I missed posting on Saturday.
Instead of blogging, I was flying home
from southern California after a visit with my three grandsons—and their
parents, too, of course: daughter Karen and her hubby, Brian.
Missing my regular Saturday blog post
bothered me but, at the same time, it felt OK.
It felt OK because it symbolized a
change I’ve felt coming on. I’ve been feeling it in my heart, my mind, my
spirit.
Missing that blog post prompted a
change I knew was inevitable.
I hinted at that change on my birthday in June when I pondered God’s words to Joshua: “You
are getting very old” (Joshua 13) and He pointed out Joshua still had big
tasks to carry out before it was too late—duties only Joshua could complete.
God listed specifics and then said, “You’ve gotta do this, Joshua, as an inheritance. Leave this legacy for your tribes—your family. Do it. Do it now.”
Since then I’ve been thinking. And
squirming. God has tasks for me to accomplish while I’m still walking this
earth, things He wants me to leave for my family.
For the past couple of years, my oldest
grandson, Chase, has been asking me to write a book for him, another book of family
stories.
I have a few vignettes snapped into a
three-ring binder for him and the other grandkids, but I need to write so many
more!
Doing so has been on my mind a lot
since June, and—you guessed it—again last week Chase asked if I was writing our
family’s stories. I knew the time had
come, as if God again nudged me: “You’ve
gotta do this, Linda, as an inheritance.
Leave this legacy for your
tribes—your family. Do it. Do it now.”
I can’t know how many days or weeks or
years I have in which to prepare and complete that legacy, so I’ve been asking myself, What should be my priorities? What am I doing with the time I have
left? What activities must I set aside—or cut back on—so I can spend my time
wisely? What legacy do I need to be
working on?
If you’ve followed SM 101 for even a
short while, you know one of my priorities is carrying out Deuteronomy 4:9, “Always remember what you’ve seen God do for
you and be sure to tell your children and grandchildren!”
Soooo ~~ here’s what’s changing at Spiritual Memoirs 101: Beginning next
week, I will post only once a week, on Thursdays, so I can dedicate more time
to writing for my grandkids.
I want to tell our family’s stories—not because our family is special but because God is special.
It’s not about us. It’s all about God.
See you next Thursday, September 19!
Continuity gives us roots;
change gives us branches,
letting us stretch and grow
and reach new heights.
Pauline R. Kezer

