“I Will Repay the Years the Locusts Have Eaten”

When my husband and I bought our first house, scarcely three months after we married, it was from one of the sweetest couples we ever met. And this very sweet couple gave us this gigantic head’s up: our new neighbors would be…trying.

Trying is an understatement.

God used this neighbor to gave me a crash course in practicing the fruit of the Spirit. Could I still show kindness and gentleness when my neighbor took pictures of our friends visiting us (she said it was for evidence if she needed to call the police)? Or when she nearly called the cops because my dad dropped by at night? Could I still show gentleness when I was yelled at for getting a grass clipping on her side of the hedge?

Crash course.

It took years before I was genuinely thankful for that crash course. I was so thankful for kind neighbors after that experience, but I wasn’t thankful for those cantankerousness neighbors until a few years ago. The Lord does a quick work in the furnace. Could I love THAT neighbor as I love myself? I thanked Him for lesson my ‘trying’ neighbors gave me.

The Lord will also repay for the years the locusts have eaten.

In a perfect world, neighbors love one another and speak kindly to one another. They look out for one another and don’t suspect the worst.

My husband and I have lived in many places during our eleven years of marriage, but now we own a house again. This time we live in Texas.

And our neighbors are amazing.

This last week, while I fed chickens, chased my dogs and discovered that my daughter could read, and has been reading for a while, and refused to perform for me, my neighbor put up posts for a fence. For us. Without asking for a cent for his labor. “I’m out here anyway, and putting up a posts around my yard. Just glad I could help.”

I almost cried. His kindness was almost startling! I hope to pay this forward somehow.

Meanwhile, when his wife came home, she’d found a Frisbee for my daughter. They’re like an extra set of grandparents while the others live far away.

As grumpy and trying as our first neighbors were, God flipped it all around and tipped the scales in our favor.

Our neighbors on the other side homeschool their little girl. My daughter and this girl are becoming fast friends and spend every possible moment together.

The Lord will do exceedingly, abundantly above all that we could ask or even imagine. If He tells you that He will repay for the years that the locusts have eaten, prepare to be blown away by His generosity.

The Lord is good, and His mercy endures forever.

Why Not Now, short story by Jennifer Slattery

Today I have Jennifer Slattery as a guest blogger. I’ve read a few of her short stories, and am quite impressed with this versatile writer. At the bottom of the post you’ll see a link to her site, which I thoroughly recommend visiting.

The story Ms. Slattery is sharing, Why Not Now, touched me so deeply the first time I read it. With each reread, I’m more convicted. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did:

Why Not Now

Yavonne sits on her bed with her back pressed against the headboard and a pillow clutched to her chest. Her parents’ brutal words slice through her paper thin walls, filling their house with hatred. She grabs her Ipod sitting on her bedside table and slams the earplugs into her ears, cranking the volume until her brain vibrates. Tears lodge in her throat, but she swallows them down.

A razor blade tucked inside her nightstand drawer beckons her. The scars forever etched in her arm pale compared to the deep wounds encasing her heart. One of these days, she’ll cut deep enough to end it all.

Would anyone care? Would anyone even notice? The words spoken by a neighbor a few months back flood her mind, playing tug-of-war with her heart.

“God loves you. He’ll never leave you nor forsake you. He sees you.”

She snorts and yanks up her sleeve, exposing ugly pink scars. Yeah, he sees her all right. All of her. Why would he care about her or her family?

“God loves you. He’ll never leave you nor forsake you. He sees you.”

What a laugh. If that’s true, then where is he now?

Yavonne holds her breath, her heart quickening, as she waits for a response.

The steel guitar grates against her ear drum.

Yeah, that’s what she thought. What does it matter, anyway? You live and die, then turn to worm food.

So why not speed the process along a bit? Shorten the dash on the headboard?

***

Rachel sifts through her container of beads, laying the yellows and orange on the table. Soft praise music drifts from the kitchen, muting her parents’ chattering voices. She smiles and resumes her beading.

