blogger is being ridiculous and not letting me copy and paste
but the chorus goes
i just wanna be with you
i just want this waiting to be over
i just wanna be with you
and it helps to know the day is getting closer
every minute takes an hour
every inch feels like a mile
till i won't have to imagine
and i finally get to see you smile
and the second verse:
my journey's here but my heart is there
so i dream and wait, and keep the faith, while you prepare
our destiny, till you come back for me
oh, please make it soon
After my grandpa died 7 years ago, I distinctly remember hearing this same song on the radio. And I remember feeling the same comfort from it that I did today. While this song is more about our time left on earth and hoping for heaven, so it would seem to be a great song for those us with years and years left on the earth. However, here it felt so applicable to a dying grandmother. She's spent ninety-two years toiling her way through the good times and bad of this life, and it appears that her days of struggle will soon be over. Her wait is short, and her journey is almost done, but she's about so see what we should be hoping to see. She can sing this song more authentically than anyone else I know.
We rarely think of life as a time where we wait to go to heaven. Our lives are like standing in line at Walmart with the coolest product we could possibly imagine, just waiting for finally be checked out and get to use this sweet product. We should be excited and want to get through the line so we can finally open up the box and rip out the packing products and own it, but we're so occupied with standing in line that we forget what the point of standing in line is. We distract ourselves the whole way to the register, looking at magazines or grabbing a few more trinkets to buy, occasionally letting other people go before us. We stall as long as we can, choosing to just stand there with the box instead of checking out and opening it to what's inside.
Maybe thats a bad metaphor, but I feel like that's how I'm living my life, and that's how a lot of us do. Do I really just want this waiting to be over? I can't say I'm spending my life anticipating leaving this world, and if I was told "the day is getting closer" I'd be freaked out that my death was coming up(and even more creeped out someone knew that), not excitedly waiting to go.
My extended family has exchanged many emails the past few days, and one included some of the few things my grandma has been able to speak during her periods of consciousness when my uncle, her oldest son, was with her this morning. She said in distress,
"I'm going to die. I'm going to die"
Seconds later, she spoke again.
"I'm going to live again. I'm going to live again."
Oh Lord, haste the day when my faith shall be sight
The clouds be rolled back as a scroll
The trump shall resound, and the Lord shall descend
Even so, it is well with my soul
So I was bored today and decided to look at my blog and remembered I'd stumbled upon yours, so I did some reading...
ReplyDeleteI REALLY enjoyed the waiting in line at Walmart analogy. It's interesting to really realize all that we, knowingly or unknowingly, put in our lives as distractions from our ultimate goal and prize in life: glorifying God on Earth while waiting to eternally glorify Him in Heaven.