My workplace is a bustling charismatic place filled with
communication and activity. I get there early in the morning, mostly before
anyone, and it’s a little more peaceful. As people roll in, it starts to get
going and then it doesn’t stop all day long. But this past week we had silence.
Right in the middle of the busiest hours, the announcement went out to honour
our fallen heroes with a moment of silence.
I can’t help think that silence is a special and valuable
thing to many of us. To others, it’s the nightmare of reflection that demands a
constantly denied response. Many of us spend our day running from the truth of
the silence. Stopping to think, reflect, and be observant demands gratefulness
and the honouring of those who provided the good things the silences remind us
of.
Thank you to those who fought and those who lost so that I
can enjoy the freedoms of our country.
Last Sunday our four oldest and some of their friends from
our Bobcaygeon church travelled up the road to play for the service in Fenelon.
I was the chauffer. So, we arrived about a half hour before the service and the
kids practiced through their music and did a sound check. There were a good
number of elderly folk in the sanctuary enjoying the practice. A lot of them
stopped by to ask me who I was, and my systematic response was “I’m the girls’
dad.”
“Ohhhh, you’re the one..”
Hmmm.. Yup. I’m the one. Haha.
After a few folks
passed by me, and we neared the completion of the practice, one of the older
men in front of me turned and just started talking to me. “You know… seeing
those kids up there, having worked so hard to be involved like this.. well… You
know we always say this and that about the young people today. But these kids
give me some hope. There are some good kids around after all.”
What ever happened to respectfulness and gratefulness?
Shouldn’t these folks who lost loved ones, and lived an honest life, and paid
their taxes, and voted to keep us free, and helped provide us our lifestyle,
meet with more honour than we in our generation greet them? Should it be so
hard for them to find hope for when they’ve passed on?
Last Sunday our next-door neighbours were completing their
move. The boys had helped them all week. Bob, our kind old man next door, (only
to be replaced with another kind old man named Bob by the way.. lol) has taken
to adopting our kids as his “grandkid neighbours”. Sunday when we got home from
church we were a little surprised to see Jeddy doing math… voluntarily… in the
afternoon… when it’s do-whatever-you-want time. Come to find out, the kid is
getting his math done so he can help Bob finish moving during school time on
Monday morning and see him off. I cried. I wish I had been that type of kid. A
kid who honours the elderly, and shows love by his works. Before Bob left he
told the new Bob, “You’re going to love these kids. They’re like my adopted
grandkids. They’re the best-behaved kids I’ve ever seen…”
When I hear comments like that I can’t help but think how
glad I am these kids turned out like me and not like their mother. I kid.. I
kid..
We’ve been so blessed with great bonfire weather this year.
We’ve been pretty much bug free for a couple months now, and yet the nice nights
keep coming. It’s nice now because the sunset is early enough that we can have
an after-dinner bonfire instead of staying up so late for it. A couple weeks
back, I scheduled a bonfire on a Thursday night. I told everyone and they all
thought I was joking. I was not. I love our fireside music practice and cuddle
time by the fire. As I sit comfy in my cedar Muskoka chair on the porch in
mid-November with my laptop and cup of tea, writing this, I am thinking tonight
might be a good night for one too! Even though I love a good bonfire, the kids,
having been busy all day and just finished their work for the day, have better
things to do. Initially when I told everyone that Thursday on my way home that
I was skipping dinner and heading straight to the fire pit, no one was really
interested. I figured I would just enjoy the perfect evening and stars all by
myself. I started up what was, in my opinion, the best built fire of the year,
and nestled into my chair, feet up on the edge of the pit, looking up into the
sky as the constellations slowly began to reveal themselves one star at a time…
It was dark quickly, and though I could see the house I couldn’t see anything
between me and the house. I heard the door, and someone heading down. It was my
Hunny.J
She was carrying a cup of coffee for me, and coming to join me. Then I heard
the door again, and again, and slowly everyone came down the hill carrying
their chair and some instruments too. I knew none of them wanted to be out
there. But they did it for me. They were unselfish with their time for me.
Today, there is a dearth of honour and respect. There is a
plague of laziness and selfishness. I say today, but really, it’s nothing new.
It’s a symptom of ease. It’s a diseased fruit of our natural course. The
culture today is one towards self-respect, and self-honouring, rather than
honour and respect for the honourable.
Years ago, when I was working on the nightshift, I would
often enjoy my lunch break outside watching the sunset while I read my Bible
and had some time to reflect. One gentleman I worked with would often join me.
We didn’t agree a lot of the time, but we enjoyed many gentle conversations about
everything from Creation, to child-rearing, to the end of the world. He had a
religious mind set, and really, we had the ideal respectful discussions, though
we almost always disagreed. There was a mutual respect and honouring of each
other that allowed us to be kind, and present our thoughts, and then gently
disagree.
I started chatting with a man from another part of the world
in an online game I used to play. We had a lot in common personally, including
our conservative lifestyle at home, our homeschooling, and our large families.
However, he is a knowledgeable and faithful Muslim and I am a Biblical Christian.
In that very understanding, as we began to discuss our differing and agreeing opinions
on matters of our faiths, we decided to be respectful and honour each other’s
opinions. We spent many hours discussing important and valuable details with
respect. He is more than a victorious argument to me. I respect him. I care for
him. I pray for him. I wonder if we who claim to be people of faith were so
kind in our discussion of all things, say, politics for instance, if we
wouldn’t find a more peaceful forum for convincing others of our opinions.
Maybe we would understand each other more if we were less about winning and
more about love for our neighbours.
What did you think about in your moment of silence? What was
it you were honouring? Who were you giving respect to? Or was that just an
annoying archaic practice that wasted a minute of your year?
Take a few moments of silence today, to stop and think, to
reflect, and to honour those who hope for the future in you.
“The fear of the LORD is the instruction of wisdom; and
before honour is humility.” – Proverbs 15:33
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