
A couple of years after Kenny and I met—but before I had any idea we’d end up
together—he made a guest appearance in a dream that would forever change the
way I view relationships.
At the time, I’d been single for about a year and was
enjoying it immensely. All I’d wanted for decades was peace, and God had
granted me just that. I was living on Music Row, spending
my days at an editing job I enjoyed and
my evenings hanging out with the homeless at a ministry I loved, eating sushi
with girlfriends, or jogging in my trendy neighborhood. For all I cared, life
could go on just as it was into eternity. I was having fun, steadily healing
from years of grief, and experiencing deep joy like never
before. If I was to get married again, it would have to be nothing less than a
God-thing.
So anyway, the dream: I was standing in the shadow of a
tall, benevolent man, and several women were prepping me for marriage. As they donned
me with flowers and arranged my veil, I felt what can only be described as
panic. I wasn’t ready for marriage. Even though the atmosphere surrounding the
faceless man was positive, I was terrified of saying “I do” again. “Wait!” I
yelled. And then I said something that didn’t initially make sense as I pointed
to my left, toward someone I couldn’t see. “If I must get married again, let me marry him.” Several times I repeated
myself: “If I must have a husband, please, let it be him!”
Someone in the crowd asked, “Why him?” I didn’t know the
answer until it came from my dream-self’s mouth. “Because we have the same
heart,” I said. Only then did I turn to my left and see who was standing
there. It was Kenny York.
And then I woke up.
“What was that
about?” I prayed. The Lord spoke again to my heart: “One plus one equals ten.”
“Huh?” (I learned
long ago that prayers need not be eloquent.)
“One plus one equals ten,” God continued. “You, by yourself,
and your future husband, by himself, are able to accomplish only so much for
Me. But the effectiveness of the two of you together, once you’re married, will
be exponential. One plus one will equal ten.”
God was referring to the holy synergy that happens with
certain pairings—whether between spouses, friends, pastor and associate pastor,
or mother and daughter—that He uses to affect more lives than would be affected
if each person were to fly solo. That made sense to me; after all, He “appointed
seventy-two . . . and sent them two by two ahead of him to every town” (Lk. 10:1, NIV). Apparently, there was another marriage in my future
that would serve God’s greater purposes. I was confident that He’d allow me to
experience the joys of a God-sanctioned marriage—and indeed life with Kenny is
a daily delight and adventure—but those benefits are secondary to God’s
purposes.

Since the timing wasn’t yet right, it’s good that it took me quite a while to realize that God was being literal by including Kenny in this dream. My initial response was that he was symbolic of the man after God’s heart. Kenny and I had been serving alongside one another at a weekly outreach to the homeless. He cooked for and pastored our guests, and I worked with our volunteers and generally made sure everyone left with full bellies. I had the highest respect for Kenny, who clearly made enormous sacrifices to care for the broken. If I’d been asked to assemble the perfect man, he would have had Kenny’s big, compassionate, God-fearing, people-loving heart. To me, the metaphor went no further, but I’d absorbed the important message behind it: that marriage is, first and foremost, about God and His purposes. That certain pairings produce exponential results. That earthly relationships can yield heavenly outcomes.

Since the timing wasn’t yet right, it’s good that it took me quite a while to realize that God was being literal by including Kenny in this dream. My initial response was that he was symbolic of the man after God’s heart. Kenny and I had been serving alongside one another at a weekly outreach to the homeless. He cooked for and pastored our guests, and I worked with our volunteers and generally made sure everyone left with full bellies. I had the highest respect for Kenny, who clearly made enormous sacrifices to care for the broken. If I’d been asked to assemble the perfect man, he would have had Kenny’s big, compassionate, God-fearing, people-loving heart. To me, the metaphor went no further, but I’d absorbed the important message behind it: that marriage is, first and foremost, about God and His purposes. That certain pairings produce exponential results. That earthly relationships can yield heavenly outcomes.
Take a minute and examine your relationships. Is there one in particular that produces holy synergy (or that did in the past)? Are you half of a one-plus-one-equals-ten equation?

Wow, I love your story! It has really stuck with me, made me think about it and hope that I get to experience God in the same way.
ReplyDelete(I'm glad I finally got this posted. I've been trying all morning from my phone, which apparently does not work! :)
p.s. it also nice to meet another blogger from TN!
Love, love, LOVE this post. I think I needed to hear it today, and it's given me questions to ponder. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteCaptured, thank you for being diligent, I appreciate the comments of fellow bloggers! And Jennifer, I'm glad that this was food for thought and as always, it's encouraging to hear from you. :)
ReplyDelete