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One Year Ago Today

7 Comments 18 December 2007

It caught me off guard, the date.

It’s December 18th. The day we came home from France.

One year ago today, we plodded off an airplane, fluffy cat in tow. We made our way down the long escalator to baggage claim. Friends greeted us with signs. I kept it all together, smiling, exhausted, until I saw the praying man. I barely knew him, but I knew him to be one who sincerely followed Jesus and dirtied his knees in prayer. When I looked into his eyes, I couldn’t keep the tears back. His Jesusy eyes saw my grief. He knew.

Today I’m a bit of a mess, remembering. How kind everyone was. How our little temporary home had been decorated for Christmas, complete with tree. How folks lent us cars, took us to dinner, prayed for us.

The scar that is France is raw today. So much heartache there. So many lessons. Trials heaped upon heap in such a pile I felt suffocated most of the time. If you had told me what we would’ve gone through, I would never have had the courage to go. I would’ve crawled back into bed, humming praise songs.

But we did go through the gauntlet. In every possible way. Though I feel terribly sad that we didn’t stay there the rest of our lives, and guilty too, I am thankful that my children are in love with Jesus. And I am too. Patrick also. I never thought I could endure such stuff, but Jesus gave me wings when I felt like digging holes.

Was it a victorious homecoming? Not really. More like a marathoner crawling past the finish line, fully spent. But I thank Jesus from the deepest part of my tired heart that He pulled me across. And He gave people to cheer us forward.

A year ago today, we came to Texas from France. We all left parts of ourselves back there, I’m sure. And the me who was me then is not the me today. I’m worldworn, more cynical. I’m still so tired. But I still love Jesus with a desperate passion I didn’t know before I left American soil. Why?

Because He held me.

He shaped me.

He listened.

He walked me through the valley of the shadow.

He became my best friend.

He sustained me.

He wept with me.

He bore the weight of my grief, particularly concerning my children.

He upheld me.

He became home, my safe place.

Back in America one year, I still see Him as I did then: the great Rescuer. The Bearer of harsh words. The Healer.

Patrick and I came down that exact escalator two days ago. We waited at the same baggage claim. How much life changes in a year. I don’t know if I’ll ever be the same having gone to France and come home early. I’m not stronger. If anything I’m terribly weak and needy and insecure as a result. But I see Jesus clearer now. Understand His strength because of my frailty.

And for that, it’s all been worth it.

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  • blueVicar

    I, for one, am glad to have known you in France. K noted the date that y’all left France; we talked about it over dinner that night. Funny how I had NO idea last year that we’d be back in the USA also by now. Life does take strange turns, doesn’t it?

    Meilleurs voeux!!

  • Kristin Early

    Mary, I for one (although I’m sure there are others who share this sentiment) am grateful God brought you back to Texas. Six months ago I attended my first Dallas Christian Writer’s Guild meeting and yours was among so many welcoming faces. Your encouragement, your writing and your wisdom on TWV2 has not only helped improve my writing but also deepen my understanding of what it means to be called by God to write.

    Just yesterday a dear friend in the mission field in Argentina wrote me about God’s call on her heart to write about her mission experience. She asked me, yes little ol’ me for advice! I encouraged her to visit your web site and shared the letter you wrote to the “new writer.” I just read her e-mail in response to my advice and as I expected, she was exceedingly, abundantly blessed by your words.

    So, take comfort in knowing that in Texas you are a blessing to others both near and far.

    In Him,
    Kristin

  • D. Gudger

    Mary, do you have any archived posts about your time in France and how you learned the love of Jesus in the toughest, darkest journey in your life? How did you make it from day to day when things felt hopeless and painful? Did you feel betrayed by God at all?

    I ask, b/c I’m in a dark place, where God is mostly silent and painful trials are rubbed in like salt in a wound.

    I find myself relating closely to many of your emotions, your feelings and long for a deepening of my faith.

    Your pain is not a loss. Your story can literally save someone’s life. You can show fellow believers how to survive time in the fiery furnace and see Jesus standing there with him arms wrapped tight around us.

  • Mary DeMuth

    Bridget beth and darren,

    thanks so much for kind words like that. I needed them.

  • Darren

    You also showed your kids that you and Patrick love the Lord so much that when he said, “Drop everything and move to France for My renown,” you said, “Yes Lord.”

    That will guide them the rest of their life.

  • Bridget Beth

    edit (to have failed)

  • Bridget Beth

    Mary,

    This is so beautifully written. To failed would have been to have not learned anything. I love how you show that God uses the journey just as much as the destination. You are such a treasure!

    B

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Mary DeMuth

I love Jesus, my family, and my life. Jesus has helped me live uncaged, and for that I'm eternally grateful. In that place of thanks, I write books and blogs and whatnot.

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