Grab a cup of cinnamon tea and sit with me.
It's been a wild week, literally to the Bahamas and back again, full of so many little sweet gifts and so many hard things.
After church Sunday the kids and I drove as long and as efficiently as we could to Ocala, and then woke up early the next morning to book it to Ft. Lauderdale. We unloaded the party bus and quickly overheard the parking attendants speaking Haitian Creole. Lily had friends in ten words, and we finally broke away from that little family to fall into the arms of sweet cousin-family...just in time to board Royal Caribbean and set out on our first ever cruise.
All the work of travel, all the work of making up a week of school, all the work to earn the money even for the cheapest week of cruising of the year...it would be worth it for precious family time and a Bahamian vacation!
We woke up the first day at Coco Cay, known for "the perfect day."
And it was. It was beautiful, the cousins all had the most precious time together swimming and playing beach games. The food was bottomless and "free" and the water was surreal.
Not long after we re-boarded, I was seasick...I thought. Emma was wobbly and emotional. And as Ben, Nora, Emma and I packed into our tiny, dark cabin, I started to be violently ill. Between trips to the bathroom, Emma started throwing up, and by morning...it was ugly, violent food poisioning. We were exhausted. Every towel and sheet was rancid. I sent Ben and Nora to breakfast with Aunt Lisa, and when I bent to clean Emma again, my throbbing head spun and I blacked out. Emma was bawling and filthy and I was on the well-worn carpet, unable to help her, unable to lift my head, unable to push. I'm not sure I've ever been that sick.
That was the high and the low...and the following days were sweet precious memories of watching the eight cousins play on the pool deck from a chair in the shade with Emma...of cheering for Ben as he played basketball, shakily cheering for the cousins as they scaled the rockwall, of taking another excursion our last day and I finally felt good enough to get down in the sand with Mayah and to catch up with Uncle Adam on the boat. And that night Lisa started throwing up, and the next morning we piled back into our van with loads of terrible laundry and cried through goodbyes....and as we drove Lily started to throw up...and Emma, to this moment, still hasn't bounced back.
As I drove the 13 hours all in one swoop, passing bags to sick kids, watching Emma grow weaker and more lethargic still, and hearing stories of the big bellyflop contest...I thought of manna.
The Israelites thought because they were no longer in slavery, the dessert would be paradise...and turns out, the paradise was hard, too. I get thinking that vacation, Bahamas, Coco Cay the Perfect Day should be blissful and perfect and I've deserved it and relaxing and turns out in the sweet, there is still hard. Till heaven, it's still broke. Unlike Him, the BEST places and the best experiences still don't satisfy.
But when I needed help, recovering and driving sick kids 13 hours, He provided exactly what I needed for that specific situation, just like manna. They were hungry, and His hand was not short. God cared more about their hearts and about mine, too, but also...He saw and met their everyday, tangible needs. Simple, sweet manna.
They had nothing to do with its production. They simply had to gather it up. Exactly what they needed, exactly how much they needed, and His provision even accounted for Sabbath rest!
God provided. For real. He met them. There was no lack. His hand was not short. There was no waste.
And then He replaced the bread from heaven with the bread of life from heaven, and though I've had nothing to do with its production, I have and keep receiving the free gifts of His salvation and grace and love and joy and peace.
When I needed His help and protection on the impossible, 800+ mile road, He truly helped and protected me and us. When I needed help in that dark cabin, He sent Lily in a sunshine yellow t-shirt, who patiently cleaned and carried and found us a quiet chair in the shade with fresh breeze and brought us water and tea, and when I had four kids and couldn't be mom, my most precious sister swooped in and loved them and adventured them well.
When we got back to our van, now 3 adults and 9 kids, our new Haitian friends had a giant platter of Haitian food they had made us for our return.
Haitian women who had never met us, who work for minimum wage in a parking garage, while WE were on a CRUISE, kept track of the days and hours, bought meat and vegetables and plantain of their own money, cooked it, and when we struggled around the corner, they provided our family's sweetest comfort food.
Manna.
As I drove that late night, trying to make sense of all the hard in our lives and the lives of those we love, especially in the pockets that were supposed to be perfect and pampered and restful, He asked me if I saw His manna, "given that he might humble you and test you and do you good in the end" (Deut. 8:16) as His sweet provision, or if I would "complain in the hearing of the Lord about their troubles" (Numbers 11) like Israel. If my children would hear me complain about the meat of Egypt or point out His provision and tender loving care.
And so, as much heavier things surround me and I battle on my knees for many...I am hungry for SO MUCH. Until we are living in that true, perfect day...I am hungry. And when I am hungry and tired and out of options...praise...the Lord takes care of us.
Lord, give us today sweet manna in the places we are waiting on You for things that have yet to resolve.
Amen!