This morning I was looking out the large window of my office, watching eight deer forage for food under a light covering of snow. Graceful, beautiful creatures in a winter landscape worthy of a Christmas card cover. I’m sure my face reflected the peace and sense of contentment the scene outside my window evoked. Psalm 42 immediately came to mind.
As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God.” Psalm 42:1
Shattering that peaceful reflection just minutes later, I caught a news flash of the shooting at an elementary school in Connecticut leaving twenty seven dead, eighteen of them children. I am sitting here now with tears streaming and a million questions running through my head. How can something like this happen? How can anyone feel anger so deeply it would lead them to this type of action? I’m so confused. And I find myself crying out to God.
“Why, God? How can you let something like that happen? I get that we live in an imperfect world and I get that you never promised us smooth sailing or lives exempt from sadness or pain. But this?
I am thousands of miles away from the tragedy and I want to run out of my office, pull my own grandchildren out of school and shelter them forever. I don’t want them to have to grow up in a world so ugly and so evil.
I am furious at the 20 year old shooter, angry at whomever or whatever brought him to this point, and to tell you the truth – I am upset with God. I want Him to turn back the clock, bring those children home tonight to the parents who sent them off to school this morning never dreaming what lay in store. I want the world to stop hating and hurting people. I want the peace on earth that songs of this season harmonize about and that the Bible promises.
The hardest part for me is being lulled into a picturesque, isn’t it pretty, all is well state of mind when at that very moment unspeakable tragedy, chaos, and ugliness was taking place. Where is the justice in that?
The rest of Psalm 42, when I take time to read it, speaks to my mood.
My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. Where can I go and meet with God? My tears have been my food day and night, while people say to me all day long, “Where is your God?” Psalm 42:2-3
These things I remember as I pour out my soul: how I used to go to the house of God under the protection of the Mighty One with shouts of joy and praise among the festive throng. Psalm 42:4
Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God. Psalm 42:5
This is a “yet I will praise Him” time for sure. I can’t make sense of what happened this morning, or for that matter on any given day when the world out-shadows the glory of heaven.
Sometimes I praise Him with joy so overwhelming it lifts me off my feet and threatens to rupture my heart muscle it is so powerful.
Sometimes I praise Him when I’m walking through a ho hum time, my emotions too lazy to cause a ripple on an ekg.
And sometimes, like right now, I praise Him even though I’m weighed down and weary with crying. Even though I am crying out “Why”, I am still singing “How great Thou art”. When fear and doubt and anger and confusion play basketball with my soul, I choose to see myself on the winner’s bench with my Coach’s hand on my life and on the dysfunctional world in which I live.
My soul does long after you, God, more than it longs for understanding or explanations when horror happens. I am hungry for your touch, thirsty for your living water, and desperate for your strength and your love to help me overcome the battles of life is this harsh world.
Please join me in praying for the families who are living this latest tragedy, for a society where this type of thing happens all too often, and for each of us individually that we might be a healing salve in a mortally wounded world.
By day the Lord directs His love, and at night His song is with me, a prayer to the God of my life. Psalm 42:8