Wednesday, February 11, 2015

February 11: Writing Prompt #42-Whoa!

What’s the most surreal experience you’ve ever had?
*In October of 1997, less than a year after I moved to Kwajalein, I wrote an essay about my most surreal experience.  I actually still have that essay, and I brought it out just for this prompt.  I have copied it down mostly how I wrote it at the time, leaving out small, irrelevant bits and editing it as I wrote it out because I can’t help it. Not surprisingly, my most surreal experience happened in that non-denominational church I told you about in an earlier entry that I attended when I was a teenager and young adult in college. 
God’s Spirit Shower
As you walk into the large, open sanctuary, it resembles a basketball gym more than a place of worship, but its surface appearance speaks nothing of what goes on inside each week.  The first sounds that leap to your ears are musical with the beat of the drums, the strum of guitars, and the chime of piano keys.  Excitement is in the air as the people weave in and out of the aisles, greeting each other with smiles and hugs.  Everyone is getting ready for the praise and worship part of the ceremony, which I like to call, God’s Spirit Shower. 
There is an orchestrator on the stage in the front, making sure all the elements come together. There are greeters at every door ready to welcome you into the flock with a warm hug, kind word, and sweet smile.  There are worshippers scattered along the stage singing to God, “pour on us,” welcoming Him into their presence to lead His people as He pleases.  It is certainly not quiet. The members of this particular church announce their praises to God in a boisterous flurry of raised hands and tearful eyes. There is no set program during this part of the service because it is lead by the spirit.  As the Spirit begins to move, no one, including the pastors of the church, know exactly what might occur. There might be healings, speaking in tongues, testimonies, and most likely, a word from God through one of His people. 
If I didn’t know better, I might tell you that I first came here by accident.  After my parent’s divorce, my mom began attending, and to be with her, I followed. The ways of this church were very different than anything I had ever experienced in my Baptist upbringing, but I found it exhilarating! I discovered such genuine devotion in the people who attended there. At first, I simply observed, never getting too drawn into the activities or emotions for fear of how crazy others might think I was. But, gradually, I found myself being pulled into it all, smiling with joy and wiping my eyes of tears as I witnessed those in the presence of God shouting victory chants for the MVP who had saved the game and their souls.  I laughed as the exciting built into a dance around the building. God’s anointing was pouring down just as the chanters had asked for. I cried with those on their knees in the aisles, calling out to Him for love and praising Him for love received.
Sometimes, I would still resist the pull of His Spirit and not accept the peace that comes from God’s love, especially during vulnerable times in my life like the year I lived with my dad after withdrawing from college for a time.  During my childhood years and young adulthood, my life revolved around my dad. I devoted my time to trying to please him, even though I didn’t really understand how to do that.  I think my own dad may have spent much of his life trying to please his parents too and did not have the nurturing he so needed. As a dad himself, he was handicapped in knowing how to love in a way he never experienced love himself. That being said, I tended to push away from the love of God because if my own father couldn’t love me (as least that’s how I felt at the time-unable to please him, which translated into not loving me in the mind of a young woman), how could the creator of the universe love such a pathetic creature.  I couldn’t accept his love. I didn’t know how, so I continued to push away and turn into the hardened shell of a person I believed my dad to be. I spent the first years of my adult life being the rebellious child I never was. When that shell cracked from all the pent up emotions and guilt, I withdrew from college and went home to live with my dad, in an effort to rebuild, to try and put things back exactly where I thought they should be. That’s when God arrived and broke through my walls. 
I found out how hard it was to live with my dad as an adult, not really knowing him much from my childhood. So, my reactions to him were childlike temper tantrums and running away in rebellion. The situation was worse than ever. I was totally lost in the world, and at this moment, I found myself back in church with my mom. When my parents got divorced, I believed with all my heart that God would bring something good out of it, but it didn’t happen until much later.  My dad remarried almost immediately, and at that time, it felt to me that my dad’s new family was more important to him than me, and during my visits to his home, I would smile and act like the strong girl I thought he wanted me to be, but afterwards, I would come home to my room, curl up on the bed with my stuffed animals and cry myself to sleep, wondering why my Daddy couldn’t hold me in his arms and love me just as I was. Of course, even if he did hold me, I wouldn’t have stayed there for long because I didn’t even feel comfortable when he hugged me back then. 
Unfortunately, being back in his home as an adult, brought the baby girl out in me, and one night after coming home as late as I could, I snuck past him room and closed the door to my haven of solitude with a sign of relief that I didn’t have to speak with him.  Night was the only comforting time for me in that depressing home (my dad had recently gotten divorced for the 2nd time, so it was a difficult time for him as well, I’m sure). I knew he wouldn’t get up from his sleep to disturb me, but as soon as I woke up, my body tensed, listening for his heavy footsteps on the hardwood floor downstairs.  I don’t believe he enjoyed seeing me either because of my acid tongue and constant bitter recall of his sins against the family. The difference was that he seemed unaffected by my words. In my mind, he had all the control. 
The night may have been my solitude, but it was also a time for ghosts of the past to haunt me and remind me of scars that had not yet healed. One Saturday night, I lay in bed, curled up like that little girl I still was and cried, although this time was different than before.  This time I cried not about my father, but about my God.  I desired the relationship with Him that He had always offered, but that I never fully accepted before. I cried out for His arms to hold me. I became increasingly upset at God because He wasn’t there physically. I wanted a physical presence there with real arms to wrap me up in. I cried out for those arms. “Daddy, why can’t you be here to hold me in your arms. I want that so much. Why can’t you do that. I know you’re here in Spirit, but it’s just not the same.” That night I fell asleep waiting for a miracle, crying out to God to rescue me from my solitary nights. 
The next morning at church, I was so sad.  A dark cloud of depression had set right over my heart. I coldly endured the hugs and smiles from the greeters and my church family. I really just wanted to be alone. At the very bottom of this self-pity, God spoke directly to me.  A young woman leaped to the front, anxious to share with the church the word God was speaking to her at that very moment. I half listened being so used to hearing His words spoken in front of me, but this time the Holy Spirit shook me up.  Though this servant, a petite woman almost totally blocked from my view in the back, God said, “I do want to hold you in my arms; I long to hold you, and I love you. I love you as if you were my only child.”  His ONLY child.  Immediately tears poured down my face. I had longed to be loved by a father in this way, to be some man’s precious little girl, for all my life. All this time, I didn’t realize that I had the most loving father in the world.  Never before or since has God answered my prayers so directly.  God had brought me, almost accidentally, to a place I never would have come on my own, a congregation I never would have expected to love so dearly, and a blessing I could have received anywhere, but He chose here, and it made all the difference. 
God is everywhere for me now….the swaying of the trees, the motion of the waves, the voices of children, and in the hearts of all those who long for a love they’ve never had. A church like the one described above, well, it may be what some call fanatical, and it would cause many people to walk right out upon the first healing or foreign tongue spoken, but only God knows what you need and how to touch your heart and change your life for the better.

*A final note: This was originally written during a very tumultuous time in my life. My relationship with my biological dad now is much, much different, and the wisdom I have gained in the years since taught me that much of what I thought and felt about my dad wasn’t the reality of the situation.  Today, God has shown me that I have 2 fathers who love me very, very much!! J  

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