“He will be our peace.” (Micah 5:5 NIV)
My big brother was admitted to the ICU on Saturday. I hadn’t even know he was sick until he was terribly sick; too run down to talk, even. We got a few garbled ‘I love you’s’ over a fuzzy phone line the next day in the last seconds before sedation and intubation. And then he went silent.
Somewhere in the devastation of this week, I came across this scripture. I think it was my advent reading; a life preserver in the sea of loss again. “He will be our peace.” My heart: a strange mix of sister-mother, has felt far from peaceful. I’m so glad Peace is a person that promises to ever extend Himself toward us.
It’s always alarming to me how when someone important passes away, the sun still rises, the coffee still brews, the the laws of physics hold steady and the world moves on even without our loved one in it. We have gone still in grief and shock but everything and everyone around us marches forward as though their life meant so very little in the grand scheme of things.
My big brother passed away yesterday. My older, braver, smarter, funnier and far more charming brother is no longer with us. He was my first accomplice but also my bully and tormentor. He’s literally known me my entire life; one of scarce few on the planet at this point.
It was a complicated relationship. I was his first sister, but also his snitch and the object of much of his torture and the punchline to a few of his jokes. We grew up and apart; plunging ahead into totally different objectives. He fought wars overseas and I raised little people. We had only just begun to deal with one another as adults when he was in that terrible fire that altered his physical frame forever. A few years later, he came to live with Rob and I full-time. In some ways I feel like we fostered him; a great hulk of a man reduced to a wheelchair and tremors, his brain injury from the flames leaving him with the impulse control of a much younger child.
In those latter years; Chris and I drove thousands of miles together. We faced the estate of my parents with perseverance . I pushed the papers and made the phone calls and he commiserated. Chris and I had countless discussions about heaven and hope. I brushed his teeth twice a day and took him to the dentist for the first time in ten years. He grinned wide at me when he told me had ten cavities. We got them taken care of and he told me how he refused to brush his teeth in ICU because it was the only choice he got to make each day. He talked. I cried. I talked. He listened. Mostly. We went to church and the doctor and Walmart and endlessly out to his shop with spare parts. We gave each other gifts and made each other laugh and we loved one another as best we could: two broken people with a whole lot of shared history and the gift of fresh grace.
Quite honestly; I’m wrecked. If my frame and heart were steel and glass it would be all wrapped around itself right now. Chris insisted in living at a level speed of risk that my seatbelt-wearing-self could never quite tolerate. Yesterday’s impact has made a mangle of our forty-some years together. I have questions, regrets, shock and so much sadness. I’ve been missing my brother for a long time and now he’s gone and I’m left to sort out the scene on the side of the road.
Last night I was praying again; it feels like I’ve spent my whole adult life praying for my big brother. Over and over I have wondered if I made any impression on his heart, or if our love and sacrifice for him had gone unnoticed because of his brain injury. Was I remembered, was I appreciated; was the surrender worth it? (I realize these are terrible questions; please forgive me, but one still asks them.) As I was crying out to the Lord in my grief, I began take stock of the tremendous impact Chris had made on me. Living with him, caring for him full-time afforded me a level of sanctification that I have known by no other means. I died to self daily while seeing to the most basic needs of my disabled brother. He caused me to lean on the Lord in ways I had previously thought impossible. In some measure, he brought out my best self, but most of the time he exposed my stubbornest stretch of flesh to the light of God’s Word. Chris made me crazy but he also moved the needle on my holiness in a profound way. I am a different person because of the years I spent caring for my big brother. I believe I’m a better person because of our time together, and for that, I will always be grateful.
I keep coming back to this text in Micah; it’s been on repeat in my soul for full days now. “He will be our peace.” When we have questions, when we have heartaches, when we have regrets and no more time on the clock, Jesus somehow enters our wreckage and whispers His peace into the tangle of emotions, ready and able to help us sort it all out.
May You know the peace of Christ this season, dear ones. <3
“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.” (John 14:27 NIV)
So beautiful, Anna. Thank you for sharing. I’m so sorry for the loss of your brother. I pray peace on the Christmas Day, as well as the days to follow. Your so right. He is our peace. I’m so thankful that the Lord left us the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, our Strength, our Helper, our …… everything in EVERY season. What treasure. What a gift. God bless you. ❤️
Tanya, thank you so much for your kind sentiments. I know the Lord is holding us all near as we sort through our grief. I, too, am grateful for His Spirit – He is indeed the Comforter. It is incredible that first we are comforted and then He uses us to comfort others; only God could dream up a system such as that. Bless you and Merry Christmas.
Anna, for someone who always has something to say , I am at a loss for the right words. I am sending you and your family many hugs and prayers. You are strong and by the grace of God you find healing in sharing. I love you my friend. I often reminisce about high school and my friends. You are at the top. ❤️ I love your heart and Chris was very fortunate to have a sister like you. He loved you. He needed you just as much as you and your family needed him. God is his caretaker now. Cherish the memories as they’re the best way to keep his memory alive. He’s probably hugging your parents as we speak and telling them what a great sister you have been. They’re definitely proud of you. God bless you and your family. I can’t wait until it’s my turn to meet our heavenly father. You are truly a blessing to us all. Hugs.
Wow, Kim, such kind words. Thank you so much. I love that part about ‘God is His caretaker now.’ – what an encouraging thought. Thank you.
I’m sorry for your loss. Pray you continue to find the peace and comfort as only Christ supplies and is lasting.
We’re here for you and your family.
Thank you, Janet, I surely appreciate it. We are leaning on Him for everything and He is faithful.