Kneeling, a Lament.

Photo by Jude Beck on Unsplash

I sing a lament
of a nation divided
a strong man pulled down
right on down to his knees

But worse still and so infinitely
much more disturbing
is His much treasured family
chock full of the disease

For we spit and we sputter
with our tongues all unfurled
we devour and bite
we are just like the world

Oh, we cherish our freedom
grab on tight to our rights
leave behind the downtrodden
ignore all of their plights

Blessed are the peacemakers
Blessed too are the poor
Blessed are all who mourn
but don’t ask me to pay more

He told us we would suffer
but we run from the pain
He called this life temporary
but we build palaces in our name

We’ve refused to give grace
we’ve refused to shut up
when our feelings are pinched
we back up with a truck

Full of memes and blog postings
that we copy and paste
and we wound our dear brother
to our sister lay waste

And the enemy prowls
and the enemy seethes
and the enemy lies
and the enemy breathes

And we’ve stopped looking out
and we only look in
fighting fighting each other
he looks on with a grin

Oh your music is different
so much different than mine
and your interpretation
is not yet quite divine

Let me tell you the truth
that only me and mine know
and each “truth” with no love
wielding death with each blow

Oh our body it’s bleeding
can’t you see each sweet part
irreplaceable, magnificent
altogether, but apart

Because we’re losing this battle
each long day that goes by
we are self-amputating
can’t you hear His pained cry

Of My love they should learn
when they watch how you love
yet you’re ripping and tearing
as I still bleed up above

And the enemy laughs
my oh my does he scorn
for this day he has labored
since the day he was born

Oh dear Father forgive us
how we’ve trampled Your name
how we’ve scorned Your beloved
who don’t act quite the same

We’ve forgotten the words
and the warnings You gave
and we’re flying full tilt
once again to the grave

We are bleeding before You
ripped ourselves limb from limb
and if You don’t come to us swiftly
what comes next is quite grim

I sing this song of lament
from my knees, here’s my part
Yours alone to forgive
start with me, change my heart

God please knit us together
help us stand once again
side by side, hand in hand
turn our back to our sin

Help us forget what we want
look to You for our needs
open-handed, show the truth
for the truth the world pleads

Only You God are worthy
only You speak the truth
and the liar is strong
but he’s nothing like You

So we wait here together
we wait here on our knees
because we know You are faithful
and that You hear all our pleas

We Are Not Consumed.

Original Photo by Ricardo Gomez Angel on Unsplash, edited by the Author

This morning I was sitting on the balcony with my daughter and my coffee. The sun was on my right side and a gentle breeze was blowing. Not many Turks get up as early as our daughter, so it was pretty quiet — enough to hear the birds chirping loudly from the tree about five feet away.

And as I sat there I thought — how can I have this moment of such peace in the midst of everything that’s going on? If I were to make you a brief and non-exhaustive list of the uncertainty and instability troubling me from all sides — COVID, race riots, watching loved ones duking it out on social media, waiting on a court date so we can finalize the adoption and finally take our daughter to meet her family and friends.

My heart is hurting for the pain and the suffering and the divisions breaking out in every direction. For the multiplication of lies and the inexplicable violence and the lack of visible peacemakers.

And yet. There I sat in a moment of such perfect peace it brought tears to my eyes.

My daughter likes to flip through my Bible, and as she was flipping I saw a verse I’d underlined in Lamentations years ago.

Because of His great love, we are not consumed.

Yes, the world has erupted once again in chaos and flames. And yes, some of us are taking our turn at the very hottest center of the fire. But we are not consumed.

Somehow, some way, with each new morning’s mercies He gives us what we need. To stand and face the sorrows of the day. To burn or watch those we love burn. To run toward the fires instead of away from them.

I think it’s in those little bubbles of peace like I experienced this morning, in moments of laughter and joy and light, that He shows some of His greatest love. When He says take a breather from worrying about the world and rest for a minute, smile, breathe, enjoy your coffee. I’ve got this.

Because of His great love, we don’t have to be consumed. What a world-altering, life-changing, hallelujah-shouting kind of truth.

Is This What You Meant?

Photo by Rakicevic Nenad from Pexels

Is this what You meant when You made me? When You formed me? When You planted the spark in my mother’s womb? 

Is this what You meant before the universe burst to life, when You chose this exact moment of history to place me within?

Is this what You meant, for me to flourish inside a marriage I never wanted nor sought, for which You had to painfully rip away the scar tissue so I could fit into this wonder?

Is this what You meant, this endless ache of distance from family and dear ones, to give me a tiny glimpse of Your time far away from home and the familiar?

Is this what You meant when You made me? This bag of aging bones, couple pints of blood, under-utilized brain and often half-hearted attempts to live? This imperfect image of You constructed from specks of dust?

I want what You meant. All You meant. All the life. All the breath. All the blood. All the gasping for oxygen as we wind up and up and up, drawing every day nearer to that highest, long-sought summit. Until finally we reach the pinnacle of the fullness of You in me, and we stand and gaze in wonder.

Notes from the Collective.

Volume 6: the Jacker Revolution in Branch 12, 384-412 PST

Photo by Sirma Krusteva on Unsplash

Preface

As mentioned in my previous volumes, this series is an attempt to provide as extensive a history as possible of the Jacker phenomenon, as witnessed in each of its various iterations throughout the 16 branches of our species.

Unlike several of our branches who broke from the Collective immediately, or others who swung from side to side each time a certain number of generations passed, Branch 12 has the unique qualifier of majority adherence to the Collective until approximately the mid-350’s, Pulse Standard Time (PST), when early reports began to surface about Jacking in the outer settlements.

