Five year-old Madeline climbed into her father's lap.
"Did you have enough to eat?" He asked her.
She smiled and patted her tummy. "I can't eat any more."
"Did you have some of your Grandma's pie?"
"A whole piece!"
Joe looked across the table at his mom. "Looks like you filled us up. Don't
think we'll be able to do anything tonight but go to bed."
Madeline put her little hands on either side of his big face. "Oh, but, Poppa,
this is Christmas Eve. You said we could dance."
Joe feigned a poor memory. "Did I now? Why, I don't remember saying anything
about dancing"
Grandma smiled and shook her head as she began clearing the table.
"But, Poppa," Madeline pleaded, "we always dance on Christmas Eve. Just you and
me, remember?"
A smile burst from beneath his thick mustache. "Of course I remember, darling.
How could I forget?"
And with that he stood and took her hand in his, and for a moment, just a
moment, his wife was alive again, and the two were walking into the den to spend
another night before Christmas as they had spent so many, dancing away the
evening.
They would have danced the rest of their lives, but then came the surprise
pregnancy and the complications. Madeline survived. But her mother did not. And
Joe, the thick-handed butcher from Minnesota, was left to raise his Madeline
alone.
"Come on, Poppa." She tugged on his hand. "Let's dance before everyone arrives."
She was right. Soon the doorbell would ring and the relatives would fill the
floor and the night would be past.
But, for now, it was just Poppa and Madeline.
___
The love of a parent for a child is a mighty force. Consider the couple with
their newborn child. The infant offers his parents absolutely nothing. No money.
No skill. No words of wisdom. If he had pockets, they would be empty. To see an
infant lying in a bassinet is to see utter helplessness. What is there to love?
Whatever it is, Mom and Dad find it. Just look at Mom's face as she nurses her
baby. Just watch Dad's eyes as he cradles the child. And just try to harm or
speak evil of the infant. If you do, you'll encounter a mighty strength, for the
love of a parent is a mighty force.
Jesus once asked, if we humans who are sinful have such a love, how much more
does God, the sinless and selfless Father, love us?' But what happens when the
love isn't returned? What happens to the heart of the father when his child
turns away?
___
Rebellion flew into foe's world like a Minnesota blizzard. About the time she
was old enough to drive, Madeline decided she was old enough to lead her life.
And that life did not include her father.
"I should have seen it coming," Joe would later say, "but for the life of me I
didn't." He didn't know what to do. He didn't know how to handle the pierced
nose and the tight shirts. He didn't understand the late nights and the poor
grades. And, most of all, he didn't know when to speak and when to be quiet.
She, on the other hand, had it all figured out. She knew when to speak to her
father-never. She knew when to be quiet-always. The pattern was reversed,
however, with the lanky, tattooed kid from down the street. He was no good, and
Joe knew it.
And there was no way he was going to allow his daughter to spend Christmas Eve
with that kid.
"You'll be with us tonight, young lady. You'll be at your grandma's house eating
your grandma's pie. You'll be with us on Christmas Eve."
Though they were at the same table, they might as well have been on different
sides of town. Madeline played with her food and said nothing. Grandma tried to
talk to Joe, but he was in no mood to chat. Part of him was angry; part of him
was heartbroken. And the rest of him would have given anything to know how to
talk to this girl who once sat on his lap.
Soon the relatives arrived, bringing with them a welcome end to the awkward
silence. As the room filled with noise and people, Joe stayed on one side,
Madeline sat sullenly on the other.
"Put on the music, Joe," reminded one of his brothers. And so he did. Thinking
she would be honored, he turned and walked toward his daughter. "Will you dance
with your poppa tonight?"
The way she huffed and turned, you d have thought he'd insulted her. In full
view of the family she walked out the front door and marched down the sidewalk.
Leaving her father alone. Very much alone.
___
According to the Bible we have done the same. We have spurned the love of our
Father. "Each of us has gone his own way" (Isa. 53:6).
