to trust Him with my
fears, my plans, my future.
In
May 2014, when my husband was diagnosed with stage four melanoma cancer, I
pulled out the book again with trembling hands and reread the lines I had
highlighted, the pages I had dog-eared. This was my fourth reading and much of
the book was already tattooed on my heart. God had faithfully prepared me for
that devastating season of losing my love, the daddy of my three daughters. I
already had learned the transforming wonder of counting gifts. I already had
made it a habit to turn my face toward the Son with my list of gratitude in the
midst of the suffocating darkness.
Ann’s words
soothed me in my suffering: “The good news is that all those living the land of
the shadow of death have been birthed into new life, that the transfiguration
of a suffering world has already begun. That suffering nourishes grace, and
pain and joy are arteries of the same heart – and mourning and dancing are but
movements in His unfinished symphony of beauty” (100). She pointed me back to
hope and His goodness.
If you are in a
season of waiting, a season of loss, a season of wondering why there is so much
suffering in our world, I challenge you to start a gift list. If you feel like
you are just mucking through the everyday tasks of being a mother or a job that
makes your shoulders pull tight with the weight of stress, I dare you to pause
and notice the goodness around you.
Dorina Gilmore-Young is a published author,
blogger and public speaker. She is a mama to three active girls and serves as
the Coordinator for The Bridge MOPS group.
No comments:
Post a Comment