There is some disagreement about the official start of the Jacker Revolution in 12 — I have chosen to date it from 384 PST when the first shots were fired. From that point the Jacked population increased rapidly until full scale war broke out in 401 (when the Collective made the decision to go lethal), which is the date others have used in the past. I respect that decision, but my choice makes more sense to me.

This report includes interviews with as many surviving members of the Branch 12 community who lived through the revolution as were willing to talk to me. I appreciate the honor they each showed me by allowing me to roam with them through their memories of that difficult time. Some of them were veterans with serious scars, many had lost close family and friends, and almost all remembered the period with deep personal regret.

Also integral to this volume was my search through the extensive archives maintained by Branch 12. Special thanks go to Julio Jackson Hussein, Head Archivist at Messages from the Collective. Without his assistance this volume would not have been as rich and detailed as I would have liked.

If there are errors, they are mine alone, and I accept full responsibility for them.

On a personal note, the research into Branch 12’s fall from grace was extremely challenging for me. As seasoned readers of this series already know, as a Branchless I was born without the inner ear, thus can neither receive messages from the Collective, nor be Jacked. I find once again it both saddens, and gladdens my heart, depending on which side of the war I’m currently researching. It does also aid my research that I am not subject to the Pulse. I hope both the Branched and Branchless find this volume as interesting to read as I found it to research.

Sarah Ellicott
623 PST
Branchless, Settlement Seven

Out of the Black.

Photo by Ylanite Koppens from Pexels

Something moves in the black. Shimmers. Squirms.

I’m used to the darkness, so the movement is startling and uncomfortable somehow, but also mesmerizing. There’s some kind of light, some slight gloss of reflection. It wiggles and twists and I struggle to make sense of it.

Is it a worm? A snake? The thought of it joining me here repulses, but I don’t think I’ve yet guessed right.

It’s changing every moment, struggling, growing in size and — pushing — somehow. Pulsing from somewhere within, it continually lengthens.

And then suddenly it’s changing in a different way and the picture clarifies. The color was off; that’s why I didn’t understand. I should have recognized it, but the environment threw me.

In my life there has been only blank gloom in this space that barred even the smallest fragment of light. I have grown accustomed to the silence. The still sadness of void.

I never expected to see growth here. I didn’t know new life was possible under these conditions. Yet here it is, and I am amazed.

It is a budding branch, green and new and strong. And it is growing fast.

Glimpse of a Warrior.

Photo by Maria Pop from Pexels

My eyes are drawn to the brief flickers of flame, well-masked by a tremendous amount of smoke. The bitter taste of it sits on my tongue as the awful sounds of battle clang in my ears.

Then she emerges. Staggers, really. Her arms are at her sides, her hands empty. Somewhere back there in the smoke she lost her sword and shield.

The remains of a helmet cling to her head, but there’s a significant chunk missing. There are so many injuries it’s difficult to know where to begin — the wound on her forehead, mixing a trail of blood and grime down her neck; the gaping tear in her side that she carefully favors; scrapes and cuts and bruises beyond number. She’s limping as she takes a few shaky steps, sways perilously, then stops.

I didn’t notice at first, but she’s crying. Now I can focus on nothing else, watching as big tears mingle with the blood and grime, slowly edging downward toward her torn clothing.

Her eyes seem full of an ancient sadness, and I watch as she begins to tremble. Her head turns side to side, eyes widening as they take in the battles raging in every direction. The trembling becomes stronger, rocketing through her whole body. Her knees give way and she falls to the ground as her head tilts back and she lets loose a roar of rage so loud it echoes over the battle sounds that have nearly deafened me.

Only then do I notice that she is on fire in a couple of places. As the last echoes of her roar fade into silence, I’m mesmerized by the way the flames seem to be devouring her, as she slumps to the ground in defeat.

There’s a beat, long enough for me to wonder if all is lost, but soon enough, I realize my conclusion was wrong — it wasn’t a slump of defeat after all, it was a roll.

Her face testifies that she is nearly unconscious as her body goes through the motions designed to put out the flames. She continues to roll, slowly at first, then gradually, gradually picking up speed. She spins faster and faster, until I regret the infirmity of my eyes. I can’t see clearly.

My mind can’t catalogue the moment it happens, but in a flash she emerges from the roll crouched on top of a dark black horse, gleaming in his purple silks, both of them powerful beyond measure.

Her clothing has transformed to match, purple silk flowing around her, and there is a long black cloth that is some kind of weapon trailing behind the enormous shield covering her back.

The injury to her forehead is patched, the grime and blood are gone, and from the way she holds her sword I know the wound at her side is mended. She charges past me so fast I feel the wind, her eyes blazing with such focused intensity I can still see them, long after she’s returned to the mayhem.

The Enemy.

Photo by Daria Shevtsova from Pexels

The sand is mesmerizing. The way it moves, drifts — hovers, almost — over the surface of the beach. One might almost be forgiven for thinking it was alive because it moves like it has intelligence, or maybe more like the wind moving it has intelligence.

Directing. Guiding. Showing it where to reach and leading it through its’ complicated dance with the water always coming and going.

The wind is relentless — it hasn’t stopped blowing all afternoon.

And I realize, suddenly, that it’s a lot like our Enemy. That realization causes a shudder to pass through my body, completely unrelated to the cold of standing alone at the top of a dune in the middle of winter. Water to my right is not nearly as interesting as the sand, although the tart, fresh scent it gives off is a kind of delicacy. The land to my left is covered in long, green and brown grasses. Presumably there are guards a couple hundred yards down the beach in both directions, but I can’t see them. Not a single discordant sound interrupts my thoughts, only the near-silent waves and the gentle press of the grasses rhythmically brushing against my knees.

