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Beautiful, A Mourning Glory Devotional
"And the second is
like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself'."
Matthew 22:39 NKJ
I have always loved this commandment mostly because it
assumes we love ourselves. At the very least it seems to give us permission to
feel good about ourselves and to treat ourselves well because then that is the
standard for the treatment of others. I have rarely seen, in this day and age,
the kind of love God would have us have for ourselves. I call it "God Esteem."
God’s vision of us and hope for us is always the most wonderful self-image
conceivable. He made us and wants us to be the best we can be and love ourselves
at any age.
It almost seems today as if "low self-esteem" is chic. If you
don’t have it you’d better go looking for it. We are so controlled by external
evaluation that there are very few ways to have any kind of esteem according to
society norms. You can’t be too fat, too poor or too old or in modern, young
parlance, "You can’t be too thin, too rich or too young." Someone was telling me
that models today, for the most part, are all washed up in their twenties. I
think most of us buy into this lie. I feel it must grieve the Father that we
can’t love ourselves at any age.
But once I did encounter what I believe was "God Esteem,"
true "God Esteem." Mama B, my mother-in-law, has always loved the Lord and
believed that he forms us, physically as well, at every stage of our lives, and
that he does a perfect job. It was late one night on vacation, and I had to get
up to visit the bathroom, which my husband and I were sharing with Mama B, who
was in the next bedroom.
The bathroom door was closed. I peeked into Mama B’s bedroom,
and she was not there. I waited outside the bathroom door for a few minutes. I
didn’t want to call out for fear of waking my husband. I tried to turn the knob
softly. The door wasn’t locked. I pushed it open, and there was Mama B standing
in front of the mirror in the dark. The moonlight was streaming through the
window, and Mama B was standing directly in its light. The silver and white of
her bobbed hair, shone like white and grey silk. She had on a very red lipstick
which made her teeth aspirin white. She was smiling so broadly and peacefully
that she radiated happiness. "You know what?" she asked me.
"No, what, Mama B?"
"I’m a beautiful old lady."
We were silent for a few seconds, and then I looked at the
striking mirror image and said, "You know what? You are."
Since her death, when I remember this incident, I go to the
mirror and try to say, "You are a beautiful middle-aged woman." Oh yuk! I don’t
mean a word of it, and you can tell by the surly frown in the mirror. I know
Gwyneth Paltrow isn’t going to worry. But I also know Mama B was right. I know
she had "God Esteem."
Thank you, Lord, for giving us examples of the wisdom of
some your saints which can give us great comfort and guidance in our grief.
Our loved ones, who have died, not only live on in You, but in us. Thank you
that I will think of Mama B and You every time I take a step toward God
esteem.
For your encouragement,
Diana Burg
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Diana
Burg
http://www.amourningdevotional.com
Mourning Glory – A Devotional for
Grieving is a book for
helping those struggling through a loss and looking for support and
comfort.
Diana is a writer and author with several
books in print. She writes everything – novels, short
stories, plays, screenplays and poetry. Her passion is
writing Christian books. |
Please feel free
to contact us if you would like to submit an article for our
site. |
 ISBN:0-9716511-6-7
Soft cover, 224 pages |
"Your devotional book, Mourning Glory,
is excellently done, and you can be very proud of your accomplishment. I know it
will be an excellent resource for Christians who are suffering through
bereavement."
Andrea Gambill, Editor
Grief
Digest Magazine
"I so enjoyed laughing and crying reading this
deeply honest and inspirational book. The authors share great wisdom of life’s
sorrows and grief, but remind us through touching experiences and thought
provoking scripture how we are truly blessed.
Mourning Glory truly reveals God’s Glory!
Thank you! Thank you!" - Jayne Hause
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