Because I have been so busy lately (Holy Week, go figure!) it has been hard to find time to write some new entries of my own. However, God drops wonderful things in my email box from time to time. If they touch a deep place in me, it only feels right to share them.

The following paragraphs are from a new book by Christian singer and songwriter, Michael Card. They seem most appropriate for Holy Week and they bring to mind the many people in my life who are grieving for one reason or another.

“David, who spent more than his share of long, agonizing nights, knew that morning is the time when things inevitably change for the better (Psalm 5:3; 143:8). Even in the midst of his darkest, most mournful lament, Jeremiah recognized that morning was a special time to wait for the trustworthy appearance of the HESED of God (Lamentations 3:22-23). The appearance of his loving-kindness and compassionate faithfulness meant the end of mourning, for the time being. What makes morning unique is that it is the time when HESED appears.

They are both old, sturdy, Anglo-Saxon words: “morning” and “mourning.” Despite the fact that they sound virtually the same, they descend from two completely different roots, as their spelling indicates. Yet they are inextricably linked in the Bible.

Perhaps what links the two words together is the fact that they both represent moments when we “wake up.” Clearly morning is the time when we open our eyes to the hope of a new day; but in another, deeper sense, a time of mourning can also be an occasion when we “come to our senses” and with new, tear-cleansed eyes see the world as we have never seen it before.

When suffering wakes us up, lament leads us to a new understanding of who God is and what [God] means, or can mean, to us. The good news is that [God] is fully present, both in the joy that comes in the morning as well as in the sorrow of mourning.

“Now is your time of grief,” Jesus told his disciples just before He was arrested, “but I will see you again and you will rejoice, and no one will take away your joy” (John 16:22). That first Easter morning, as the disciples awoke from their sorrowful sleep, could they have ever dreamed of the greater joy to which they were about to awake–a joy that could only come to them in the morning after their long night of unspeakable mourning?”

–Michael Card, from The Hidden Face of God, Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2007, pp.
49-50. ISBN-13: 978-1-57683-669-9.