I have to remind myself to look up every once in a while to perform my duties. I finally pulled an afternoon watch, and I’m glad. We marched for days to get here, arriving about a week ago, but this is the first time I’ve had a chance to really study the landscape. Everywhere I look is beauty of a kind I’ve never seen, trying to woo me toward an unfamiliar peacefulness.

Were it not for the sand.

The dreadful sand penetrates my clothes and causes every inch of my skin to itch, not just the exposed parts. Every time I stamp my feet to warm them up I feel it grating between my toes. The grit of it in my mouth causes my teeth to grind and I spit again, uselessly, cursing under my breath.

Suddenly I can’t stand the sight of it, though it fascinated my attention just moments ago. It seems as if I can almost see each little grain marching toward me, part of the maddening, swarming whole. Working with intent, but brainless as well. Not one grain breaks rank. They can get anywhere the wind blows. They will never stop. They will never get to the end of their forces. They will never leave us alone.

But even with this incessant, aggravating sand reminding me of horrors I’d rather forget, if it were up to me, I’d stay on guard here forever. The last battle was the worst of my life, and I’m not eager to get back into the fight.

Our last camp was pitched in a terrible, barren desert, where we were shivering through the long winter, when suddenly he found us, as he always does sooner or later. Like I said, relentless. But I almost fell off my horse when I saw his forces coming at us that time. Right up front leading them big as life was my cousin. We hadn’t seen him in months, ever since he disappeared on a raid. Of course we’d assumed, we’d hoped, he was dead.

My older brother Peter came and stood beside me. He didn’t need to say anything for me to know what he wanted me to do. I knew we would have to get to our cousin or die trying. It’s one of the prime honors and responsibilities of our existence, to set free those who have been enslaved by our Enemy.

Once the fighting started I followed Peter as he angled toward our cousin, but by the time we were able to make it into his inner circle my arms were so tired I could no longer raise my sword. I remember my cousin’s eyes were glistening with tears as he raised his sword to swing against me and I knew I was done for — and I was almost relieved — when suddenly Peter came in from the side of my vision and absorbed the blow. His blood sprayed across my face and I was momentarily blinded.

When I could see again, it was over. My cousin lay before us, my brother standing over him with his right arm hanging limply at his side, blood flowing fast.

We took Peter back to camp and bound his arm. Even the smallest wound can be dangerous and must be closely watched. It didn’t take long, and I felt increasing dread watching the red streaks lengthen daily. As I suspected it would, the day soon came when he asked me to take off his arm.

It’s always a last resort, cut off the arm to save the life, and it was the most difficult thing I had had to do in a life full of difficulties. He would become a cripple by my hand. But in our world absolutely anything is better than succumbing to a wound of the Enemy.

He didn’t pass out as I’d hoped while I made the cut, but when we held a burning shield up to the stump at his shoulder — well, I still hear his screams in my dreams. Afterward, he thanked me over and over, but there was a dimness in his eyes that haunts me more than the screams.

For a while we thought it might have worked, that it might have been enough, but then he started to change. He started talking about things we don’t talk about.

In the past, I had always been the one who questioned the way things were, Peter never did. True, even though it’s what we’re all supposed to want, he didn’t want to be the Friend any more than I did. He only ever wanted to be a Storyteller, and maybe because he was so good at it, he was always asking questions and dreaming up scenarios. But they were never questions about how we lived or what the Friend asked of us.

Those were the subjects of my questions, and most of the time he would listen to me ask them without shaming me, which was good because I felt enough shame when I was alone with my thoughts.

Evenings around the fire, long nights marching to our next hiding place, standing next to each other on guard duty. Whenever I would complain about the way things were or ask unanswerable questions, he would patiently respond with the words we all knew. The memorized truth that we were trained to use to combat the lies that assailed us. Me in particular. He never seemed to have problems with the lies in the same way I did.

Which was one of the reasons I took it so hard when he began parroting my questions back to me. I tried to answer him with the truths, but they seemed hollow coming from my mouth. I could tell he didn’t believe them as solidly as he once had.

He could no longer fight. He who was once on the front lines was relegated to helping in the kitchen, and his spirit was broken. His stories became perfunctory and poorly-attended, until he stopped telling them altogether.

Everyone could see it, though I denied it fervently any time someone brought up the subject. And then one day I woke and he wasn’t there on the ground beside me. When I went searching I saw him at the edge of the camp. He showed me the streaks he’d been hiding, wrapping clear around his chest, and we wept together, holding each other tight.

Though it was my responsibility to set him free right then, he left before I could work up the nerve. I reported him missing as required and rode hard with the group sent to catch up with him. We made it in time to see him from a distance, limping into the Enemy camp and immediately swarmed by soldiers.

The leader of our raid turned to berate us angrily for not getting there in time, “they’ve probably already started eating him! That’s what they do, eat them to take their strength!”

My brother was one of us, one of the strongest, and I cannot bear that he is gone.


A sound at my back startles me and I bring my sword up quickly, like a natural extension of my arm. But it is only a bird, large and white, staring at me from where he landed on the next dune over. I laugh quietly and lean down to throw a rock at him, then laugh again when he manages to look offended as he flies away.

We can never be too careful. The Enemy can come by land, by sea, by air. Even tunnel in.

We call him Enemy, not because no one knows his name, but because we’ve been taught that to name someone is to honor them. To see them. We refuse to do both. If he walked into our camp right now everyone would turn their back to show their disdain, even as he cut our heads off.

