Reimagined
.
by Amy Hughes
This is a story
about heaven and how I am learning to hope for
it in a more specific and personal way. It
started as an anti-anxiety exercise for me
several months ago. With the overactive
imagination that I have, I could picture a
dozen ways of losing my loved ones or dying,
and each worst-case scenario stopped me cold
with fear. Even though they were unlikely,
they gripped my heart all the same. While most
of us fear losing loved ones, I can trace
these heightened fears back to the difficult
birth of my fourth child and a period of
postpartum anxiety afterwards. For months
after he was born I couldn’t help but picture
horrible things happening to him. I felt
compelled to check on him constantly to make
sure he was ok. I yelled at my other children
if they came anywhere close to stepping on
him, or accidentally hurting him. Even as I
left the postpartum phase and the intensity of
that anxiety behind, I found myself more
easily drawn into specific worries. Would my
kids’ school be safe from active shooters?
Would my husband return safely from his
business trip? Would sickness strike my family
and friends?
My imagination felt like my enemy, always
assuming the worst, robbing me of sleep and
peace. But a part of me wondered if I could
use this same imagination to visualize
something I knew to be true, even if I didn’t
know what it would look like. I believe in the
resurrection and the life to come. And I
believe that Jesus loves me and my loved ones
more than I can understand. As Jacques
Phillipe says in his book Searching for
and Maintaining Peace: “One thing is
certain: God loves our dear ones infinitely
more than we do, and infinitely better. He
wants us to believe in this love, and also to
know how to entrust those who are dear to us
into his hands.” And while I know this in
theory, it occurred to me that it matters what
scenes play out behind my eyelids. The more I
visualize something in my mind, the more
powerful I allow that idea to become. I needed
my hope to be more specific than my fears,
because I knew, ultimately, the specific would
win the fight for my attention, each detail a
foothold for my focus.
I
needed my hope to be more specific than my
fears, because I knew, ultimately, the
specific would win the fight for my
attention.
Maybe for me, one antidote to my very specific
anxieties about death and loss would be to use
my spiritual imagination to picture how much
Jesus loves those who love him. To picture
what he is preparing for us when we shake off
the shadows of this life and step into
eternity. How could my fears not melt in light
of such love?
So I began to write, imagining the details of
heaven. I spent part of my prayer times asking
the Lord to renew my mind and remind me of his
love. I thought back to times in my life when
I felt his presence most strongly and tried to
remember what struck me in those moments. When
and how have I felt most connected to
Jesus and specifically loved by him? I also
thought about some of my big questions: what
would it be like to reunite with my husband if
there’s no marriage in heaven? What age are we
in our resurrected bodies? How can we possibly
celebrate and worship for all eternity? And I
always came back to scripture, trying to let
my meditation be fueled by the Bible.
Is there danger in such an exercise? Maybe if
I take myself too seriously and claim things
I’ve imagined as fact, or stray from
contemplating the gaze of Jesus, or the truth
of his word. There is the danger of looking
foolish, for I will most certainly be wrong on
every detail. Scripture says “No eye has seen,
no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined
what God has prepared for those who love him.”
(1 Cor 2:9) So I know it is impossible to
imagine, with my human mind, the glory of what
God has prepared. But doesn’t it also say: “if
anything is excellent or praiseworthy - think
about such things”? (Philippians 4:8) And when
we think about those things, over and over
again, meditating on them, they have a way of
capturing our hearts and minds. And
contemplating spiritual mysteries can help us
grow in faith, as we learn how to be “sure of
what we hope for, and confident of what we do
not see” (Hebrews 11:1).
C.S. Lewis argues in The Weight of Glory
that the more insidious danger would be not to
imagine too much, but too little. He
says “It would seem that Our Lord finds our
desires not too strong, but too weak. We are
half-hearted creatures, fooling about with
drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy
is offered us, like an ignorant child who
wants to go on making mud pies in a slum
because he cannot imagine what is meant by the
offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too
easily pleased.” So these are the scribbles of
a child in a slum trying to imagine that
holiday at the sea. I will laughably use the
wrong colors and shapes, having never seen the
ocean, using only what I know to imagine what
I do not yet know. But this I am learning: it
is changing my heart to long for heaven in a
specific way, and dream about it not as some
far-off country, but as if I have an upcoming
trip with a real ticket and a packed suitcase.
