Monday, January 20, 2020

For years, I had endured the kind of suffering only reserved for the grandest of fools, those who believe they were fighting for something true. And I fought hard to hold on, even as the water kept rising, and I kept suffocating—because it was true, or I believed it was. Now I know I had been an idiot, a blind one, an earnestly blind idiot.
And so I died. God, how I died. How it hurt. How I drowned every day for weeks on end in my shame, my guilt, in the unbearable agony of knowing I had caused someone unimaginable, undeserved pain. This is my greatest regret, and the scar it has left in my heart I will carry forever to remind me how I was weak and stubborn—but also as a reminder of how I was forgiven. I can no longer hope for the forgiveness of man, but Christ has looked at me with mercy and offered me another chance.
It is unfathomable that I could live again after all that ugliness, yet here I am. I can only return his mercy, the grace that scum like me don’t deserve, by living every day with gratitude. And so I am. My heart is bursting with thanks that he has calmed the storm and invited me to walk with him gain. I had carried my cross to my "death," and I have learned the lesson that this tragedy wishes to teach me.


You come to me, running with tears in your eyes and your arms longing to embrace me my hands, shaking drenched in blood, touch you for the f...