Easter has passed and I’m still waiting for resurrection.
Hoping for, begging for, watching for signs of life. Straining my eyes for beauty in the ashes, listening intently for a whisper in the rubble.
There are many who say it’s best to wait until you’re on the other side before you write the story, before you say the words, before you tell what happened. Perspective and all. There’s wisdom in that, but if I’m honest, when I’m in a middle place I don’t only need to hear from those a chapter or two ahead… I need to know I’m not alone on this page.
Today, I’m in the middle.
Today, I’m waiting for deep heartache to become a doorway of hope.
Today, I’m living in Holy Saturday, that great in-between day of confusion and questions, loss and sorrow.
It’s easy, even tempting, to skip over Saturday when we think of Easter. It’s more comfortable to move on to bright colors and hands raised, to worship songs and “He is risen” declarations. Despite writing an entire book for those in the messy middle, for those who need hope for tomorrow when today feels like a question mark, I’ll be the first to admit that if given the choice, I’d much prefer to hurry through to redemption and restoration.
I know what God can do, am fully confident of His power, and rest securely in His promises, and yet here I am — and perhaps, here you are too — holding both the grief of Good Friday and the joy of Easter morning.
Here, in Saturday.
Here, in the in-between.
Here, in the first part of Psalm 126:5.
“Those who sow in tears,” the Psalmist begins.
“What color is waiting?” one character asked another in a novel I read during Lent. “What color is sadness? Loneliness? Rejection? Shock?”
The main character, an artist, finds herself navigating unexpected loss and grief that turns her world upside down. I slowly flip the pages, pausing to consider, imagining a canvas covered in shades of gray as tears threaten to drip onto the page in my hands. A few days later, I stood in the paint aisle of my local craft store. In the days leading up to Easter, I added layer upon layer to my canvas, thick strokes mixing together.
Then I went to the plant store. My hands, speckled with paint, planted seeds deep in the dirt. Seeds that look remarkably like tears.
It will be a while before the flowers begin to bloom. Time takes time, and today the color of waiting isn’t too far off from the Burnt Umber on the canvas and the dirt beneath my fingernails. Today, the middle is quite literally messy and muddy. But there’s a miracle hidden in the word itself, in naming something the middle, in the very place where we think, “Yes, this feels like one long Saturday.”
If we’re in the middle, then it can’t possibly be “The End.”
We remember this at Easter as we adorn the cross and sing “In Christ Alone”, but it’s just as true every other day. The story was never, ever going to end on Saturday. After all, there’s more to Psalm 126.
“Those who sow with tears will reap with songs of joy. Those who go out weeping, carrying seed to sow, will return with songs of joy, carrying sheaves with them.”
Psalm 126:5-6
The Message translation says it this way: “And now, God, do it again — bring rains to our drought-stricken lives so those who planted their crops in despair will shout ‘Yes!’ at the harvest, so those who went off with heavy hearts will come home laughing, with armloads of blessing.”
“What color is belief?” I asked myself this morning. What color is hope and trust, faithfulness and rejoicing? What color is the promise of resurrection? Gold, I decided. Starlight Gold, to be exact, swirling among the thick strokes of Cloudy Day, Midnight, and Smokescreen.
Light in the dark. Peace in the storm. A compass in the night. A tear-shaped seed cracking, breaking, bursting open so that new life can emerge. Ours is a story where resurrection is already and always on the way.
I don’t see it yet, at least not in this particular middle place. I’m still watching, still waiting, still begging, and believing that the page will turn. What I know, though, is that Sunday is always coming.
Today, I remind myself: We have a God who turned the very worst of all days into a day known around the world as “Good.”
Today, I remember: We have a God who doesn’t rush us through the middle of Saturday but instead joins us in the dirt, weeps with us in loss, and walks with us through heartbreak and confusion.
Today, I rejoice because: We have a God who came near in order to break open, who became a seed that was buried so that we might come home laughing, arms filled to overflowing with goodness.
Easter has passed and I’m still waiting for resurrection.
But if we’re in the middle, then it can’t possibly be “The End.”
If you’re currently walking through a middle place, desperate to see God’s goodness in the chapters you wouldn’t have necessarily chosen, Even If Not: Living, Loving, and Learning in the in Between is for you. You have not been forgotten or overlooked. There is beauty, even here, and you are not alone.
Mary Laflamme says
I will be sending this amazing article along to a dear friend who lost her daughter recently who was a young Mom of 6 kids, now all struggling with grief together. I, myself having lost a son, can only understand in part what she is going through. This article will encourage her along the way. Please put her in any prayer list you can. My friend is now, after raising 10 children, tasked with raising 6 grandchildren. BUT GOD!
Ruth Mills says
BUT GOD, indeed! Praying God will be tangible in the tension between trusting He is good & the devastating grief of the death of your friend’s daughter. May she know you & others (even heavenly siblings she’s never met) stand in the gap in prayer for her in this hard hard ‘middle’.
