I’m going to plagiarize myself in this mini-essay. It’s partly from a Christmas letter I wrote back when I was pregnant with Steven. I’m dusting it off since I’m supposed to deliver a Mentor Moment tomorrow morning at MOPS and I’ve got nothing.
The theme for today’s MOPS meeting is good sleepers. It would’ve been really cool if I had my act together and had a mentor moment to go along with it. I’ve got nothing.
But my ADHD mind specializes in making random connections. The subject of sleeping babies reminds me of lullabies, which reminds me of the CD mom gave us when Emily was little. It was called Sing Over Me by Bethany Dillon. I loved the CD but the title track rubbed me wrong; it’s from Zephaniah 3:17. “For the LORD your God is living among you. He is a mighty savior. He will take delight in you with gladness. With his love, he will calm all your fears. He will rejoice over you with joyful songs.” It’s a great verse, really it is, but the bit at the end bothered me. I thought we were the ones who were supposed to rejoice in him, not the other way around. And what does it even mean to sing over someone? It’s kinda weird, don’t you think?
Someone smarter would’ve just googled it. But I had a very busy toddler, and I wasn’t firing on all cylinders. The Zephaniah verse troubled me, but it was more of a fleeting thought. The verse would rise to my mind as I was driving around the silvery lake to the grocery store or while I lathered shampoo or conditioner into my hair in the steaming shower, which is where I do all my best thinking. I’d ask God about the Zephaniah verse. I wouldn’t get an answer. I’d then forget about it. Wash, rinse, repeat.
I was pregnant with baby number two around this time, and I was seriously freaked out. My pregnancy was marked by fear because a dear friend had just lost her baby boy a month before her due date. I had this irrational fear that something was seriously wrong with my unborn child. Or everything would turn out fine with the baby but I would be hit again with postpartum depression.
One afternoon I was lying on the couch, feeling guilty because I was too nauseous to even pick up my Bible. But in that moment on the couch the Zephaniah verse, the one that never made sense, fell from my head and landed firmly into my heart. He spoke to my heart through a picture of me rocking Emily as I sang her a lullaby. That’s how he longed to comfort and nurture me. All I had to do is run to his outstretched arms and lay everything at his feet. Or in my case, I just needed to lay in fetal position on the couch as he rejoiced over me with singing. At that moment I knew God was with me, calming my anxious heart. He was with me in this pregnancy, and he would continue to be with me in childbirth and later as I learned to take care of a newborn again. After all, he is mighty to save. All I had to do is come to him.
Child of God, he delights in you, he longs to gather you into his arms so he can sing over you with joyful songs. All you have to do is come.
Edited to add: On the way to MOPS this morning, about a mile from church by Albertsons, God reminded me of something that happened during the tender months following dad’s death. Most nights I dreamed of music, of joyful songs in the night. And these melodies were complete orchestrations. In my dreams, I could hear each and every instrument and every single musical note from stunning symphonies that were new to me. I play the piano but I’m not a musical person. Add to it, I have a high-frequency hearing loss in both ears. It’s impossible for me to experience the full effect of the orchestra when I’m awake and fully conscious. I’ve always wondered about those dreams, and what they meant. But driving to church to talk to moms about how God sings over us with great rejoicing sparked a connection. He literally sang over me in the darkness of night with songs of great rejoicing.