Friday, March 9, 2018

Grandmother's Letters

A few weeks ago, in an attempt to do a bit of organizing, I grabbed my box of letters and notes that I've kept through the years and started sorting through them. I had letters from family and friends from as far back as high school. Simple notes that were dropped in the mail from a friend in college. Birthday cards from my parents. A thank you card from my sister-in-law from before she was my sister-in-law. Emails from my Dad that I printed out (a good thing because I'm not sure I could access that old email address these days).

A few of the special letters came from my Grandmothers. My Dad's Mom (Granny to me) sent me a letter typed on a typewriter during my freshmen year of high school. My family moved that year. It was really hard for me and she took time to write to me about a time when she experienced the same sort of move and apprehension. My Mom's Mom (Grandma) sent me cards while I was in college. Simple little notes to let me know she was thinking about me. I remember getting those notes and feeling encouraged.

I'm sure I did not appreciate those notes as much when I received them. I enjoyed them but I had a lot of life to live and so I didn't realize just what a blessing it is to have generations of people encouraging me. I didn't yet know the calling they were following came from the God who created us all. You see, God did not create us to live separate lives. He does not call us to attempt to figure this life out on our own. He gave us a church body, a family, to walk beside us. One of our greatest resources for Godly living is sitting right beside us on Sunday morning.

I have been contemplating intergenerational church lately. The idea was introduced to me by a dear friend at church, one who has much more wisdom than I do. I find myself longing for my kids to know their church family. Not just their friends and our small group but the whole church. I want them to feel as though they have a whole church of grandparents that they can look to for wisdom and guidance. I want them to hear what the generations that have gone before me have to say about this life we are living.

It is not just a blessing to learn from the wisdom of those who have made it further in life than we have, it is a calling.

Likewise, teach the older women to be reverent in the way they live, not to be slanderers or addicted to much wine, but to teach what is good. Then they can urge the younger women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God.