Paul takes our rebellion a step further. We have done more than turn away, he
says; we have turned against. "We were living against God" (Rom. 5:6).
He speaks even more bluntly in verse 10: "We were God's enemies." Harsh words,
don't you think? An enemy is an adversary. One who offends, not out of
ignorance, but by intent. Does this describe us? Have we ever been enemies of
God? Have we ever turned against our Father?
Have you ...
ever done something, knowing God wouldn't want you to do it?
Ever hurt one of his children or part of creation?
Ever supported or applauded the work of his adversary, the devil?
Ever turned against your heavenly Father in public?
If so, have you not taken the role of an enemy?
So how does God react when we become his enemies?
___
Madeline came back that night but not for long. Joe never faulted her for
leaving. After all, what's it like being the daughter of a butcher? ]n their
last days together he tried so hard. He made her favorite dinner-she didn't want
to eat. He invited her to a movie-she stayed in her room. He bought her a new
dress-she didn't even say thank you. And then there was that spring day he left
work early to be at the house when she arrived home ,from school.
Wouldn't you know that was the day she never came home.
A friend saw her and her boyfriend in the vicinity of the bus station. The
authorities confirmed the purchase of a ticket to Chicago; where she went from
there was anybody's guess.
___
The most notorious road in the world is the Via Dolorosa, "the Way of Sorrows."
According to tradition, it is the route Jesus took from Pilate's hall to
Calvary. The path is marked by stations frequently used by Christians for their
devotions. One station marks the passing of Pilate's verdict. Another, the
appearance of Simon to carry the cross. Two stations commemorate the stumble of
Christ, another the words of Christ. There are fourteen stations in all, each
one a reminder of the events of Christ's final journey.
Is the route accurate? Probably not. When Jerusalem was destroyed in A. D. 70
and again in A. D. 135, the streets of the city were destroyed. As a result, no
one knows the exact route Christ followed that Friday.
But we do know where the path actually began.
The path began, not in the court of Pilate, but in the halls of heaven. The
Father began his journey when he left his home in search of us. Armed with
nothing more than a passion to win your heart, he came looking. His desire was
singular-to bring his children home. The Bible has a word for this quest:
reconciliation.
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself" (2 Cor. 5:19 NKJV). The
Greek word for reconcile means "to render something otherwise."' Reconciliation
restiches the unraveled, reverses the rebellion, rekindles the cold passion.
Reconciliation touches the shoulder of the wayward and woos him homeward.
The path to the cross tells us exactly how far God will go to call us back.
___
The scrawny boy with the tattoos had a cousin. The cousin worked the night shift
at a convenience store south of Houston. For a few bucks a month, he would let
the runaways stay in his apartment at night, but they had to be out during the
day.
Which was fine with them. They had big plans. He was going to be a mechanic, and
Madeline just knew she could get a job at a department store. Of course he knew
nothing about cars, and she knew even less about getting a job-but you don't
think of things like that when you're intoxicated on freedom.
After a couple of weeks, the cousin changed his mind. And the day he announced
his decision, the boyfriend announced his. Madeline found herself facing the
night with no place to sleep or hand to hold.
It was the first of many such nights.
A woman in the park told her about the homeless shelter near the bridge. For a
couple of bucks she could get a bowl of soup and a cot. A couple of bucks was
about all she had. She used her backpack as a pillow and jacket as a blanket.
The room was so rowdy it was hard to sleep. Madeline turned her face to the wall
and, for the first time in several days, thought of the whiskered face of her
father as he would kiss her good night. But as her eyes began to water, she
refused to cry. She pushed the memory deep inside and determined not to think
about home.
She'd gone too far to go back.
The next morning the girl in the cot beside her showed her a fistful of tips
she'd made from dancing on tables. "This is the last night I'll have to stay
here, she said. "Now I can pay for my own place. They told me they are looking
for another girl. You should come by." She reached into her pocket and pulled
out a matchbook. "Here's the address."
Madeline's stomach turned at the thought. All she could do was mumble, "I'll
think about it."