The words of this morning’s sermon fill her head.

“You’ve been given a precious gift. Now you need to share it. God wants to loves the world—through you. Right now, as you sit her surrounded by His love, someone is hurting. Right now someone is calling out to God, asking Him if He truly cares. The question is, will you allow Him to love His broken children through you, or will you turn and walk away.”

An image of Yavonne, her neighbor, lingers in her mind—the dark, almost hollow eyes, centered on the ground. Her shoulders, hunched forward. Her face hardened by anger and bitterness.

Rachel shakes her head. Yavonne isn’t interested in Jesus. Yavonne isn’t interested in anything.

“Will you share His love with a hurting world?”

She rests her hand on the table as the question posed by her pastor nibbles at her heart.

But of course she will. She does all the time. Last week she’d spent ten hours helping with Vacation Bible School. That’s sharing God’s love, right? And next Wednesday she plans to join the youth at the local women’s shelter.

And yet, despite her rationale, peace evades her as the questions continued to rise.

“What about now? Will you be there for my child now?”

Her mother walks into the kitchen clutching a basket of laundry. “What’s wrong, sweetie? You like you’re about to swallow a lemon.”

If only it were that easy.

Rachel rubs a bead between her index finger and thumb. “I’m not sure why, but I feel like God wants me to go talk to Yavonne.”

“Then you should go.”

“I don’t know…. Maybe I should pray about it.”

“Or maybe you should obey.”

Rachel sighs and pushes up from the table, her stomach flip-flopping.

Her mother smiles. “I’ll be praying for you.”

***

Yavonne’s hand trembles as she holds the thin razor blade against her clammy skin. Her veins form a faint blue webbing through her wrist.

Just do it, you coward. One slice and it’ll be all over. One cut—long, deep and quick. She closes her eyes and grits her teeth—

A loud knock shakes her door. “Yavonne!”

Yavonne’s breath catches in her throat. She shoves the razor under her pillow, her gaze locked on the jiggling door knob in front of her.

“Yavonne! How many times do I have to tell you not to lock your door?”

As if her father really cares.

“Someone’s here to see you.”

She wipes her sweaty palms on her pant legs, smoothes her hair from her face, and stands on numb legs.

“Coming.”

The stench of alcohol and stale cigarettes assaults her when she swings the door open. Her father stands in the hall wearing faded jean shorts and a sweat-stained tank-top. Her mother lounges on a couch a few feet away watching television and gulping beer.

“That girl from next door’s here.” He swipes his nose with the back of his hand. “Said something about beads.”

Yavonne angles her head, staring into the living room where Rachel stands with a stiff smile on her face. Her smile twitches as Yavonne approaches.

“Hey.”

“Hey….I…uh….” Rachel chews on her bottom lip, scanning the cluttered living room.

Heat rushes up Yavonne’s neck, settling into her cheeks as she follows Rachel’s gaze. Empty beer bottles clutter the coffee table and dark stains splatter the carpet. An overflowing bag of trash lays on the linoleum floor, flies buzzing around it.

“So…. Do you like to make jewelry?”

Yavonne snorts. “Do I what?”

The girl wrings her intertwined hands, staring from the floor to Yavonne’s face then back to the floor again. “I wondered if….” She swallows. “I mean, uh…you wanna come over for a minute?”

Yavonne studies Rachel for a moment, searching for the hidden joke. When none surfaces, she nodded. “I guess so. Sure beats sitting around here all day.”

Jennifer Slattery

Jennifer Slattery writes for Christ to the World, an international evangelical ministry that broadcasts in over 23 countries worldwide. Under the direction of former LifeWay editor, Dr. Art Criscoe, she is working on Christ to the World’s contemporary youth series that deals with many of the intense issues youth face daily, like cliques, peer groups, alcohol, sex, smoking, cutting, suicide—76 topics in all. She also writes for the Christian Pulse, Samie Sisters, and maintains a devotional blog. You can find out more about her and her writing at http://jenniferslatterylivesoutloud.com.