Not once upon a time,
not once in a lifetime;
just... sometimes,
I feel like an inkstain.
And even if you are a Writer, and you Like Ink... that is not a compliment.
Sometimes, I feel like an inkstain on the written work of my life, penned by the hand of God. Like a very unsplendid blot that landed in the middle of the page somehow; the sort that makes you wince, trying to rub it away with your fingers, even though you know it won’t do any good.
I hear people say that “God don’t make no dirt.” (The grammar? Horrid. The phrase? Existent. More's the pity.) When I hear it, two things come to mind (apart from the miseries we shall soon endure if we do not learn to better wield the English language). The first: I know it is true. The second: I’m perfectly capable of making my own dirt, thank you very much, and ruining my life to the fullest of my abilities without any help whatsoever.
There are times when I believe I am more capable of doing wrong than I am of doing right. And it frightens me.
In the midst of this petty life, where the wakeful darkness of my Saturday nights is spent wondering how to be as impossibly perfect as possible at church the next day, living through a sermon about the splendid potential within the 'Good Christian' who has somehow invaded our expectations, and then returning home to face every unholy thought, word, and deed that has plagued my steps and not knowing which is better—avoiding the truth, or facing the reality of what I have been—I cannot help but wonder, sometimes, what this trembling heart could be missing.
Perhaps, it is 2 Timothy 2:11-14— the promise that no matter how faithless I am, His faithfulness never fails. That He is constant where my own failings can never be—into eternity itself. That He has overcome the self within me, and now: torn, slain, and conquered back into life, I am His.
What is His is His forever. Even an inkstain.
And by a queer thing called Grace, He turns those inkstains into love stories. Because the truly beautiful love stories are about those who were loved, without having anything loveable to offer—and through that love, becoming worth loving.
If you don’t believe it, just ask the inkstains.
1 missives:
I'm an inkstain. You're an inkstain. The most beautiful blots in creation, dabbled right into the Lamb's Book of Life.
The first thing that came to my mind when you said "God don't make no dirt" - which is a phrase I have not heard before - was, "Oh, what dreadful grammar..." But you're absolutely right. I hear people say, not that the devil made them do it, but that the devil /helped/ them do it, and perhaps that is so; but really, the devil is a busy fellow and a rather terrible one, and if any old bloke were to come into contact with him, I can't imagine the exchange being so flippant. The thing is, the devil entirely aside, we're perfectly capable of ruining our own lives without a helping hand from any. And even if we try our best to be good - well, look at the best, the Pharisees, and hear what God had to say about them.
No, it's entirely of God's love and grace, not of our scrubbing at the inkstains, that makes us beautiful.
Jesus paid it all,
all to Him I owe.
Sin had left a crimson stain -
He washed it white as snow.
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