She spent the rest of the week on the streets looking for work. At the end of
the week when it was time to pay her bill at the shelter, she reached into her
pocket and pulled out the matchbook. It was all she had left.
"I won't be staying tonight," she said and walked out the door.
Hunger has a way of softening convictions.
___
Pride and shame. You'd never know they are sisters. They appear so different.
Pride puffs out her chest. Shame hangs her head. Pride boasts. Shame hides.
Pride seeks to be seen. Shame seeks to be avoided.
But don't be fooled, the emotions have the same parentage. And the emotions have
the same impact. They keep you from your Father.
Pride says, "You're too good for him."
Shame says, "You're too bad for him."
Pride drives you away.
Shame keeps you away.
If pride is what goes before a fall, then shame is what keeps you from getting
up after one.
___
If Madeline knew anything, she knew how to dance. Her father had taught her. Now
men the age of her father watched her. She didn't rationalize it-she just didn't
think about it. Madeline simply did her work and took their dollars.
She might have never thought about it, except for the letters. The cousin
brought them. Not one, or two, but a box full. All addressed to her. All from
her father.
"Your old boyfriend must have squealed on you. These come two or three a week,"
complained the cousin. "Give him your address." Oh, but she couldn't do that. He
might find her.
Nor could she bear to open the envelopes. She knew what they said; he wanted her
home. But if he knew what she was doing, he would not be writing.
It seemed less painful not to read them. So she didn't. Not that week, nor the
next when the cousin brought more, nor the next when he came again. She kept
them in the dressing room at the club, organized according to postmark. She ran
her finger over the top of each but couldn't bring herself to open one.
Most days Madeline was able to numb the emotions. Thoughts of home and thoughts
of shame were shoved into the same part of her heart. But there were occasions
when the thoughts were too strong to resist.
Like the time she saw a dress in the clothing store window. A dress the same
color as one her father had purchased for her. A dress that had been far too
plain for her. With much reluctance she had put it on and stood with him before
the mirror. "My, you are as tall as I am," he had told her. She had stiffened at
his touch.
Seeing her weary face reflected in the store window, Madeline realized she'd
give a thousand dresses to feel his arm again. She left the store and resolved
not to pass by it again.
In time the leaves fell and the air chilled. The mail came and the cousin
complained and the stack of letters grew. Still she refused to send him an
address. And she refused to read a letter.
Then a few days before Christmas Eve another letter arrived. Same shape. Same
color. But this one had no postmark. And it was not delivered by the cousin. It
was sitting on her dressing room table.
"A couple of days ago a big man stopped by and asked me to give this to you,"
explained one of the other dancers. "Said you d understand the message. "
"He was here?" She asked anxiously.
The woman shrugged, "Suppose he had to be."
Madeline swallowed hard and looked at the envelope. She opened it and removed
the card. `I know where you are, "it read. "I know what you do. This doesn't
change the way I feel. What I've said in each letter is still true."
"But I don't know what you've said," Madeline declared. She pulled a letter from
the top of the stack and read It. Then a second and a third Each letter had the
same sentence. Each sentence asked the same question.
In a matter of moments the floor was littered with paper and her face was
streaked with tears.
Within an hour she was on a bus. "I just might make it in time."
She barely did.
The relatives were starting to leave. Joe was helping grandma in the kitchen
when his brother called from the suddenly quiet den. Foe, someone is here to see
you."
Joe stepped out of the kitchen and stopped. In one hand the girl held a
backpack. In the other she held a card. Joe saw the question in her eyes.
"The answer is 'yes,'" she said to her father. "If the invitation is still good,
the answer is 'yes."'
Joe swallowed hard. "Oh my. The invitation is good."
And so the two danced again on Christmas Eve.
On the floor, near the door, rested a letter with Madeline's name and her
father's request.
"Will you come home and dance with your poppa again?"
He Chose The Nails, p. 59 - 68. Copyright. W Publishing, 2000,Max Lucado. Used
by permission.
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