I stood at the library counter to check out a book by one of my
favorite fiction authors.
“Did you know Maeve Binchy died?” the woman at the desk asked.
I hadn’t heard. As happens when favourite authors die, I felt a
twinge of personal loss. No more quirky Irish characters tripping through Dublin ’s streets with the
threads of Maeve’s stories unwinding behind them. I expressed my regret to the
librarian who was pleased to find someone to share her grief.
“I went to Dublin to visit my brother,” she said. “When I was
there someone pointed out Maeve’s house to me. I saw her sitting in her study
at a window that looked out on the Irish Sea .”
A writer engaged in the business of writing – a treasured sight.
Our private memorial ended and I left the library with Binchy’s
book, “Evening Class,” tucked under my arm. In the story, several unlikely
Irish people enroll in a night class to learn Italian.
My reading of the book coincided with the beginning of my own
evening class.
At the first class, I asked my students, “What is it that you
want to write?”
Each person had a story to tell. I had expected that. What
surprised me was the intense tragedy of their stories. Three of them had faced
life-altering traumas. For them, the time had come to put those experiences in
publishable form.
After that first evening class, sorrow for their sufferings kept
me awake.
At our second meeting, students read early drafts aloud. In
worshipful voices, they told of transforming experiences. Each had been to a
corner of hell and found God there. They had poured their pain onto the page.
Now, they struggled to transition to the miracle phase of their
stories.
Unlike Maeve Binchy’s humorous class my little gathering’s atmosphere
hummed with holiness because the Writer of Redemption Stories sat at our work
table.
A twenty-something wrote about a bleak night in the city’s
downtown core that became a turning point. She wrote of God healing her from
addictions. Her sufferings as a child would make most people turn to drink and
drugs. Today, she’s sober and at peace. She wept as she read her story. The
rest of us wept with her.
The intersection where our stories collide with God’s story is
called Grace. Grace overlooks our
dependencies, takes pity on our sufferings, reaches into the darkness that
shrouds and rescues us. Grace hugs the unhuggable. Grace sees the crying child
within and doesn't judge by outward behaviour. People need the grace stories my
evening class is producing. Readers' hearts will ache and rejoice when they see
God’s byline embedded in these stories.
If you met them, the darlings in my evening class, you wouldn't
believe where they've been. You might gape as I almost did when one by one they
read their stories.
Maeve Binchy's Evening Class is made up of off-beat characters
who entertain me. I love the lilt of their language, their odd approach to
life. But they are fictional. My evening class consists of real people who have
waded through darkness, endured pain to get to the place where their God stories
shine. They’re willing to relive the suffering, which is what they must do to
write their stories.
Why would they willingly wade back into the sorrow? So the world
will know that Jesus is still writing grace stories.
Nothing surpasses the power of the personal story to impact lives.
Our testimonies begin long before we become aware of them and they will
continue long after we’ve left earth . . . if we write them.
***
9 comments:
Love it! Thanks Rose. I read this with an increasingly uplifted heart and raised gaze.
Grace . . . it's such a charming sound. Sorrow turned to joy. Tears of suffering and trauma transmogrified by grace into tears of gratitude.~~+~~
Great post, Rose! I love Maeve Binchy and one of my favourites is Evening Class. Glad to hear that you have your own evening class. It sounds like you have the makings of some future authors!
Thank you Peter. Teaching this writing class was a special joy for me. You know, sometimes we're going about our normal everyday lives, and we land in a place where God's presence surprises us. That's how this evening class was for me.
Rose
Wow what a wonderful post, Rose. I was blessed by His grace!
The world needs to hear more of these kinds of stories!
Pam Mytroen
What a beautiful post! I'm so thankful for God's grace.
Writing the stories of God's grace is an important mission. We can tell our stories - but the memory of our telling won't last too long after we're gone from the planet. If we write our stories and get them into the hands of others, they will last for a few generations. In telling our grace stories, we're telling His story.
Rose...thank you for this affirmation of something I also find -- that in the telling of the human story, we click the shutter on grace. You are a consummate story-teller yourself, and your students are blessed to sit under you.
"Why would they willingly wade back into the sorrow? So the world will know that Jesus is still writing grace stories." I love these lines. So meaningful, just like this entire post, Rose. Lovely and honouring to writer, reader and, ultimately, the One who gives grace. Well done.
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