The more I dream about the details of it, the
larger it looms in my life, and it washes
everything with that diffused light of real
hope. The hope is real, and that is what
matters. I find myself daydreaming about
seeing Jesus face to face even as I wash
dishes or fold laundry. What will it be
like to have no more sin or pain or sadness?
What will it feel like to walk the streets
of that city where God dwells with his
people forever?
In light of our current climate of fear and
panic as the Coronavirus pandemic unfolds, I
find myself in need of this hope more than
ever. Coming back to these meditations about
heaven has been a powerful way to recenter and
remember where my hope is anchored, and what
my marching orders are. Fear does not free me
to love well, and as a Christian, my marching
orders are to love well, in all situations. In
a very real way, my spiritual imagination is a
powerful weapon against anxiety and despair.
In one of his other books, Interior
Freedom, Jacques Phillipe writes: “The
essence of Christian spiritual combat is, with
the strength of faith, to maintain a hopeful
outlook on every situation, on ourselves, on
other people, on the church, and the world.
Such an outlook enables us to react to every
situation by loving”. Fighting to keep my
attention on the good promises of God, in
little concrete ways, is actually a practical
way I can equip myself to react to any and all
frightening situations in love.
Fear
does not free me to love well, and as a
Christian, my marching orders are to love
well, in all situations. In a very real
way, my spiritual imagination is a
powerful weapon against anxiety and
despair.
I want my kids to see a Mom who “has no fear
for her household, and can laugh at the days
to come” (Proverbs 31:21,25). Their little
hearts perceive the difference between panic
and peace, even under the surface. I want them
to see a mom whose heart is captured by the
idea of spending eternity with Jesus. A mom
who can’t help but talk about it all the time,
so that it grows so large in their minds it
drowns out the panicked pulse of the world
around them. I want to be part of a church
whose imagination is so captured by the life
to come that they act noticeably different
than those without such a hope.
A former pastor at our church used to talk
about heaven in such a way that encouraged us
to dream. He would say “Heaven will be like
the best thing you can imagine… and if not
that, then something better”. If not that,
then something better… His challenge
encourages me to imagine, because it reminds
me there is little danger of disappointment.
There is almost everything to gain, and
nothing to lose in such an exercise. There is
every chance that by focusing on the life to
come that I will be freed to live this life
more peacefully and charitably. There is no
chance I will ruin the surprise, overestimate
God’s goodness or get there one day and think
“It’s nothing like I imagined” in a
disappointed way. Rather, I expect in faith to
think, in the words of St.Thérèse of
Lisieux: “Oh my God, you have surpassed
all my expectations.”
“Then
I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for
the first heaven and the first earth had
passed away, and there was no longer any
sea. I saw the Holy City, the new
Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from
God, prepared as a bride beautifully
dressed for her husband. And I heard a
loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Look!
God’s dwelling place is now among the
people, and he will dwell with them. They
will be his people, and God himself will
be with them and be their God. He will
wipe every tear from their eyes. There
will be no more death or mourning or
crying or pain, for the old order of
things has passed away.’ He who was seated
on the throne said, ‘I am making
everything new!’”(Revelation 21:1-5)
**I recognize that clinical anxiety is a
medical condition requiring medical
assessment. I am not seeking to downplay
mental health issues, or to suggest positive
thinking as a cure-all. I only aim to look
at the spiritual element involved in my own
experience as one way to approach a complex
issue.
This article
(c) by Amy Hughes was first published in The
Lois Project
Amy started The
Lois Project as a way to combine her
love of writing with her desire to
strengthen connections between Christian
moms. Amy and her husband John live with
their 4 children in Michigan, and are part
of the Word of Life Community in Ann Arbor.
The
Lois Project is a group of Christian
women from various cities, countries, and
church backgrounds who feel a common call to
be disciples on mission in all seasons of
life. Most of us find ourselves in a season of
care-giving as mothers, grandmothers, mentors,
or teachers.
Many of our writers are part of an
international, ecumenical Christian community
called The Sword of the Spirit.
Although we come from Catholic, Orthodox, or
Protestant traditions we seek to foster unity
among these groups and work together.
www.loisproject.com
Instagram: @theloisproject
facebook.com/theloisproject
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