Kathy Francescon says
Oh Mary, my heart breaks for those six children who have lost their mom and their grandmother, who has lost her daughter. I cannot imagine all this family is going thru. I will be praying for all of them, that God will comfort them and bless them and heal their pain and grief. So very sad for all of them. And you said the only hope for any of us…But God. He knows, He cares, and He hears our prayers. I will keep everyone in my prayers and thoughts.
Beth Williams says
Mary,
Abba Father, Please comfort the grandmother who lost her child, the husband & children who lost their wife & mom. Send your comfort & peace to their hurting souls. Send encouragement to them also. Walk with them through this tough time. In Jesus Name AMEN!
Blessings 🙂
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
Oh my, praying for your friend and her family now… thank you for sharing, Mary!
Dawn Ferguson-Little says
Katylin thank you for this wonderful message. It speaks to me of Abraham who had to wait to get to the land he was promised. Plus God promised he be the Father of many he had to wait for that too. But in everything Abraham still trusted God would keep his promises. Look God put Abraham to the test to see would here really sacrifice his only son Isaac. Abraham was going too. If he had to Abraham would have. But God sent an Angel told him not to harm the boy. In the bushes God provided a ram for Abraham to use as a sacrifice instead of him son Isaac. So God provided and did not let Abraham have to sacrifice him son. But sometimes God put us to the test to see how strong our faith is in him. When we are waiting on a merical that we want God to answer for us. That we have prayed and prayed about. Should it be for ourselves or someone else like an serious illness or job we need to pay the bills. No matter what it is. God could put us to test before answering us and giving us the merical we want and need for ourselves or someone else. To see how strong our faith is him and to see how much we truly trust God will do it in his perfect timing. Like Abraham had to wait. Love today reading. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little xx
mp says
Such a beautifully written post. I’m definitely still “in the middle” with heartbreak of estranged relationship with son but thank you so much for the reminder that it’s not “the end” and the reassurance that God is weeping along with me.
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
That’s such a painful road to walk… I’m praying for you today, MP.
Christine Beck says
I so needed this today. I feel like I have been in the middle, stuck on Saturday for 4 years now. My marriage is in such a broken state. My husband is lost in such darkness and desperately needs salvation. I grasp to hope and put him in the hands of Jesus praying for a miracle. Thank you for such encouraging words and the truth of knowing that I am not alone in my struggles. Be blessed this day!
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
Hugs and prayers for you today, Christine. <3
Ruth Mills says
“If we’re in the middle it can’t possibly be the end” How fabulously encouraging! Thank you for these wonderful words! Blessings
Susen says
Yes! God joins us, and I think it’s important that we invite God into our circumstances because even though God may not change the circumstance, He can make it easier to navigate because He is with us
amada_chavez@yahoo.com says
Yes oh yes! Please would you keep my Mama (Linda) and me AmaTHa in your prayers! Middles can be so hard!
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
Absolutely. We are praying for them!
Stephanie says
Thank You so much for sharing Kaitlyn. The middle is so hard at times. I am also in the middle, waiting, hoping. I needed Your reminder today, sister. You are not alone! Sending you a big hug and praying for you. Please pray for me ❤️
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
A hug and prayers right back atcha. Thank you for reading and sharing!
Bonnie Kruse says
Such encouragement of hope. Hope deferred makes a heart sick, but though faith we can hold on to hope. Faith IS THE VICTORY that overcomes everything.
Blessings. I too am in the middle and trusting to deliver and heal my prodical.
Thank you!
Bonnie Kruse says
Such encouragement of hope. Hope deferred makes a heart sick, but though faith we can hold on to hope. Faith IS THE VICTORY that overcomes everything.
Blessings. I too am in the middle and trusting God to deliver and heal my prodical.
Thank you!
Mary Geisen says
Thank you for these words of hope and light in the middle of the waiting. Saturday is an important day in my own journey of waiting. The good news is as you say, “If we’re in the middle, then it can’t possibly be the end.”
Amen.
Kaitlyn Bouchillon says
Yes. Grateful, with you, that God is with us in the Saturdays of life too.
Angela says
I love this message! I, too, am in the middle of waiting. I am clinging to the idea that THIS couldn’t possibly be “The End” of my story. At church yesterday the pastor put it another way, “Celebrate the good on the way to very good.”
Beth Williams says
Kaitlyn,
I’m in the middle. Waiting on God to find a better job for me. One that uses my skills & talents. Steven Furtick, TV pastor, put it this way. We go from Friday to Sunday without thinking about Saturday. We must remember that on Good Friday Jesus hung on the cross. Saturday He was in Hell but then the very best happened & He arose on Sunday. Everyone remember Easter Sunday is coming! Let’s celebrate the good we have while waiting on God’s best!
Blessings 🙂
Dena says
I, so needed this today. Thank you.