At least that’s our training, I’ve never known it to actually happen. If it were me, I’d have a hard time not fighting, even though no one who has ever gone head-to-head with him has survived the effort. I’ve heard the stories though.

Horrible, terrifying, chill-inducing stories.

My first memory is about him. It’s a story we’re all told as children, over and over again, until it sinks into our skin.

In the night the story comes to me and plays across my mind as if it happened to me — the terror of running to exhaustion, fighting past reason, bleeding from every conceivable location. The Enemy takes me apart piece by piece, skinning me while there is still breath in my body. Then, right before death, he hangs me and leaves me to be finished off by buzzards. The pecking out of my eyes usually wakes me.

The Enemy is the boogeyman of our childhood, the ghost we’re taught to fear above all others. He sneaks into our camps in the night and steals our children. Two hundred men go into battle and only three return. We are constantly wounded and picked off, forever on the run and never let alone to live our lives as we choose.

He tells lies, he weaves spells over his followers. He makes them call him master and obey his every command. There is no room for dissent in his army. He calls it the Family, but we know better. We call them the Enslaved, and we work to free them. We give each a chance to come back to live free with us, but most of them choose death.

He is evil incarnate. Trying to eat us alive. He’s been trying to enslave us for generations, but we will not yield. We are fighters. Rebels. We live hard but we are free. We lose ground and make it up elsewhere. We lose brothers constantly and pick up others along the way.

It is a weary existence, but we understand the responsibilities we’ve been given and we take them seriously. We are led by the Friend and his council of wise ones. He leads us, surely, steadily.

Our training is hard, but the Friend wants us prepared. He wants us to be strong and to not flinch away from our duty when it comes. We fight and train every day. If we’re not in battle, we battle amongst ourselves. Only the strongest should survive, and each one strives to be the strongest. The weak among us are a liability. When we have to retreat we kill our wounded rather than allow them to fall into his hands because if he finds one of us alive, he does something unholy to them and sends them back to fight against us another day. Better to die by a friend’s hand than fall into his.

I remember the day I became a soldier. Sometimes at night I can see his face, the man I killed to earn my badge. He kneels before me as I grind in the knife. We are taught to prefer close combat so you can see the life leak out of the eyes. Fear is our only weapon. Terror. If they fear us, maybe they will leave us alone. If we make the price dear enough, maybe they will stop coming.

But nobody ever talks about how it never works. All our training. All our dogma. All the sacrifices. The truth is he never stops coming. No matter how high a price we exact, he always sends more of his forces. Into whatever dark hole we are hiding in, whatever hellish canyon into which we’ve escaped.

One time when I was a young soldier he sent zombies after us. I didn’t know what was happening or what to call them, I just knew they weren’t armed as usual and they didn’t fight back. I was so taken by surprise that one was able to grab me in a tight hug and I started to feel the burning.

It frightened me so badly I was able to fight myself free and took his head off.

After that the storytellers told us about other battles against the zombies. They come every so often, and they’re almost the worst type of army. They swarm us with unbelievable numbers and we cut them down with machetes like we’re taking down grass.

It’s happened a few more times since. I hate those battles. I don’t understand the zombies. But most of his attacks are armed. Sometimes they come with terrible weapons and cut huge swaths through our forces. We can be decimated in moments by bombs that take out whole sections of our armies. I was once in an ambush where only Peter and I escaped, and we barely made it out alive.

I hate the Enemy. I hate everything about him. What he stands for. His desire to make me a slave. To take away my freedom. He sends his men on suicide missions and we cut them down. I feel the weight of the lives I’ve taken and the burden is growing.

I feel bad about it, but he gives us no choice. He’s the one sending to their death those we would welcome with open arms if they wanted to come home. They once were with us, but he poisoned their minds.

So we fight each other. We kill. Why can’t he just leave us alone? We live in peace when he’s not attacking. If he would leave us alone long enough, I’m sure we could build some kind of civilization, some kind of life.

The Friend is a harsh leader because he has to be, but at least he’s a fair one. We all respect him. He’s the first through each trial. The first in each training fight. And if he ever weakens, a challenger can arise and fight him to become the new Friend.

We’re told that once we were all part of the Family, but back in ancient memory we broke away. Our ancestor had both the courage and the strength to break the chains that bound him and walk into freedom. He was our first Friend and we revere him. Our history tells us that we have had seasons of great victory and times we have been nearly wiped into extinction.

In my lifetime we’ve been in pitched battles nearly without end. We can never be sure when the Enemy will come, and we must always be aware. The Friend says he is always roaming around our world, seeking ways to devour us. We have to stand firm, have our eyes open, and always keep watch for the wild coming of his family, drunk on the blood of our brothers.

There is no corner of our world that he will not send his army into. No stronghold that is completely safe. There are stories of strongholds that weren’t taken for a thousand years, and then one day they fell from within.

But we have stories too. We have victories. We sit around the fires at night and listen to our histories. We remember what has passed, those who have gone before, the good and the bad. We have Storytellers of such skill that they can make us weep and cut ourselves in our agony and despair, who can describe victories with such clarity that we will stay up all night dancing in delirious ecstasy.

Those were Peter’s favorite stories to tell. He was a good fighter, not one of the best, but solid and strong. But as a Storyteller, though young, he was already unmatched. His stories were the best attended, the most frequently requested at the Council. Until he stopped telling them.


Another sound startles me and I realize I’m jumpier than normal. We’re supposed to be above it, we’re trained to be without emotion other than the hate we cultivate for the Enemy. And yes, I hate everything about him. Hate is the strongest emotion I feel. But there are others, and they’re hard to erase no matter how long and hard I try.

