I haven't written one word since October 20. Oh, I've jotted notes and scribbled things I needed to remember, but these fingers haven't produced anything of importance since the day I just referenced.
That's the day I
received the latest rejection of my novel.
I wrote
about this possibility cryptically a few months ago, cautioning myself not to
let hopes soar too high or be dashed too low, should the manuscript be rejected
again. It was, and I’m still standing.
Here’s
the quote I use in the opening of my novel:
"And you know that you fight for the lost causes
harder than for any other.
Yes, you even die for them."*
*Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Directed by Frank Capra. By Lewis R. Foster. Screenplay
by Sidney Buchman. Columbia Pictures, 1939. VHS.
My pastor’s been discussing this idea in his sermons on the
book of Jeremiah. That guy wasn’t called the weeping
prophet for nothing – his countrymen steadfastly rejected his message, yet he
faithfully executed the marching orders the Lord gave him (after some initial whining,
which makes me feel better about my frequent reluctance to pick up the gauntlets
He hurls my way). Similarly, I may have to keep tilting at windmills till
the day He calls me home. If one of those windmills happens to lead to a publication
deal, great. If not, at least I’ll have gone down fighting.
Let me backtrack for a moment, and then change gears
altogether, because this post really isn’t about rejection or disappointment.
It’s about finding the Lord to be enough, no matter what circumstances we find
ourselves in. I stated at the outset that I hadn’t written anything significant
since October 20, but that’s misleading. True, I haven’t tweaked my novel, sent
any new book proposals, or even blogged for a couple of months. From that
standpoint, I’ve been stagnant. But a small group of women attend a Bible study
taught by yours truly, and I have upheld that responsibility. Right now we’re
delving deep into the Scripture-packed hymn, O
Come, O Come Emmanuel, and finding ourselves blessed by the wealth of encouragement
those lyrics have to offer.
There is more than one way to write for the Lord.
For all I know, He considers my humble efforts at educating a
handful of faithful ladies to have far greater impact than if my book were to
top the bestseller list.
So, it comes down to enough.
What is enough for this arrogant clay
pot? John D. Rockefeller, one of the richest men who ever lived, once defined
“enough money” as “just a little bit more.”
We can condemn him as a malcontent and roll our eyes at the
dissatisfaction of a man who arguably had all the world had to offer, yet wanted
more. But he’s only expressing the spirit of the age – the same thing King Solomon
found out: that whenever we put our hopes in what the world has to offer, we’re
going to feel
shortchanged.
At my grandson’s birthday party last month, there was a laser
tag game of sorts. Being an old fogey, I had never experienced this
recreational activity, so I took my granddaughter into the tent and together we
chased the fleeting lights. I found it somewhat symbolic that, as soon as we laid
hold of a given beam, it disappeared into nothingness.
I wrote
about this phenomenon years ago, pining about my inability to lay hold of the
laser beam that is the holiday feeling. It was the Christmas season, as it is
now, and I was struggling then, as I do now, to let enough be enough. I was overeating
and overfeeding my holiday joy meter with endless Christmas songs and Hallmark
movies. I can only report partial success in the ten years that have elapsed
since; something inside still yearns for an elusive something that won’t fade away on December 26. Something that will continue feeding my spirit and keep it aglow even after the curtain (or fork) drops.
But that brings up another point. The only curtain with eternal significance was ripped in two by heavenly hands when Christ breathed His last, thus shouting down through the ages that His sacrifice was enough. That the dividing line between deity and humanity was forever removed, leaving only the need for each pilgrim to make his wholly inadequate way into the presence of glory.
As I’m rereading these ramblings, it seems I’ve overdone it again with metaphors and analogies. Oh, well. So be it. It should come as no surprise that someone who binges on food and Christmas movies would tend to go overboard in the figurative language department. Better that than cookies.
I hope, though, that in the midst of my metaphor madness, one point stands out in brilliant relief. At the top of my Christmas tree rests neither angel nor star. Those things heralded the light that pierced darkness 2,000 years ago, but the cross finished the work of redemption. As I posted on social media many Christmases ago, “Lord, turn bad into good, wrong into right, sin into redemption. Come to think of it, You did that at the cross. Thank You, Lord, that Christmas turned into Easter and death turned into life when the creche met the cross.”
And that, my dear readers, is more than enough.