I watch my gangly son sprint through the open gate to the far end of the blacktop where he
finds a friend and a red bouncy ball. He’s all spindly arms and lanky legs strung together with muscles lean and long. Some days it feels like this eldest son of mine is six going on sixteen.
My gaze floats past little girls jumping rope, a tricycle rider pedaling happy, and the seasoned
schoolyard aide who always wears a whistle and a smile. It’s a blur of playground commotion,
but my sight is fixed clear in the distance on my boy.
He raises the red orb high above his head then thrusts it down in one smooth mighty motion.
Rubber ricochets off asphalt and the perfect sphere jiggles wonky in the air till the impact’s
force runs its course and the other boy catches the ball in jubilant victory.
It’s just a regular Monday.
It’s just an ordinary morning of kindergarteners playing before the ringing bell signals the
beginning of another learning day.
It’s in this ordinary moment my heart swells with thanks. All my inners about to burst with
ridiculous glee and sobering gratitude.
Eventually I leave my post as unnoticed, grinning watchman, leave my boy to delight and play
and grow. I turn toward the path home.
I inwardly laugh at myself for such intoxicated joy first thing in the mundane of Monday
morning. I mean, really, I’m nearly teary over my kid bouncing a ball. What in the world?
But I know the deeper reason for my exaggerated, moment-savoring wonder. It’s rooted in
a renewed understanding of God’s abundant goodness and faithful care.
My heart is full from a mountain weekend soaking in His love.
I shuffle past moms chiding disheveled kids in rushed morning chaos and their Hurry up! The
bell’s about to ring!
urgent pleas trail behind me.
Another day that will be me. But today I’m strolling slow, chewing on all I heard and saw, felt and sung at the weekend women’s retreat I attended with a dear friend.
I hear snippets of messages spoken, God’s Word boldly proclaimed:
I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me. (John10:14)
I feel the way worship stirred my heart:
I’m no longer a slave to fear
I am a child of GodI smell the crisp air of a million pines and remember the desires and tears poured out over
journaled prayers, some of the sweetest conversations I’ve had with the Lord in a long time.
It was a weekend of feeling the depths of God’s care. Assurance that He sees me. He knows
me.
He pursues me and forgives me and delights in me.Because I am His sheep.
His child.
His Becky.
And when overwhelmed by the wonders of God’s intimate
knowledge of you, His personal reach into your ordinary,
everyday grit and fears and dreams, the best response I know is
to give thanks.
To continue to live eyes wide open to His continual love and care.So I relish in the way my boy with no front teeth smiles the widest toothless smile as he plays
the timeless game of bouncing a schoolyard ball.
And I continue to give thanks through every step I take on the half mile journey home.
I slow.
I want to see.
Because if I believe that God met me in the mountains through scripture and song, divine
appointments, afternoon naps, and stranger-sisters praying over me, then I have to believe that
He wants to meet me in the mundane of Monday morning.
If He poured out His goodness on me at a retreat then He can pour out His goodness in my
everyday routine.
On the short route from the kinder playground to my white front door, I slow.
I look.
I find.
I find that God’s goodness is here. His glory
abundant. His fingerprints
evident.