Five minutes before my children go
to bed, I am not feeling very holy. They are tired and I am exhausted. There
are blue globs of toothpaste in the sink basin because Jamie, 5, isn’t tall
enough to spit right into the drain. There is often a trail of kids’ toys,
books and clothes leading from the family room to the bedrooms. Sometimes I
have the kids clean up this trail before bed, but other times, I don’t mention
it, simply because I cannot summon the energy to supervise one more activity.
Once
the jammies are on and the final book has been read (I will not eat them on a boat, I will not eat them with a goat),
the kids climb into their beds and I walk from room to room for a final
goodnight blessing.
It
used to be that I just prayed with the children, I didn’t bless them. The
arrival of our foster daughter, Teenasia, at age six, changed that. From the day she
arrived, as I learned about the abuse and neglect she had suffered, I felt more
and more afraid for her — and less equipped to be the parent she would require.
A
close friend, hearing of my fears, had brisk, no-nonsense advice for me.
“Lay
your hands on her,” she said. “Bless her every night. You can’t heal this
child, but God can.”
Not
knowing what else to do, I took my friend’s words to heart. That night, as T
lay on her back in the darkness, I knelt next to her bed. I placed one hand on
her head, and traced the Sign of the Cross on her forehead. What to say? I
didn’t want to alarm her by bringing up her past, yet I wanted a strong
blessing to bring about healing. I looked within myself for what my deepest
hope was for her.
“God,
bless Teenasia and help her to become the Teenasia you created her to be,” I finally said.
Leaving
Teenasia’s room that night, I thought about what I had said, and discovered that
truly, this is what I wanted for all four of my children— that God would guide
them to grow into their very best selves. I wanted each one to live a life that
was a response to God.
Now,
ten months after that first blessing, I am still making the Sign of the Cross
on T’s forehead every night— and often on my other children’s foreheads, too. I
have added to the blessing — sometimes thanking God for Liam’s work ethic or
that Jamie can now ride a two-wheeler. The essence of the blessing remains the
same, however — a prayer that God will help that child to become the person he
or she was created to be.
I
have found that there is something about this act of blessing that feels
different— that feels more powerful—than simply praying with my children. In
the act of tracing the cross on their foreheads, I am acknowledging my own role
as a leader and teacher in my children’s faith life. Because only I— not my
children — am speaking during the blessing, my children are more open and receptive
than they are at any other time during the day.
For a moment (and often only a moment), their chattering stops and they
do nothing but lay still and silent, receiving their blessing.
And
as tired and cranky as the kids or I may be right before bed, the before-bed
blessing smoothes out the end of the day. It reminds both of us why we’re here
and speaks to us of God’s plan for our lives. The before-bed blessing concludes
my children’s day by pulling us both to a higher place—a place where God, if
invited, will lead and shape.
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