Sweat beads gathered. First, the forehead, then the upper lip. Oh yeah! I need a fan! Beth never remembered it when she was away from her tiny office, but at the first sign of internal heat she regretted forgetting.
Her tiny, trusty (and slightly rusty) desk fan sat unused at home ever since she resigned her full-time writing job the year before. The face of it had fallen off, but Beth kept it with the intent of putting it back together or turning it into something quirky and fun.
But where to put a fan? Her temporary desk was thoroughly cluttered that there was only room for her arms to rest while she typed. The rest was strewn with manuscripts, alligator clips, highlighters, mechanical pencils, headphones, a coffee cup, and The Chicago Manual of Style.
The only place was the floor . . . Wait a minute! There was a floor fan in her neighbor’s curbside trash array just two days ago! But the fan was not of initial interest. There was a cool cart with a retro feel. She had considered pulling it out of the pile and maybe even the fan, but it was dark and she wanted to be sure she could clean anything she put into her car. Sadly, the neighbor was prompt with the trash pickup and the small mountain was gone by the next morning.
Beth imagined the fan redone in bright colors and sitting on her office floor. How hard could it have been? Take it apart, clean it, and spray paint! She probably wouldn’t have stopped there. She moaned inwardly, My idea came too late!
Her imaginations drifted to college memories and her tendency to scribble on everything with paint her aunt had given her. The array of colors came in tubes with ball-point tips. It was like writing! Literally. Have ball-point paint? Everything is fair game. Shoe boxes, lamps, pillow cases, sheets, shirts, mugs, even the desk—everything had scribbles on it.
A smile came with the memory and faded. What good is a memory? she wondered. It’s just time spent in the past with things that cannot be changed. The forlorn fan in the neighbor’s yard came to mind. It had sat waiting . . . waiting . . . waiting . . . for vision or fate . . . maybe even for her. She could have changed its trash heap fate, but she didn’t have a vision for it then.
She pondered how it is so similar for people. The natural course of life happens without vision at all. A soul is set in a body. We are plopped into the center of a scenario like the fan. This life we are walking out day by day may just be our long walk to the curb where we yield to “fate” and wait, doing our best to stand tall and proud while we’re on display in the earth.
But what we need is vision. Vision could have rescued that fan. Even just her vision, had she realized it in time, could have not only rescued it but given it a new, bright, fun life.
Beth thought about how many things she had rescued that lived in her garage or were stored somewhere still waiting for her touch to renovate or restore them. And the the other collections of useful things that she could donate or sell . . . still waiting. Those objects did not have much improvement in their fate yet. They were just kept warm and dry while cluttering space while they waited.
Oh my Gosh! There's more to it!
It wasn't just the vision that changed the situation. It was the action (or lack of it) that affected fate!
The revelation caused her to muse, Maybe that’s what a redeemer is? Someone with vision who acts? Maybe it's someone who picks up the pieces and sees a new future, someone who doesn't just rescue us from the curb of life but takes us in, takes us apart, cleans us up, and puts us back together better than we were before! It would have to be someone who dreams bigger dreams for us than we do.
She looked to Heaven, winked, and whispered, "I know someone like that!"
This time her smile didn’t fade. For the first time, she had a solid idea of what it looked like to be in “redeemer’s shoes," the curious phrase God mentioned the year before.
She was on a heartbroken retreat in Mexico after the whirlwind of her father's death and the request of her employers to resign so she could handle his affairs knocked the wind out of her. She thought she would breathe on the beaches of Cancun, but she usually sobbed in the exquisite suite. Even so, God planted seeds in Beth’s spirit: gentle warrior, redeemer’s shoes, and Psalm 78.
Stepping into “redeemer’s shoes” was more of a concept than a concrete action plan. Beth studied her usual way and looked up scriptures and words for clues. At first she felt like she just stepped into her father’s shoes, but the sense of redemption grew over time. When she was in Guatemala and came across a young boy saddled with 12 years of debt after his parents passed away, she redeemed him from his debts. After that, she looked for ways to redeem. But it faded as responsibilities mounted. She escaped to Guatemala again, but it was different, more demanding. After she returned home for the holidays, she ran to keep up with commitments. The only redemption at the forefront of her mind was her own . . . until today.
The simple vision of a fan.
The simple thought of an idea being too late.
The simple wondering if that’s what redemption looks like—new ideas, vision that usurps fate.
Beth twirled in thought on her chair, Ideas! It was one of her magic words. She could wrap her heart around that. Redeemer stuff? I don't know. But IDEAS I can do!
“And you can follow them too,” the Voice said within her. “You can trust your ideas. You can trust your heart. You can trust because it's Me within you. Just trust Me. I'm with and within you.”
Beth softened at the holy words. The familiar, Heavenly Voice always carried a dimension of gentle power that fueled her heart and mind.
“Thank You,” she whispered.
Tears came like an expected friend with a warm hug. That was normal for Beth. She was a crier, whether it be happy or sad. If her heart was moved, she cried! But then she felt a silly, lopsided grin spread from somewhere deep within and screw itself onto her face, whirring to the imaginations of wild and wacky projects parading through her mind.
The sensation came from the same place that fluttered when she had a great idea as a kid, often a surprise for someone and the anticipation of the encounter. It reminded of her when she waited across the hall from the bathroom and could barely contain her giggles waiting for her brother to discover the inflatable gorilla in the shower. Or the time she orchestrated a surprise for a friend under the cover of darkness and couldn't wait to hear about the encounter; she engaged it. She threw rocks at the window until her friend woke and came to the door only to be greeted by an avalanche of packing peanuts.
Memories brought more memories and smiles. She was an endless source of energy and fun, always ready to pull someone out of a "normal" existence into an unexpected experience.
She whispered again, this time with a lilt in her voice and a twinkle in her eye, “I think I’m beginning to see it, Lord.”
He matched her twinkle with His voice, “Yes you are, sweet one.” He paused as if watch her reaction.
A glitch flickered through her smile. Beth didn't voice it, but regret was tugging at her for not having seen or understood early enough.
The Voice continued, "PS. With Me, you're never too late. I'm THE Redeemer. Redeeming time is my specialty."
Oh yeah! Beth laughed. It seemed obvious with God's voice speaking to her heart. Of course! I couldn't redeem the time on my own! Excitement burst through her thoughts. This was a partnership!
Joy tugged at Beth's heart like a child waiting to be fully noticed. She yielded like a waterfall to gravity. The thrill of trust splashing into Him woke her from the stupor that snuck up on her over the year.
She looked at the calendar: February 1, 2022. I may be a month late, but I think my new year just started now!
All Rights Reserved | Ingrid B. Skarstad Williams