Match Made In Heaven
(From Karine)
Consumed by my loss, I didn't notice the hardness of the pew where I sat. I was
at the funeral of my dearest friend - my mother. She finally had lost her long
battle with cancer. The hurt was so intense, I found it hard to breathe at
times. Always supportive, Mother clapped loudest at my school plays, held a box
of tissues while listening to my first heartbreak, comforted me at my father's
death, encouraged me in college, and prayed for me my entire life. When Mother's
illness was diagnosed, my sister had a new baby and my brother had recently
married his childhood sweetheart, so it fell on me, the 27-year-old middle child
without entanglements, to take care of her. I counted it an honor. "What now,
Lord?" I asked sitting in church. My life stretched out before me as an empty
abyss. My brother sat stoically with his face toward the
cross while clutching his wife's hand. My sister sat
slumped against her husband's shoulder, his arms around her as she cradled their
child. All so deeply grieving, no one noticed I sat alone. My place had been
with our mother, preparing her meals, helping her walk, taking her to the
doctor, seeing to her medication, reading the Bible together. Now she was with
the Lord. My work was finished, and I was alone.
I heard a door open and slam shut at the back of the church. Quick footsteps
hurried along the carpeted floor. An exasperated young man looked
around briefly and then sat next to me. He folded his
hands and placed them on his lap. His eyes were brimming with tears. He began to
sniffle.
"I'm late," he explained, though no explanation was necessary. After several
eulogies, he leaned over and commented, "Why do they keep calling Mary by
the name of 'Margaret'? "0h, because that was her name, Margaret. Never Mary. No
one called
her 'Mary,'" I whispered. I wondered why this person
couldn't have sat on the other side of the church. He interrupted my grieving
with his tears and fidgeting. Who was this stranger anyway?
"No, that isn't correct," he insisted, as several people glanced over at us
whispering, "Her name is Mary, Mary Peters." "That isn't who this is." "Isn't
this the Lutheran church?" "No, the Lutheran church is across the street." "Oh."
"I believe you're at the wrong funeral, Sir." The solemnness of the occasion
mixed with the realization of the man's mistake bubbled up inside me and came
out as laughter. I cupped
my hands over my face, hoping it would be interpreted as sobs.
The creaking pew gave me away. Sharp looks from other mourners only made the
situation
seem more hilarious. I peeked at the bewildered, misguided man seated beside me.
He
was laughing, too, as he glanced around, deciding it was too late for an
uneventful exit. I imagined Mother laughing. At the final "Amen," we darted
out a door and into the parking lot. "I do
believe we'll be the talk of the town," he smiled. He said his name was Rick and
since he had missed his aunt's funeral, asked me out for a cup of
coffee. That afternoon began a lifelong journey for me with this man who
attended the wrong funeral, but was in the right place. A year after our
meeting, we were married at a country church where he was the assistant pastor.
This time we both arrived at the same church, right on time. In my time of
sorrow, God gave me laughter. In place of loneliness, God
gave me love. This past June we celebrated our twenty-second wedding
anniversary. Whenever anyone asks us how we met, Rick tells them, "Her mother
and my Aunt Mary introduced us,
and it's truly a match made in heaven!"