Wednesday, March 28, 2012

It's a Providential Life

My family speaks movie.  When my siblings and I get together, we can have entire conversations comprised of little more than movie references strung together by a handful of original thoughts.  And, we’ve found, there are few conversations in life that can’t somehow be enhanced by an It’s a Wonderful Life movie reference.

True story—when the elder of my two-headed brothers got married, our younger two-headed brother toasted him with these words:
To my big brother Chaz, the richest man in town.
 They’re both a little bit off their nut.

A few years ago, my church threw a party for our pastor to celebrate his twenty-five years of service to our congregation. For the event, I wrote a skit entitled, It's a Providential Life. My brother (the elder two-headed one) made this sign which was carried back and forth across the stage as someone played, Buffalo Gals Won’t You Come Out Tonight? on the ukulele.

In the skit our pastor, portrayed by his son, found himself trapped at an elder’s meeting during which fine points of church order were being argued and debated in mind-numbingly excruciating detail.  At one point, the pastor’s character banged his head on the table and cried, “Sometimes I wish I’d never become a pastor!”

Of course, Clarence the angel appeared and showed him all the babies never baptized, the sermons never preached, the marriages not performed. We even caught a glimpse of his wife, pastor’s wife extraordinaire, living instead as an old maid. “Why, I’m not even Presbyterian!” she cried.

During the course of my daughter’s wedding, my dear pastor made reference to that skit and to that sign which continues to hang in his office. Speaking from the book of Ruth, he reminded my daughter and her new husband that God’s providence was, and remains, everywhere present in bringing them together and as they begin their new life together.

Ruth as he reminded us, found herself widowed and in poverty and gleaning in the fields of a man named Boaz. Boaz, as it turned out, was her near relative who became her husband and redeemer.  Later in scripture, we read that our true Redeemer, the Lord Jesus Christ descended from this man who just so happened to have a field where this impoverished widow gleaned.

My pastor emphasized these words:  as it turned out, and it just so happened. To the believer, he reminded us, there are no coincidences; all is Providence. According to the Westminster Shorter Catechism, God’s works of providence are defined as his most holy, wise, and powerful preserving and governing all his creatures, and all their actions, all of which is a fancy-schmancy way of saying, God's got this.

Since my daughter’s wedding, I have been thinking quite a bit about the holy, wise and powerful acts God used to bring us to that day. When my husband and I made the decision to adopt, it just so happened that I had a former roommate whose husband worked for Bethany Christian Services. After we were approved for adoption, our daughter’s birth mom read our file.

As it turned out, she chose our family because she wanted her baby to grow up in a family with other adopted children. It just so happened that my in-laws had adopted about twenty years earlier. We saw evidence that God’s plan in bringing our daughter to us had begun taking shape years before my husband and I even met.

When our daughter was young, we happened to hire a lovely young woman as a babysitter for her on a regular basis. That babysitter happened to grow up, go away to a small Christian college, and find a husband. They returned to live near us and, during the course of a seemingly random conversation, my husband offered a job to our babysitter’s young husband. Some years later, as it turned out, he became president of the alumni association at the small Christian college from which he had graduated. When our daughter was looking at colleges, he took her there for a visit and she fell in love with the place.

Shortly after arriving at college, our daughter met a young man who just so happened to live in an area in western Pennsylvania where my husband lived during high school. As it turned out, his family attended the very same church in which my husband had grown up. It just so happened that all our people knew his people.

(This happy providence, by the way, proved most useful when my daughter and her boyfriend began to date. I was able to warn him that my daughter’s grandparents continued to live on in legend in his family’s church and, should he ever even begin to formulate an inappropriate thought toward my daughter, the good people of that congregation would gladly pummel him--possibly even bludgeon him. He never really knew if I was just really, really funny or just plain crazy which, providentially, worked to my advantage.)

As it turned out, my husband and I realized we had already met the parents of this young man, having been introduced to them earlier that year at a fund-raising auction for a college ministry we support.  We learned that the boyfriend’s parents had met and married while attending the same small Christian college our daughter attended. As it turned out, his mother’s college roommate became a teacher in a small Christian school in New England. Last year, that former college roommate was my nephew’s teacher.

Just a few days before the wedding, my daughter received a message from her brother-in-law to be, asking if she had an Uncle Andy. As it turns out, the two were sitting only a few feet away from each other at a conference, having just learned they worked for the same company.

Uncle Andy, by the way, is the younger two-headed brother.

You see people; it really is a providential life.

This is a slightly edited post from the archives. Linking in community today with Jennifer and KD:





36 comments:

Jean Wise said...

Great post. It;s a wonderful life is my absolute favorite movie but your stories how it has weaved its way into your family stories is priceless. We too have had the last few years very obviously God planned moments. Love your story!

Jennifer@GDWJ said...

Fantastic! And, as it just so happened, I got God-bumps reading your story. :)

P.S. -- Big, big fan of "It's a Wonderful Life." Zuzu's petals! Zuzu's petals!!"

Megan Willome said...

This is why we love good stories because God is always writing providence across our lives.

