Truth Falls Fresh
in Reflections
She put her forehead to the floor and started to sob. Sobbing like only a preschooler can—for something I’d forgotten you could cry about.
She cried for Jesus.
Because He died.
She cried like it happened that minute; and for her, it did. Until then, the reality remained in her ears only—truths she’d been told that had no real home. But while we flipped through the picture Bible, they moved to her mind, and finally found her heart.
With no concern for clocks or calendars, it happened that very moment—the one in which she realized it. Her face turned red, her eyes welled up. And the floor absorbed the shock of it all.
He died! He died!
I chuckled; how sweet. I laughed; how silly. Then it hurt.
That’s right, he did.
He had to, we tried. No use. So we quick hurried to the tomb. And she stopped crying when we got there.
As Mary might’ve looked, or Peter, so did she: wide-eyed, red-faced, wet-cheeked. But quiet and still and listening very carefully.
The tomb is empty; the linen is formless; the angels are questioning, why do you search?
He is alive!
There He is on the road to Emmaus. There He is in their midst. There He is by the water with Peter; look He’s eating breakfast. And there He is ascending.
Now all is well. The tears are wiped away with her little palms. Now they can be dried. All is well and good and right, now.
May the truth always fall so fresh. May it quicken the tears, and be quicker to dry them.
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Amen.
Ahhh, sweet child. I can see her. I pray her contemplation of the Savior forever quickens her heart to respond, and that though she’ll have tears, she’ll also be filled with that inexplicable joy of her salvation! I just want to hug her!
To my teacher friends, Jess and Karen– thanks for your comments. Thank God for children to show us how it’s all done!