Like fear. I would never admit it to anyone, but I fear the Enemy more than I hate him. I fear him turning me into one of his zombies. I fear I will be weak and not able to take my own life if necessary, if I’m ever wounded. I fear that I value my life more than my freedom and that he could enslave me because of it.

There’s sorrow. I feel it piling up, year after year, death upon death. We are taught not to form bonds, but it is almost impossible when you’re fighting side by side with someone not to care for them when they fall.

There’s despair. We live this life on the run, always trying to get a leg up on him, but never quite winning for long. We win sometimes, we take ground, but eventually we lose it. We always lose it.

And shame. I feel shame squeezing out of my pores most every waking moment. Before he left, Peter was the only one I could admit it to. I hated the offensive raids the most, but even when we were acting in self defense I hated the killing. I felt like these were my brothers, that we should be giving them more opportunities to come back to us. That they could have been me if I’d been born in a different place.

I knew they were deceived, but did that make them bad? Obviously the Enemy was evil, but were they? It is not an unpopular opinion. In fact, some of our Friends have been less war-like, trying to make peace, trying to recruit from the Enemy’s forces rather than killing them. Our current Friend is one of the most brutal we’ve had in awhile. He says they have made their choices and we must respect their decisions.

I don’t agree with him, and neither did Peter. But Peter said what was the point of thinking about it or questioning orders? Neither of us wanted to be the Friend, so we would never be in charge, so we couldn’t do anything about it — so why worry?

He always said we should just do the best we can to follow orders and get the job done so we can come home and enjoy another evening around the fire.

I don’t know how he did it, separating his mind so easily. I cannot separate. When I’m sitting around the fire trying to enjoy the stories, a part of me is always back in the battle, remembering the look in the eyes of the last person I killed. I am ashamed. Both that I killed and that I cannot be single-minded. Either kill without shame, understanding the righteousness of our overall cause, or work hard to become the Friend and change the rules. Sitting in the middle is weakness, and I understand at my core I am weak. Peter never seemed to have any regrets, whereas I am full of regret.

How I acted or should have acted. What I did or didn’t do or should have done. It’s exhausting. Suffocating. Inescapable. And the only thing I have to look forward to is the stillness of death. That might be the thing I crave more than any other. Just to have this be finished. To set down my sword and be at peace.

I can’t talk this way out loud of course, I would be executed for poor morale. Or if I wasn’t that lucky I’d be sent into reeducation. Our first education is bad enough, being reeducated is worse than most kinds of death.

Someone materializes out of the haze of wind and sand in front of me and I raise my sword again, instantly on alert, but quickly recognize my Lieutenant and relax just slightly. He’s probably checking on me. He’s been keeping a close eye. It’s protocol when we have a free will defection. They usually come in clumps, like group suicide, a phenomenon of broken hopes and dreams, of weariness, of saying — if he could give up, why can’t I?

This is the first time I’ve been allowed on watch since Peter defected, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the Lieutenant has been out there somewhere all afternoon watching me. I don’t mind. I don’t feel completely stable.

But as he comes closer I see he’s not just checking on me. He has a look on his face I’ve never seen, one I struggle to describe.


Peter has returned.

He walked into camp a few hours ago. We don’t know how he found us, but the whole camp is on high alert when I follow my Lieutenant back. There are extra guards going out. A squad runs past and I could swear every one of them looks at me as they trot by.

Peter has earned the traitor’s death, of course. There are no excuses. He will be skinned, then pieces of him will be taken off slowly, over time. A good executioner can make it last weeks. He will be cut, bandaged, fed, given water, but every day a new piece.

We call it the flaying, and the only way to stop it is to repent of your treason. That will earn you forgiveness and a quick end.

It is a difficult job, one very few like to do. Those that do like it are considered to be diseased in the head. It has only been done a handful of times in my life and I remember it still in my nightmares.

I stand with the others outside the Council Tent, waiting for their judgment. I can see they are leaving space beside me, but I am not bothered by it. The Friend comes out and nods at me, and for a moment I am filled to the brim with utter loathing. Why does he force us to reserve the worst punishment for one who used to be with us? But of course I will never ask this question out loud, we’re not allowed to criticize our leader unless we’re ready to challenge him.

He begins speaking, but I lose time. When I tune back in he is saying the Council felt I could perform Peter’s flaying with the most love. Showing him we value him as a member of our family. Giving him the best chance to come back to us.

I realize he means slowly, and I lose time again.

There is no allowance for disobedience, not a minute for reflection. The Friend walks toward me and hands me the ceremonial sword, then guides me with one hand on my back. I should be taking notice that he himself is walking me over, but I cannot appreciate the honor he is showing me.

We arrive quicker than I hoped and I say the words mechanically, looking straight into Peter’s eyes but not allowing myself to feel anything. The first cuts are the worst, like I am cutting myself. My hands tremble. I hand the sword back to the Friend and barely maintain an honorable pace before reaching the outside of the camp and throwing up.

Each afternoon it is the same nightmare. The Friend meets me at the square where Peter is still tied. He hands me the sword, freshly sharpened, and I walk forward. I must meet Peter’s eyes when I say the words, asking if he is ready to renounce the enemy and rejoin our family.

Every time we start he looks at me clear-eyed and refuses my offer, no matter what method I try. I weep, I plead, I ask him why he is forcing me to do this to him. But he never changes his mind. He cries out in pain, he groans in agony, but he refuses to repent.

He is so sure of himself. His deception is total. And it infuriates me.

