Mother's Day
May 13, 2001

Happy Mother's Day, all you moms!

The fifth commandment, written by the very finger of God on a tablet of stone is:

Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long upon the land which the Lord your God is giving you.

Two weeks ago today, we were with my 87-year-old mother in Minneapolis. I have many pleasant memories of my childhood. Everybody loved my mom. She was an all-American, apple pie mom. She never had a regular job or even drove a car. That was the norm in my neighborhood in those days. She was always there for me and my two younger brothers.

When I was young, my dad was away from home much of the time, trying to earn a living. Times were hard, and jobs were scarce in our area. He worked in the shipyards in California, then went to Canada to work on the Alaska highway and finally joined the Navy at the end of World War II. Sometimes I didn't see him for a year or more. My grandparents lived next door, and they took my mom and me under their wings during that time.

My dad's friends were the men, guys he worked with, fellow ski jumpers, golfers. In many ways, my mom and dad led separate lives.

When Susan and I visited Minneapolis in 1987, we noti ced that Mom was unusually forgetful, that she repeated stories, and most disturbing, that she believed little people were coming into her home and stealing from her at night. The change was more apparent to me than to dad or my brothers because they were with her all the time. They'd adapted to the gradual changes.

Several years later, Mom was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, or, as Susan's grandpa phrased it, "Old Timer's disease." Dad took care of here at home as long as he possibly could, but in 1993, he had no option but to place her in a nursing home.

The long gradual decline has gone on and on, to the point that she is no longer aware of anything. She rarely moves, speaks or even opens her eyes.

Most people would think that what has happened to my mom is one of the worst things that could possibly happen. They'd wring their hands, call in more specialists, be angry at God, or become depressed. We've adapted. This is just the way it is.

She's been in the nursing home now for eight years. Everytime we go back some of the old familiar faces have been replaced by new residents. Nobody gets out of there alive.

You might ask, "What is the purpose?" "What good could possibly come of this for her or anyone else?"

Well, I've come to understand that what we perceive as curses can conceal great blessings. God sees things from a different perspective than we do. Isaiah 55:8-9 says:

For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
neither are your ways my ways.
As the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts.

Since Mom went into the nursing home, my dad has gone there to feed her every day with the exception of two weeks he came here. Every day for more than eight years. All the time I was growing up, I never heard him say "I love you" to my mom or me or anyone else. He treats her with so much tenderness. He holds her hand, kisses her, and tells her he loves her. The first time I heard him say that, I couldn't believe it!

You'd have to know my dad to understand. Susan says I procrastinate, but my dad is in a class of his own. He used to run out of gas all the time. Once we ran out of gas in the middle of a one-lane bridge over the Mississippi. The traffic backed up for miles in both directions. Finally, someone pushed us off the bridge.

A few years ago, he complained about his phone bill. We looked at it and discovered he was still paying rent on a 1950s-style rotary dial phone he'd lost years ago.

My mother is getting excellent care in a Catholic nursing home. It costs about $4000 a month. I have no idea where the money is coming from, and what's worse, neither does my dad. He keeps assuring me he'll check into it!

A second amazing blessing has come out of this. My mom used to be afraid of black people. We lived in an all-white neighborhood with mostly Germans and Scandinavians. When I was in Roosevelt High School, only one of the 2,500 students was black. He was the best football player we ever had and helped us win a state championship.

When we were downtown and Mom saw a black person or one got on the bus, she would be terrified. It was her nightmare that a black person would hurt her someday.

Now, nearly all her caretakers are black, most of them recent immigrants from Africa. We know them on a first-name basis and they love to share stories of Africa. They're thrilled that we've been to Africa, and even went to some of their home towns. We couldn't ask for better caretakers. The people she once feared are lovingly doing all they can to make her life easier now that she can no longer even thank them.

So although my mother isn't at all aware of anything now, she is still bringing blessings to the people around her.

None of us knows what our fate will be, or how the final chapters of our life will read. But if we give Jesus authority over our lives, he becomes the author of the story of our life. We can trust that He'll make it come out right.

Let's pray:

Father God, we come before You today and lift up Your name in prayer and thanksgiving. We thank You for the privilege of serving You and ask that You forgive our many sins. There is nothing good we can say or do without the help of Your Holy Spirit. That is a particular comfort to me because I know that if I lift You up, You will take it from there. Your time schedule and ways will seldom if ever be understood by me. But that's OK, because in the end you have promised good. Bless this offering today, Lord, and bless this church and its leaders as they teach your word. In Christ's name we pray, Amen.

Source: www.SusanCAnthony.com, ©Susan C. Anthony