Published by Glen G. Scorgie on 12 May 2008 at 05:32 am
A Mother’s Legacy: Bitterness Begone
I feel blessed whenever I remember my mother. She was a godly mentor and a wise woman. She died of nasty cancer nine years ago, and I especially miss her every time Mother’s Day rolls around. But she left a wonderful legacy, and part of it is how she responded to hurtful people and painful experiences. She refused to allow them to make her bitter. She had an inexhaustible capacity to keep on loving people anyway.
Mom was born Lilyan Alberta Brandon in 1926 on a marginal Canadian farm about an hour’s drive north of
Eventually she met my Dad, a newly-minted graduate of Moody Bible Institute. He was bright, full of energy, and with an obvious gift of teaching. He enjoyed the shenanigans of Fundamentalists (like T. T. Shields) without ever quite being one himself. In 1951 they married, and forged a partnership of deep commitment and mutual affection that lasted almost half a century. But back in 1951 my mother was obliged to adjust to the complex expectations of a dutiful preacher’s wife.
My folks remained faithful to God and to one another through the years. The friendship and mentoring they extended to so many through the years were truly exceptional, and their hospitality was legendary. But that verse of Mom’s became her mantra whenever, in the midst of many joys, she also ran into pain in the years that followed. She was always on high alert for that nasty little thing called a root of bitterness. She managed to maintain a grace-filled and triumphant spirit through it all. And kept daring to love people, and accept the risks involved in doing that.
How did she pull it off? I think it had to do with the consolation she found in God. Just today I was reading Tom Schwanda’s excellent review of Arie de Reuver’s book Sweet Communion, which is about the spirituality of certain Dutch believers in the seventeenth century. Those given to religious stereotypes will be surprised to discover that Calvinists could ever be deeply familiar with the affective dimension of the Christian life, but the facts here speak for themselves. These old saints knew the sweetness of deeply meaningful communion with God. The reviewer notes the author’s opinion that “one of the most serious symptoms of the present crisis in church and culture is the increasing loss of sweet fellowship with God.” It’s hazardous to reduce our current spiritual crisis to a single cause, but de Reuver’s assessment may not be wide of the mark. My mother knew what that sweet fellowship was all about, and it inoculated her against bitterness. She exuded love to the very end. I thank my God upon every remembrance of her.




Rebecca Friese on 13 May 2008 at 5:21 am #
Thank you for this. As another pastor’s wife who has had “fractious folks at church” cause pain to my family, your words are a challenge and inspiration to me. May I too learn more and more to find my sweet consolation in God so that no root of bitterness will spring up in my heart. Truly God is good!
thorsten on 14 May 2008 at 3:09 pm #
Thanks Glen. I’m not good at taking time to reflect on these important things. So I appreciate you inviting (reminding, even) your readers to do so. The more I have gone in the direction of a storied epistemology over the years, the more I appreciate such story telling. Thanks.
John W. Scorgie on 14 May 2008 at 3:29 pm #
Thanks for your tribute to your mother , my aunt. She was a woman who became a refined, renewed vessel in the Potter’s hands through tough situations and I thank God for the example she was to me as her nephew and as a pastor who has also faced circumstances beyond my control and against my will.
Paul on 15 May 2008 at 8:16 pm #
As a pastor’s son myself, I can relate to the wonderfully told memories here. Your mother did indeed leave a wonderful legacy.
Bill Steinwedell on 09 Aug 2008 at 1:01 am #
I am blessed by your telling of your story and the mother with whom God blessed you, and now the rest of us who have read this. I am reading Siang-Yang Tan’s Full Service (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2006). Tan reflects upon leadership and servant-hood, but really upon the difference between selfish Christianity and being in Christ as Paul in Philippians begs us to be (rather than imitating him, be in Christ). As I read this article on your mom, as I reflected on some of the tyranny, almost evil abuse, of authority I have experienced, as well as just struggles with loved ones, I am reminded of how bitterness, unwillingness to forgive, and not trusting in God’s hand working in all things, are inescapably intertwined. How great, how difficult, how holy is the call to love one another! Love your enemy! Forgive them for they know not what they do! Thanks again for sharing your heart and experience concerning your mom!