After awhile he starts to cry when he sees me coming, but somehow I know he is crying for me, not himself. He knows how much I hate to inflict pain. I hate it. And he can see what this is doing to me as I lose weight and sleep and begin to shrink in front of him.

But pain is our crucible. It is the way we know we are on the right path, how we are able to see most clearly. Pain is our most useful tool, our greatest gift and strongest weapon. We believe that with enough pain we will be able to finally see through the lies the Enemy spins like a web around us.

It is the basis for the flay, and as the days go by I begin to believe in it completely. It is either that or lose what is left of my mind.

I make it last as long as I can. I think perhaps it is a record, although I don’t want to know if it is. I flay my brother for weeks. Piece by piece. Day by day. But somehow as his body literally comes apart by my hand, I can see that his soul is growing stronger. I see surety in his eyes, the same surety he used to project when I came to him in agony over my questions.

He had been my rock and my fortress through all my years of doubts and fears, and here he is completely and utterly on the other side. But how can he be so sure of himself now, when he was so sure before? What could have happened to have changed him so completely?

I lay awake at night, tormented.

I think it is this fury that sends the last thrust of the sword too deep. Fury at what he is making me feel, that my foundations are shaken to the dust. It ends sooner than it might have if my eyes had seen more clearly.

As he is taken down, the Friend comes up to me and pats me on the back. He says loud enough for all to hear that it’s unfortunate it ended so soon, that Peter might have changed his mind if I could have made it last one more day. I bow my head in shame.

I ask for and receive permission to bury him, and I weep the whole time I am digging. I promise him on my knees beside his grave, I will avenge your death my brother. Even though it is not our way, I will go alone. I will kill the Enemy.


I have to wait more than a month for my Lieutenant to allow me to stand guard duty alone, but I prepare a little every day, so when he finally agrees I am off within minutes of taking my post. I travel the majority of three days and nights, drifting to sleep briefly in the saddle from time to time, trying my best to keep my mind a blank slate.

Finding his camp is the easiest part because the Friend is obsessed with his location. Wherever we run, however far we go trying to hide from him, one squad is always assigned to keep the maps updated.

Once I arrive, I find the guards pitifully unprepared. I make quick work of them, silently slitting their throats with the ceremonial sword which I stole right before I left. I feel none of the usual compassion or conflicting emotions, and certainly none of the shame. For the first time in my life I am single-minded, whole-hearted, like this is what I was meant for. Maybe all of what has come before has led up to this moment, this assignment. Maybe I was even meant to be the One.

And if not, at least I will be released and not have to struggle anymore. At least it will be over. I crave the stillness we are promised after death more than almost anything.

But as I move from tent to tent, deadly, cutting them down left and right, waiting for the alarm that never comes, I begin to think that maybe I will be the One. The One the Storytellers often speak of, the One who will finally bring peace, end the war, free everyone by bringing an end to the Enemy’s reign. After all, the One must come eventually. Why couldn’t it be me?

Maybe I can be the one redeem the suffering of my cousin, my brother, my people. Maybe I can make him pay for what he has done to all of us. Maybe I can make the pain stop.

I lose track of how long it goes on, how many I have sent to their freedom, but each one gives me more strength, more surety that my mission is ordained. When finally I reach his tent in the center of the camp, I see him sitting at his table, looking at his plans and his map. So confident of his dominion, his power, his security.

I burn with hatred. My body hums with power and the righteousness of my cause. I think of my brother and my cousin and the thousands upon thousands who have been lost, and I want him to know what is coming.

I want him to know that he has lost. That he will no longer torment and enslave us. That we will be free. I scream as I rush him, but as he turns and I look into his eyes I hit a wall. He doesn’t appear to move, but I would swear he just hit me full in the chest with a sledgehammer.

For an endless moment I cannot breathe, and then lightning starts racing through my body. It feels a little like being electrocuted, which I know because it is part of our training, but this is much, much worse.

My whole body is on fire and I drop the sword and start flailing my arms around wildly, trying to pat out flames I can’t see but nonetheless feel licking at every part of me.

It is excruciating beyond any training I have ever experienced. His eyes never break focus, nor let mine wander from his. I am going to burn to death, I realize, and start fighting harder, every cell in my body filled with hatred.

He is the demon of my nightmares, the Enemy of my soul, and the look in his eyes is so much like the look in Peter’s at the end that I wish I could burst out of what is left of my skin and annihilate him. But it seems I have lost my chance. My lungs have now caught fire and I stop flailing to grab hold of my chest and try to beat the smoke back out. I fall to my knees, and in that motion finally break eye contact.

It is then that I notice he’s taking a step toward me, and panic like I have never known races through me. Everything I know, everything I am, boils down to one single thought. I have to kill myself before he touches me.

The sword is within my grasp, and as my fingers close around the hilt I begin to weep from the relief. After all my doubt and uncertainty, I finally know in my core that I am not weak. In the end, I will be able to kill myself and need not be ashamed.

I move as quickly as possible and the sword has just pierced my chest when he grabs my hand and stops the motion.

I can’t describe his touch, it is beyond sensation. But I am both blinded and deafened when I come to know what is true for the first time in my life.

The Enemy is me.


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He Delighted In Me.

“He brought me out into a spacious place; he rescued me because he delighted in me.” Psalm 18:19

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Although I’ve lived in spacious places all my life, I have never once been able to comprehend the Lord delighting in me. Loving me, yes. Tolerating me, sure. Choosing me to be in His family and then sticking by the choice because He’s honorable, even when I’m aggravating as crap? Not my problem, He chose me!

