Ready to fly

It’s our fourth time and it isn’t getting any easier. As we take our college-bound daughter up the elevator in the empty dorm, we fight back a heavy case of déjà vu.
And, honestly, a few
tears.
She’s ready to go. This
college and major have been her dream, her goal, since she got her first tour of
the meteorology building at age eleven.
Though she has butterflies, she’s eager to start life on her own.
For my wife and me,
this day wraps up thirty-three years of active parenting. It’s the end of an era. Three other times we’ve loaded up a car with
all the necessaries for dorm life and made the trip, unpacking and setting up
the room to make it homey – despite the stark, prison-like ambience of the
halls.
We help her feel at
home, knowing that our home would never be the same.
It’s hard.
Two images in back-to-back psalms bring me
comfort. Psalm 127:4 says:
Like arrows in the hand of a warrior
are
the children of one's youth.
Arrows do one thing
well – they take the battle far beyond the reach of a swordsman. Like arrows, we launch our children into the
fray, knowing their reach will be far beyond our circles of influence, long
past our lifespans. Over the years, I
have often thought of how hard the spiritual battle will be for my kids as our
society becomes increasingly post-Christian.
If that analogy feels
too warlike, then Psalm 128:3 paints a more idyllic picture:
Your wife will be like a fruitful vine
within
your house;
your
children will be like olive shoots
around
your table.
Here, the image is one of blessing. A vine
supplies wine, olive shoots give oil.
Oil and wine, in the Bible are symbols of gladness, strengthening the
heart (Ps. 104:15) and indicating God-sent prosperity (Joel 2:24). Our kids start at our table, but then grow to
reach the world with goodness.
As I watch her
converse with fellow students over lunch, I know my daughter takes with her the
values and convictions of our family.
Arrows can’t fly until
we let them go.
Vines don’t bless
until we let them grow.
Lord, what a privilege it is to
invest in another person’s life. Thank
you for the children you have blessed us with.
Use them to challenge and bless the world far beyond our reach, bringing
another generation into the light of your love.
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