Priceless Treasures by Cindy K. Stiverson
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Pearl Mother's Day blog series - a week long celebration of moms and
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Happy Mother's Day!
Priceless Treasure by
Cindy K. Stiverson
We've heard it said and often find it
true:
You don't know the value of a
treasure until you're without it.
We take for granted the things in life
that seem so readily available.
A paperclip or
rubber band, to hold things together.
A tissue or
napkin, to wipe our nose to clean our face, to absorb our tears.
A Bible to speak
words of wisdom and instruction and life and love.
And a Mother, who is all these things
and more.
She is readily
available.
She holds things
together.
She wipes our
nose, cleans our face (and our fingers, and, well…everything
else!)
She absorbs our
tears and calms our fears.
"She speaks with
wisdom, and faithful instruction is on her tongue." (Proverbs
31:26)
She loves.
Within hours after my mother passed
into the gates of our heavenly home, I was missing her. Her quick
wit…humor…charm. Her warm smile and melodious laughter, which
served her well to the very end, as did our Lord Jesus Christ, who so
graciously allowed her to slip quietly and peacefully into His
arms.
She simply stopped
breathing.
As I stood at her bedside in those
priceless moments after her passing, I wanted to touch her skin as
much as possible while there was still warmth in her body; to nuzzle
my nose against her head and breathe in the scent of her hair while
she was still there. Priceless treasures I was guilty of taking for
granted, clouded by unmet needs. I was so consumed with what she was
not, that I never fully appreciated who she was. It’s like I was
blind, but now I see!
I see her strength, her commitment. Her
perseverance…sacrifice…her unspoken love. I see how much she
meant to me, how much she did for me, how much she taught me, and how
much of the good in me was modeled by her.
She was a virtuous woman, as described
in Proverbs 31 of the Bible.
“Her children stand and
bless her… a woman who fears the Lord will be greatly praised.
Reward her for all she has done. Let her deeds publicly declare her
praise (vs. 31).”
This last verse of the poem serves as
an epitaph for the woman of virtue. It speaks of the legacy she
leaves in her passing. It spurred me to write a personal epitaph for
my mother, which I read at her funeral.
We publicly declare your praise
today,
and in the days to come,
for you deserve to be praised and
blessed,
"We honor you, Mom, for all you
have done!"
In my earliest of memories,
You worked so hard, striving for the
rest.
You persevered through great
trials
and did your very best.
I know you are being rewarded
in ways far beyond our reach.
We honor you now by practicing what
you've taught,
and even what you preached!
You've stood for us for all these
years,
Today, we stand for you!
I pray that our applause on earth
will reach your heavenly ears.
With the reading of this poem, I asked
everyone to stand. We clapped our hands in celebration and praise of
the life of my mother, Margaret Alice Stiltner.
Imagine our surprise to discover that
she had left a poetic epitaph for us! She had clipped it from an old
magazine and framed it. I found it when I was cleaning her home, on a
nightstand by her bed. My mother was never versed at expressing
emotion. This was her sweet way of kissing us good-bye: a priceless
treasure to remember her by.
###
Cynthia (Cindy) Stiverson is a
speaker, writer, and artist. In 1998, she founded Woven:
Women of Virtue Network, a spiritual formation and friendship
ministry. She pastors the women at Newark Church of the Nazarene in
Ohio. She is currently working on her fourth Woven Workbook, and also
a book for mothers and daughters on the subject of sexual
abuse. Cindy considers raising her daughter, speaker/author
Nicole Braddock Bromley, to be her greatest achievement. She loves
the men in her life, hubby Mark, grandbabes Jude and Isaac, and
son-in-law Matthew. You can find more of Cindy at www.WovenWomen.blogspot.com
and www.CynthiaStiverson.com
Exciting News – the latest Pearl
Girls book, Mother of Pearl: Luminous Legacies and Iridescent Faith
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