I never understood delight until I had the opportunity to watch my daughter learn something. To watch her try and try and try again, failing so many times and occasionally screaming a little in frustration, until one day she got it.

If you could see it, the proud smile she makes when she finally gets something, it would slay you. And there my husband and I are, cheering like fools for something truly insignificant, just like she’s won the Nobel Prize.

Because for her it’s not insignificant, for her it was a massive achievement. She may not know that, but I do! And the day I finally figured out what it was I was feeling, it brought tears to my eyes.

I delight in her.

I delight in the way she stubbornly persists trying to figure things out, in the way she suddenly gives up and flings her hand to her chest and looks me in the eye to say “please fix it for me.” The way she comes to me for comfort when things don’t go as she’d hoped, even though what happened is exactly what I told her would.

I delight in the way she keeps trying new things and is never content to rest on her laurels. I delight in her little frustration move — she claps her hands together once angrily and makes a little shriek. Sometimes there’s a foot stomp involved. I try to look away so she doesn’t see me smile.

I even once found myself delighting in watching her little mind learn manipulation. I could see the gears turning and watched her try to give me something I wanted so I’d give her something she wanted. It didn’t bode well for our future, but in the moment I delighted in how smart and creative she is.

I don’t care that she picks her cheerios out of the spoon instead of using it properly, nor the mess to clean up afterword. She’ll learn that skill eventually. Maybe next week, maybe next month, but what’s the rush? She’s dang cute now just as she is.

I don’t chastise her for dreaming big — even when I know her little hands aren’t strong enough to lift the thing she wants desperately to lift — even when both she and the thing inevitably go crashing to the ground and tears ensue.

I don’t belittle her because she’s not tall enough to get in and out of her tricycle since it still has the safety ring around the seat — even though it means I have to lift her in and out — and also have to unclick the belt every minute or two because she can’t do it yet but still wants to keep practicing clicking herself in since she only recently figured out how to do that.

I don’t expect the impossible, because that would say more about my lack of intellect than her ability — oh come on, you’re almost 16 months already, you should be able to drive yourself to college.

I’m quite certain that other stages of development will not be so cute or delightful, at least from my point of view. For instance, I know for a fact that my mother loves me — always has and always will — but when I was 13 and struggling to learn to express myself and manage hormones and all the other horrible, hard things we have to figure out at that age, I’m pretty sure there was not a tremendous amount of delighting going on.

But I think it might be true that God delights in us even then — even when we’re raging adolescents sneaking out of the house and screaming in rebellion. I think there’s a good chance He might look at us even in that immature state and say, oh, look how good they’re doing! Look how quickly they’re learning! Look how hard they’re struggling trying to figure themselves out. I love them!

This morning my daughter is on the tail-end of being sick for a week. It’s the first time she’s had a fever, a cough, a cold of any kind. I think she’s handled it magnificently. But this morning she seems a little tired of it all. Most of the time she’s been grouchy, grumpy, whiny … and then in a blink she’ll flash her beautiful smile and start laughing at something stupid.

After watching her switch back and forth for a couple hours, I actually thought to myself — can’t you stay with one emotion for more than 30 seconds?

I can imagine the Father looking down on me — me, who in the space of 30 seconds can go from oh, she’s the cutest thing in all of creation to argh! get me out of here I just want five minutes to myself and then back again — and I think He’s thinking are you ever going to learn to be less selfish? But really, He might actually be thinking, oh, look at how much she’s growing! She managed to stay unselfish for a whole 45 seconds that time — that’s a new world record! And maybe He makes a bit of a fool of Himself up there clapping for me!

The main problem with understanding delight might be the simple fact that I think I’m a grown adult and should be capable of so much more, and therefore bash myself internally and get so frustrated that I can’t do something as well as someone else. The problem, as always, boils down to my infernal pride.

But He sees me as the tiny child I actually am — and He delights at my progress. He’s squatting down low with arms open wide as I toddle toward Him, trying to keep my balance while frequently distracted, stumbling often and occasionally falling on my head.

His face is shining with pride and enthusiasm, cheering for me and urging me on to where He’s wanted me all along, safe in His arms.


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Do You Need A Gift Receipt With That?

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It’s the morning after Christmas and my daughter is teething. Nothing satisfies for long and her constant whining externalizes what I’m feeling on the inside. 

I, too, want a lot of things I can’t have today, and I kind of feel like stomping my feet a couple times and whining would make me feel better. 

Looking around at the crumpled wrapping paper and the heaping pile of pots and pans, crusted over with remnants of yesterday’s feasting, I feel like my body is moaning along with my daughter — what now?

It occurred to me this morning that there was a “morning after” Jesus’ original birth as well, not just for our celebration and remembrance of it all these years later. 

Creation had waited and waited and waited, and then He was born! And stars shone and angels sang and shepherds were sore afraid before they started celebrating. Mary and Joseph were at the center of this most divine supernova in history. 

And then what?

I just reread the beginning of all the Gospels, and there’s not a word written about the morning after. In fact, besides a story about Jesus’ consecration with Simeon and Anna, and the time He stayed behind after Passover, there’s nothing written about His next 30-some years. 

Thirty years before Jesus began the stuff that was “important” enough to be recorded!

What do you think Mary and Joseph did the morning after He was born? After being so close to the cataclysmic event of history — in my mind only superseded by one other cataclysmic event 33 or so years later — did they get up and start making breakfast and immediately getting on with it? Or did they wait around, hoping for visitors more important than shepherds, wishing somebody would bring some expensive gifts? And if so, how long did they wait? 

