Behind the veil

My daughter is getting married, and she wants to wear a veil. In front of her face.

She knows that veils aren’t that common nowadays. It’s probably because at some point people thought that since their faces wouldn’t show up in the photographs, the pictures wouldn’t be good, so it wouldn’t be worth it. But the symbolism of the veil hiding the bride’s face, the veil that the groom has to turn back in order to kiss her . . . that symbolism is rich with meaning. He can now, as her husband, enter a place where he was never allowed before. Now things are different. Now he is welcome. And her eyes will say to him, “Come.”

I remember with crystal clarity a day twenty-one years ago, when this same daughter was two. We sat snuggled together in the big green armchair while I told her Bible stories. I was talking about a different veil. I pointed to the picture of the shocked priest, watching the veil of the temple being ripped from top to bottom. Tears came to my eyes as I explained the symbolism of the tearing of the veil and what that meant Jesus had done for us on the cross: that now we can enter a place, in the presence of God, where we were never allowed before. Little Katy stared up at me with her solemn eyes. She didn’t understand, but that was okay. I understood it better than ever.

This morning our pastor will be preaching about the rending of the temple veil, the shockingly beautiful symbolism springing out of and accomplished by the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ on the cross. This is the picture of our bold and joyful entrance into the very presence of God, a place we were never allowed before.

Everything is different. Now we are welcome. Now He says to us, “Come.”

Writing lessons from Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens loved England. Because of this love, he felt a deep sense of urgency to help his homeland change in important ways. He wanted people to care about the poor, to care about orphans, and to arise from their complacency.

While his contemporary George Mueller worked for change by trusting God and starting an orphanage, Charles Dickens worked for change by writing books. Though his books appealed to the “power of the human spirit” rather than the power of God, he did want to bring about positive change, and for that I salute him.

But unlike the shrill writers and speakers of his day whose messages have sunk into oblivion, Charles Dickens knew the power of a good story. He knew that if he didn’t write a story that people would want to read, and to tell their friends to read, and to give to their children to read, the message would be lost. And so, he wrote about Oliver Twist, the indomitable spirit who persevered in the face of tremendous odds. And Nicholas Nickleby, who stood up to tyrants. And Sydney Carton, who gave his life to madmen for the sake of love. And of course, Ebenezer Scrooge, whose life was changed by realizing that there was so much more to living than amassing wealth. No matter how bleak the circumstances throughout his books, Charles Dickens wrote about triumph. Through this, he did his part to change his country.

A common response to reading or hearing about the new line of books I’m working on, about little-known missionaries, is, “There just aren’t enough missionary books these days.” Is it because of complacency? Is it because of the distractions of the offerings made by the modern culture? Whatever it may be, I share a goal with Charles Dickens. My audience is younger, my style is simpler, but I want to do my small part to write—though about the power of God rather than the power of the human spirit— to bring about change.

As Charles Dickens loved England, I love the Church. And so, because I want people to care, and to pray, and to go, I want to tell a good story. I want to write so that children will say, “Please read one more!” I want to write so that families will spontaneously talk about the stories the next day. I want to write so that parents who are reading aloud will pause to wonder over the sacrifice made by people who are, in essence, no different from them, ordinary people who will rely not on the power of the human spirit, but on the power of God, to effect the most important changes in the world—the changes that bring a soul from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of the risen Son of God.

I want to write about triumph. It’s one way I can do my small part to change the world.