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Our Giggling God

If there is one gift I miss from childhood, it is giggling. In my own experience young girls share this gift with one another with unfettered generosity. I am sure we giggled at slumber parties when we were supposed to be sleeping, but I also remember giggling while playing games—it’s really hard to throw a soft ball and giggle at the same time. Why is it that giggling and needing to pee always go together? I digress. My cousin and I would giggle in class. She had a great giggle. It didn’t take much to get her started, but stopping for either of us was almost impossible. Our 7th grade math teacher put up with a lot of giggling, but after a time he would say, “Now girls, that’s enough.” Something in our bodies or minds or hearts or throats refused cooperation. Okay. Nothing short of horrible could suppress the giggles. No. I’m serious. The only way I could stop giggling was to remember that President Kennedy had been shot. I needed to think of something completely opposite of joy, and well, in my particular world, that was the saddest thing I had ever seen.

I most often think of a weeping God, One who mourns over the tragedies and terrors we do to one another. But can we, every once in a while, ponder a Glad God? Can we imagine that when God sees a toddler’s first steps, or hears the sounds of cousins, or gets invited to tea by a little one, or listens to a second grader tell a very silly joke, that God’s response is to giggle?

May our Giggling God shake your spirit with delight and your body with joyful wonder.

It has been said we live our lives in seasons, with each season offering particular blessings and challenges. Pamela has entered the season of nurturing grandchildren; receiving and giving hospitality; and playing with words and images, threads and needles. It is a spacious time of gratitude.

Earlier seasons in her life were packed with being a part of a 4-H club, singing in choirs at school and church, and barely passing high school chemistry. The season of nursing lasted 28 years—3 of which were spent at Toledo Hospital School of Nursing, though that education could well be counted as a glad season of its own. Then there was the privileged season of seminary, the delightful season of teaching, the humbling season of pastoring. Can marriage and parenting be called seasons? It seems all her seasons were a mix of laughter and loyalty, frustrations and failures, mystery and mercy. There were tastes of grief and huge platters of generosity.

Spanning this long arc of seasons, Pamela has been surrounded by people who have enriched her life with instruction, insight, wisdom and joy. She has known the forgiving grace of God from a young age and has been taught by teachers who were passionate about God’s story of love through Jesus. It is her hope that no matter what season you find yourself in you will remember that the Holy Spirit is moaning with you in the hard times and singing with you when your heart is healed and your spirit celebrates. May kindness travel with you and honor walk by your side.

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