Were they at all disappointed that the trumpets didn’t keep playing or that baby Jesus didn’t start issuing orders about His new kingdom when He was one week old? Or did they just get right to work with no regrets?

There are so many things in life where we wait long and expect hard and dream big … and then the day comes and sometimes everything goes right and it really does turn out just as magical as we’d hoped for … and then we wake up the next day and life goes on. 

The problem with those big, wonderful events is that there is almost always a morning after when we find ourselves asking the now what?

The party always ends. And what do you mean I have to take down the tree which is always anti-climactic, if not downright depressing? What do you mean I have to go back to oatmeal for breakfast instead of bacon and French breakfast puffs? And laundry and work and homework and what to fix for dinner?

We want the feast that doesn’t end. We crave the celebration that goes on and on. We long for the unceasing joy. Because under it all, we were made for the Son. Our cells cry out with the need to be finished with the sins and the sufferings and the boredom and all this waiting to see His glory and His kingdom come. 

And the beautiful thing is, unlike so many other things we want, there’s no shame in these desires because it’s not anything like our wanting of more pie or more sleep or more time with distant loved ones.

This longing we feel is one that will be fulfilled one day. Utterly and completely. And these morning after blues turn out to be one of His great gifts to us — a reminder in the midst of the blahs and the discarded boxes that He made us for Himself. To be in pure, unsullied relationship with Him. To see Him face to face and ponder Him anew.

And nothing less will satisfy us in our deepest places.

Maybe it’s not a gift we put on our list, but it’s a gift we often need the morning after.

So what now? 

I guess we get up and get dressed. Maybe we make the bed and throw in a load of laundry while our morning cup of goodness is brewing. Maybe write a note to that friend we keep thinking about. Take a deep breath, and get back to work loving each other deeply and trying to cover each others’ multitude of sins. 

Go back to waiting for that day of all days — because He will be coming again, of that we can be sure. But it will be as it always has been, in His time. 


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Why Am I So Highly Favored?

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Have you ever wondered what Mary was thinking when she said, “why am I so highly favored?”

For some reason, this past month I’ve been pondering her response to the angelic news that she was to be the mother of the Messiah, and this is what I’ve come up with — perhaps Mary understood what a black-hearted sinner she was at a much greater level than we are even capable of today.

She was still a part of a sacrificial system, after all, where the sins she committed had to be paid for every year. A quantifiable cost had to be handed over for every sinful choice she made. Blood was spilt, and a new provider of that blood had to be purchased and killed, over and over again.

When your sin had to be paid for in such a visible, costly way, year after year, while you stood in front of the community steeped in the shame of it — I wonder if it provided an opportunity for a little more insight into the weighty burden of sin.

Mary was part of a community that groaned, looking ahead with yearning hearts toward the promised Messiah who was to come and free them from the whole bloody system.

Which leads me to believe it was wonder she must have felt, knowing what she knew about herself — and still — realizing she was being chosen to be the mother of the Lord.

How can this be? Why me?

………

I was 39 when I got married, and for most of those 39 years I’d been so petrified of vulnerability and loss that I’d constructed gargantuan walls to protect myself. Thank God my husband had the patience and kindness to invest the necessary time in knocking them down, but that’s another story.

In those first months of marriage, frequently a little jolt would shoot through my body and my eyes would tear up — how did this happen? What did I ever do to deserve this man? In fact, why am I so highly favored could have easily come from my lips.

It was wonder — knowing very well that I didn’t in any way deserve the gift I’d been given — and hand-in-hand with the wonder came gratitude.

But as time went by those wonder jolts came less and less frequently, until about a year into marriage I’d become accustomed. Six or so years later, I only have those jolts every once in a while, when I look at my husband and my eyes fill with tears. When I wish there was a way to demonstrate the depth of my gratitude for the gift of him.

In our daughter’s first months it was even odds that if she was quiet and I had a minute to just stare at her, I would start crying, unable to understand the miracle. Where did you come from little girl? How could this have happened to me?

But I was also curious if the same pattern would play out, and sure enough, she’s just over a year old and the wonder jolts are fading. And therefore the moments of spontaneous gratitude have lessened as well.

It turns out my capacity for wonder lasts about a year.

………

We’ve all experienced the devastation of the why me question. Almost always, it’s screamed out in a moment of unspeakable loss, when we find ourselves blindsided by the world we’re being forced to live in. But I think the reverse question — why me, in the positive sense — is just as provocative and a lot more truthful.

Why this man? Why this baby girl? Why these never-failing parents? And family and friends in such precious, worthy numbers? Why have I been so showered in such incalculable joys? And for heaven’s sake, why me?

That line of thought often brings me to the most shocking of all, why did my Lord choose me?

Because regarding this one question it seems my capacity for wonder is endless. Each time I truly stop, take enough time to calm down and quiet my mind — I am flabbergasted. Destroyed. Jolted apart at the seams by earthquakes of wonder.

I know who I am. I am black-hearted and desperately wicked. Almost every inclination of my heart is evil, almost all the time — which is especially aggravating given that I’ve been at this a few years and should have moved an inch or so toward the goalpost…at least!

Why me? Why am I so highly favored, that my Lord should choose me to be in His family?

I don’t know. I don’t understand it at all. But the wonder of it electrifies my heart with gratitude and praise, and I am undone.

And I hope you are, too, today. I hope you can take a beat — just one — in this crazy, busy season of shopping and wrapping and cooking and cleaning and planning … to ponder on the greatness of Him and His ridiculously crummy taste in family.

Take a brief, choking look at your own heart — and then look long upon Him and wonder anew.

Why are we so highly favored?
Because He said so, and that is enough.


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