Now recently, our pastor at church spoke about hearing God's voice and how God chooses to speak to us through a variety of methods, one of which is our circumstances. God sometimes speaks to us through our circumstances.
I can't exactly explain it, but when Mark came out of nowhere, announcing to us that he was an auto mechanic, Jake and I both felt a sense of God's provision. No sooner had Jake popped the hood of the rav than a mechanic appeared! And without us even asking, Mark offered to take a look at the car. This felt very providential, and we were both excited about that.
Well... to make a long, drawn-out story much shorter than it was in real time, things did not quite work out as swimmingly as Jake and I may have initially hoped. Mark diagnosed that the problem was with the oil tank - there was a crack in the seal... er, something... and he would fix it for us for X amount of dollars (which, I will say, was a very reasonable amount, given what we'd have paid in labor costs at a shop). So, Mark worked on the car for several days. I would walk past the front window on occasion and see him and his buddy, Skip, greasy and bundled up against the cold, binding and loosing parts around the engine, in reconstructive surgery on the rav. They were dedicated. It was freezing out.
Now understand, Jake's rav is by no means new, so I don't intend for this to sound sketchy, but the more Mark worked, the more problems Mark discovered with the car, and increment by increment, the more money Jake and I found leaving our hands. This continued for days, meanwhile Jake and I worked out a system of sharing my Jetta so that we could both make it to work and back. But then, finally, the rav was fixed. Hurray! Two cars again!
Eh, not so much.
I remember Jake kissing my sleepy forehead goodbye as he left for work last Monday, reminding me that the Jetta was once again all mine. He would be returning to his rav.
I also remember him waking me up again about 15 minutes later, flustered and sweaty. He had not even made it out of the apartment complex before the "check engine" light came on again. He had continued driving for a few yards, thinking the oil might simply need time to circulate through, but then the engine started seizing and he quickly shut off the car. Which meant pushing it all the way back to our apartment, by himself, in his work uniform, in 16 degree weather. He was not a happy camper.
Neither was I really. And not much has changed. We've exhausted all of our meager, newlywed savings. We have no more money to put into that car. So we have no choice but to continue as a one-car household while the rav sits useless in the parking lot.
Ha! You were hoping for some sort of happy, miraculous ending, weren't you! Nope, not yet. We are still smack in the middle of a not-very-fun situation. And it's still unclear to me whether or not Mark was honest with us. Maybe he was; maybe he genuinely did all he could to fix our car and maybe all the money he asked for was for legitimate expenses. I don't know. I also think there's a possibility we got scammed.
And this has caused me to do a lot of thinking. I know there are people who would chastise Jake and me for the way we went about things (ie. trusting a guy we don't know with our money, not checking his credentials or his insurance, etc, etc.), but I can't help but remember that feeling we both experienced when Mark showed up - a feeling of rightness, a feeling of peace and of providential intervention. That may sound absurd to some, but I can't discount it. I trust my hearing of the Lord's voice, especially since Jake also heard the same thing. And I still firmly believe God brought Mark to us. I still firmly believe it was God's will that Mark work on our car.
The problem, though, is that this leads me to another whole set of questions. Why would God bring Mark to us just so we could get duped? Mark's showing up was supposed to be a blessing from God, right?! Why would God bring this man into our lives and ask us to trust him if, when all was said and done, we'd end up worse off than we were at the start? It doesn't seem to make sense.
And then I remembered a scene from Les Miserables.
For those who aren't familiar with this remarkable novel/play/movie (you should change that!), I'll provide a little background: The story takes place in France and centers mainly around the character of Jean Valjean, who upon the start of the story, has just been released from prison after nineteen years. Upon being released, he is required to carry a yellow passport that marks him as a convict. No one will come near him or give him a job, and he seems fated to repeat his life of crime (How else is he to eat if he doesn't resort to stealing, once again?) However, in a stroke of providence, a God-fearing Bishop takes Jean in, feeds him, and gives him a bed to sleep in. Jean thanks the kindly old man and jokingly claims he will be "a new man" by the morning. In reality, though, Jean leaves in the middle of the night, taking with him all of the Bishop's expensive silverware.
And now comes the scene that's had me thinking. The police catch Jean with the stolen silverware and march him back to the Bishop's house, laughing as they report to the old man that the convict "claimed you gave it to him!" The Bishop looks hard into Jean Valjean's eyes. He knows that if he confirms the theft of his silverware, Jean will be sent back to prison for the remainder of his life. So, in a move of great benevolence, the Bishop tells the police that the silverware was in truth a gift, and then he goes on to chastise Jean in front of the police, "But why did you not also take the candlesticks!? They're worth at least [x amount] of francs! Please, I insist, take them too!"
And so Jean is sent on his way with more than he'd originally stolen, but not before being challenged by the Bishop to use the silver to fulfill his "promise" of becoming a new man. This event so shocks and affects the convict that he actually does decide to change, struggling to become, throughout the rest of the story, a force for good in France.
I've always entered into that scene from the perspective of Jean Valjean, and I've marveled at how blessed he was that, by the providence of God, he was led to the very door of this Bishop who would show him mercy. God was watching out for Jean Valjean.
I've never before thought about this scene from the perspective of the Bishop. He did what God required of him. He followed God's voice. A man showed up, and God asked him to care for this man, and in return for his obedience to God, the Bishop got robbed. This does not seem fair to one so faithful. It does not seem fair that the providence of God would leave the sinner blessed and the faithful suffering.
...Unless God had a higher purpose for that moment in time (which I'm inclined to believe was the case.) True, from a financial point of view, the Bishop got the raw end of the deal. But what happens when we change our perspective? If we move our focus from a monetary view of riches, the whole thing changes. The Bishop was blessed. God allowed him to be the catalyst for the redemption of a man's very soul! God allowed the Bishop to be the agent of change, the one who made a difference in the life of a man who would go on to make a difference in the lives of many more...
It's all about where your treasure is.
Is my treasure in my bank account, or is it in the hearts of fellow human beings?
You've probably caught on to the connection I'm making between this and the "Mark story". I wouldn't say they're completely comparable - we certainly didn't rescue Mark from life imprisonment or forever alter the course of his life. Not that I know of, anyway. But we were kind to him. We did show him Christ's love.
Mark is not the type of guy who you look at and immediately feel comfortable around. He's got an edge to him, a roughness. He doesn't have all of his teeth.
Nevertheless, Jake made friends with the guy. He'd stand out by the car while Mark and Skip worked and talk with them, find out about their lives. Sometimes I would see them all laughing together. And they must have liked Jake, too - they invited him to come out partying with them on New Year's Eve.
I didn't hang out with Mark like Jake did, but I brought him coffee when it got really cold. Skip would laugh and tease, "Did you give him lots of sugar? Mark loves sugar..." I laughed and pretended to be oblivious to what they were hinting at (something I learned to do well while waiting tables). No big deal. I can handle a little flirting. The point is, I tried to be good to them.
We tried to be good to them.
And now all we can do is pray that it made a difference. Our rav is down for the count without much hope of sudden healing (although, as my friend Emily pointed out, God is in the resurrection business; why not our rav4? Ha.) Things are going to be difficult with only one car between Jake and I for the indefinite future. Which sucks. Which really sucks. And it also sucks that all my Christmas money went into that useless car. But if we managed to do Mark some good, if we managed to show him a taste of the grace of God during the time that our paths crossed with his, then I think I'm okay with the state of our car and of our finances. I think I'd even say it was worth it.
Wow. I'm hearing what I'm saying. I hope I'm not crazy. :)