THE WANDERING

In June 2019, after 54 years of living in the same town, Angela and I purchased one-way tickets with no return flight, boarded a plane to Nashville, and strapped the seatbelts around us. I was leaving the city I was born in, the city I went to school in, and the city I was married in. I was leaving the place where we raised three amazing and beautiful daughters, complete with those public schools with great teachers, that tan family mini-van that transported us to more seasonal choir performances than I can count, and that always-ready Foster’s Freeze on the corner. I was leaving the city where I’d been a pastor in three local congregations, and where I’d launched a business that would serve those same pastors. I was leaving my youngest daughter, who stayed behind to begin a teaching and coaching career.  I was leaving my brother and his wife. I was leaving the cemetery where we buried my mom and my dad, next to the plots where we buried my grandmother and grandfather. And the uncertainty of our next thing was screaming at us at concert-level db.

Leaving.

Such a beautiful and terrifying word.  

As the plane lifted high above the city, I just stared out the window. Angela and I grabbed hands, and I said to her, “My whole life”. I had some words to say beyond that, but the tears came too quickly to say them.

But then, the plane made a hard turn to the right. And because the dip was so severe, the window I was peering out of suddenly became blue sky. Because of the plane’s new angle, I couldn’t see the city buildings or trees or houses or parks anymore. 

All I could see was blue sky.

Sometimes I wonder if we’re invited to wander just a little bit more than we’re comfortable with? Ours was a story of locational wandering, but I think it’s more than just a location. What if it’s about wandering in a larger sense, too? Wandering when we’ve been kicked out of the place, the religion, or the family. Wandering when we’ve been called away from the thing, the relationship, or the job. Wandering when the pain is uncontrollable and unknowable. Wandering when the loss is too great for words. Wandering when we know our job needs to come to an end, but we’re unsure about what happens next.

From the moment Adam and Eve were told not to let the Garden’s door hit them on the way out, any Bible reader can’t help but experience the stories of real people in real communities who wander. The norm for people of faith is the reality of wandering until they arrive somewhere. 

And the wandering doesn’t cease to exist simply because the escrow closes on the new home, or we buy the new shiny thing. It doesn’t matter how much money we pour into something that feels like an escape (some of us spend a lifetime in escape-mode), wandering will always live and breathe in our hearts. 

We want security, but we’re given a journey. 

We want safety, but we’re given the unknown.

We want clarity of vision, but we’re given glimpses of potential.

We want tomorrow, but we’re given today.

We want an eternal home to reside in, but we’re given this world.

And it’s only made worse when good people in our lives try to help us remove the beauty of The Wandering. Friends, family members, coworkers, even churches unwittingly try to accomplish something that’s not in their power to accomplish. They try to remove the reality of wandering by offering us lessor options with impossible promises. But when this tragically happens, the embrace of wandering isn’t the only thing that’s removed from our lives. 

Faith is removed too. Specifically, the faith it takes to walk closely to God, and the faith it takes to keep in step with the His Spirit. 

So in this world that’s no longer a garden called Eden…In this world where all creation still groans for redemption and shalom…

Should we finally and fully give ourselves complete permission to embrace The Wandering, simply because faith is most fully discovered there?

An old Gospel hymn says, “This world is not my home, I’m just passing through…” (“just a-passin’ through”, if you sing it like it was meant to be sung). I can’t help but resonate with that, and found myself singing that old hymn as our flight prepared to land in our new hometown. I also found myself just thanking God for today – just for today – and then asking Him to make today count, as I simply search for the manna that’s littered in places I’ve become too blind to see. I told God that I’m ready to receive the gift of this journey together with the unwanted reality of fear, and to fully embrace the wandering.

Because truly, friends…none of us are home yet.