January 19, 2008

  • A Rose By Any Other Name — Hope Chronicles 11

    “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose , by any other name would smell as sweet.” It’s a famous line from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliette. And the conclusion is that the name isn’t what matters. Romeo would still be Romeo even if he wasn’t a Montague (but it would have been easier if that was the case). A rose smells the same no matter what it is called.
     
    Can I weigh in on both sides? Yes, a rose still smells the same, but there is something significant about our names. Why else would we be hurt when someone cannot remember our names? However, I am also willing to admit that this may be a pet peeve of mine. As you might guess from the picture, I am an identical twin. I do mean identical. We were constantly mixed up as children. I know the trick of telling us apart in some of the more “staged” photos. (We were placed in alphabetical order.) Give me purely candid shots and I am often guessing too!

    Recently, I had a some friends’ children over. One found a tape and wanted to know what movie I had rented. It was actually a video made out of the reel to reel (yes, I’m dating myself) tapes of when I was a child. He wanted to see and asked, “So which one are you?” All the motion of two busy two-year-olds left it impossible for me to decide which one I was!

    While some twins “outgrow” this identicalness, Sara and I still look remarkably alike. She recently attended the Hearts at Home conference in Grand Rapids, MI — about 5 1/2 hours from where I live. Several people from my church are involved in Hearts. Sara had person after person come up and exclaim, “What are you doing here? I didn’t know you were coming.” To which she replied, “I am NOT who you think I am!”

    In light of this, I’ll have to forgive my grandfather for never knowing us apart. He called all the granddaughters “Honey” and “Missy” interchangeably while we were growing up. At about 14, it dawned on us to ask, “Now, which one am I?” We were horrified to find he didn’t know!

    Perhaps it is teenage girl thing, but I went through a phase of deciding what I would name my children when I had them. In bookstores, I could be found perusing the baby name books because somewhere in my head I had decided that when I named my children, I wanted the names to have meaning. This meant that they needed to be named after someone important in my life or that the name actually meant something. I planned out how I would tell them what their name meant and that each time I spoke their name I was speaking that characteristic into being in them. Lovely thought, isn’t it?

    At the same time, I could not resist knowing what my name meant. All the books agreed that “Amy” meant “beloved.” However, I never had the courage to ask my parents why they chose that name for me. I know very little about the day I was born except that they had no clue that they were in for a bonus baby! I do not know if that excited them or overwhelmed them. I know only that we were premature and had to stay in the hospital for awhile and that Sara went home several days before I did. I do not know if they kept a vigil while we were there. I really know next to nothing.

    But I do know that I did not feel “beloved.” My family was a dysfunctional mess and “I love you” was not said and affection was not shown. (Even as adults, my sisters and I cannot seem to move beyond this.) I learned early on that it was better to read unobserved in the corner than to be noticed. If you were noticed, there was typically a sharp word or a criticism or a reprimand or any number of things. So, in my mind, I think I have always felt that it was some cruel joke like calling the fat kid “Skinny” to be called “Beloved” and not feel loved.

    Most of my Christian life, I have approached God with caution. I’ve sometimes thought that I had snuck in the back door and could only stay as long as He didn’t notice me. For awhile I opted out of church. When I came back, I came back literally trembling. For months I did not partake in communion just in case God might strike me down with a great zap from heaven for sullying His table after having abandoned church for so many months and being a sinner.

    Luckily, even when I abandoned church, God did not abandon me. God has brought me into a great community of believers. From my friend Jill I have learned to say, “I love you.” I also believe she has chosen to love me. I was (and to some degree still am) a prickly as porcupine when she first met me. (It can’t be easy to love a porcupine!) Perhaps, more importantly than learning to say it, I have learned to hear it and receive it and believe it from others and God. I am still working to know how to rest in it.

    Love. It drew Jesus to the cross for me. It made Him stay there until it was through when legions of angels were waiting for His call to sweep in and bring Him down from that brutal cross. For my sake, He endured the ultimate agony when taking my sin upon himself, God turned away. He did it for me. Because of that, I can never say that I am “unloved.”

    I do not profess to understand the book of Revelation. But with my fascination with names, Revelation 2:17 has always caught my imagination. “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes, I will give some of the hidden manna. I will also give him a white stone with a new name written on it, known only to him who receives it.”

    A name only between me and God, written on a pure white stone. With as much as I’ve struggled to understand His love, I might not be surprised to find my own name written there — “Amy, loved one.” I have hope because of His love for me.

Comments (4)

  • Another great blog, Amy.

    I think I have mentioned my separation from the church.  I cannot express the gratitude that God is there for us, always.  Have you heard Jeremy Camp’s song?  Take You Back.  It makes me feel so grateful every time I hear it.

    Anyhow, sometimes we have to go through the weary times of doubt to understand the massiveness of what we do have.  In this case His love.  Life is learning, I’m sure I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know.  Matthew 13:13 refers to Isaiah 6:10  

     ”Make the heart of this people calloused;
           make their ears dull
           and close their eyes. [a]
           Otherwise they might see with their eyes,
           hear with their ears,
           understand with their hearts,
           and turn and be healed.” (http://www.biblegateway.com)

    However, a rose is a rose.  He will take us regardless.  He just WANTS us. 

    That is one of the things I got from a Casting Crowns concert, thank you Mark Hall.  He doesn’t NEED me, I NEED Him.  He WANTS me.

  • A wonderful and inspiring post.  Brought me to tears. 

    Good tears!!  

  • amy,

           What a great post. I am truly sorry about feeling unloved as a child, I was so blessed to have much love, and I thank God for that love daily. I wanted to share a song with you that may help you, as it has helped me over the years during hard times. Michael W. Smith has a song called “Never beeen unloved.” IT is awesome, and the words speak volumes. Be blessed today, amy

  • i grew up in an absive home as well & it was VERY disfunctional!! My dad was both physically and verbally abusive…long story short…when i found God at the age of 24 i did the same thing…approached God with trembling thinking he was going to stike me down & had a hard time communicating with God since all the communication i got as a child was yelling and beating, i thought that’s how God was…it took a few years of me knowing God that He in fact wasn’t like my earthly father and loved me for me & that i could come to Him as He waited with open arms…

    isn’t it amazing how your childhood and growing up a certain way makes you who you are today UNLESS you choose to be different and move beyond that what i call “generational curse”  i say that because looking back and knowing what i know today, i bet my dad didn’t even know any other way to communicate and did what he grew up knowing to do…

    i choose to walk a different path with my kids and hubby & am raising them with hearing ” I LOVE YOU” & hugs and kisses…that is something, like you, i didn’t hear or get as a child either…and again it took me awhile to shed that “porcupineness” as God showed me how much He loved me, i in turn began to show His love to others & in fact learned to love…something i wasn’t taught growing up but learned through God teaching me

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