By the way, did you see my angel poem a couple of weeks ago? It's full of "It's a Wonderful Life" references since I can't think of angels without also thinking of Clarence.

Lyli@3dLessons4Life said...

Cue the theme to "It's a small world".... It's amazing how God connects us.

Nancy Franson said...

I did not see that. Wandering over now...

Gaby said...

Oh, Nancy. That's who I feel about this adoption. When it's all done I will write a big o' long post about all the "just so happens" we are seeing right now. You know the saying: "it's a small world" should be followed by "it's a BIG God."

happygirl said...

Such a great imagination you have. And it is a small world. And a small world can make great stories. Thanks for telling this one.

Charity Singleton said...

I love considering the providence of God - connecting those dots fill me with faith and hope and make me love God so very much. I loved walking through this with you today.

Ro elliott said...

my kids conversations are quotes of movies and favorite shows...sometime people have trouble following the conversations through all the quotes....what a great story you have...how sweet of God to have so many connections...tying all this story together. the view in the rear view mirror can be quite amazing:)

messymarriage said...

I think we should all try this exercise in "providence" discovery. I think we would see that God has woven so many people and circumstances in our lives perfectly and without the help of "Clarence the angel!" haha! Thanks for the the thought-provoking post, Nancy!

Nancy Franson said...

Somehow I suspected you were a kindred spirit, Jean!

Nancy Franson said...

"No man is a failure who has friends." And how I love mine!

Nancy Franson said...

And we probably have just the tiniest glimpse of the connections all around us. Won't it be amazing to see, one day, how everything connects?

Nancy Franson said...

Can't wait to read that big ol' long post, Gaby!

Nancy Franson said...

Thanks. Wasn't sure whether or not to re-post it. Glad you enjoyed it.

Nancy Franson said...

Thanks, Charity. Have you ever seen the movie Signs? It's one of my all-time favorites--rich with dots that connect.

Nancy Franson said...

Sounds like I would enjoy conversations with your kids!

Nancy Franson said...

Well if you try it out, please come back and tell me what you discovered--would love to hear all about it. Thanks so much for stopping by.

Kimberly Sullivan said...

It is...I have a few tales of providence myself....

Patricia W Hunter said...

Oh....I LOVE this, Nancy!!! We're famous for saying, "it sure is a small world"...but the truth is that "God's got this!"

{By the way, you are hilarious. Much love, Patricia}

Mary Bonner said...

This is so cool Nancy! I love it.

Becky said...

I really enjoyed the web you've woven. Better yet, that it all turns out to be true :)

Shelly Miller said...

Wow, what a story of providence. The hand of God all over our lives in ways we could never even begin to construct on our own. And you told this well Nancy - so much detail to describe in a short post.

Simply Darlene said...

Oh my land! I followed it, mostly, but I could use a picture. Ha.

The first 5 paragraphs were grande funny.

Blessings.

Tara_pohlkottepress said...

yes, looking back at all of the things that link, weave to make the blanket of life around us...so, so true.

Nancy Franson said...

Grande funny is my brand new favorite compliment.

Wait. That was a compliment, right?

bradleyjmoore said...

I imagined that skit - with you at the helm as producer/writer/director, I'm sure it was a stitch!

It really is true, the "coincidences" add up to an extraordinary life story for each of us. Only sometimes we have to wait a while to see it all fit together. But your post here is a great reminder of how "all things work together for good..." Thank you.

Sheila Seiler Lagrand said...

Ah, Nancy, I'm a sucker for a good adoption story (my nephews took that path to my sister's home) and this one rocks! Just beautiful. Or wait, is it a wedding story? I'm a sucker for those, too. Gorgeous, wonderful story, told in that gorgeous, wonderful style of gorgeous, wonderful you. Win win win!

I miss a lot of movie references because I am nearly illiterate when it comes to film (though I know "It's a Wonderful Life." I'm not totally clueless).
Every morning when I leave for work my Awesome Husband says, "Have fun storming the castle."

It took me a long time to figure that out.

Nancy Franson said...

The first time my daughter brought the above mentioned boyfriend home for a visit, I hugged him and said, "Good night. Sleep well. I'll most likely kill you in the morning" That's from the same movie your husband quoted.

(And, yes. I really did say that. Aren't I awful?)

Sheila Seiler Lagrand said...

I always like to know where I stand with my in-laws :)

I would be hugging you in glee right now if I could.

Simply Darlene said...

Yes, indeed.
Right on.
You betcha.
Righto.
Yep.
Yessiree.
Yes, ma'am.

Simply Darlene said...

it
is
&
was
a
compliment

Nancy Franson said...

You crack me up.

Ann Kroeker said...

Brilliant!

Laura Boggess said...

You are such a gift to those you serve. I remember when you wrote that skit for your pastor. What a blessing. And it continues to bless through posts like this one! I'm glad I got to meet your daughter and her young man at Jubilee. Lovely young woman you raised up. Providentially lovely :)

Emily Wierenga said...

i love looking back and seeing how God was there, all along... even when he felt so very far away at the time. love you friend. (ps. i watch It's a Wonderful Life every year with my mum, at christmas :))

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