this is the day
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"This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it." Psalm 118:24 NIV She burst into tears. "I don't like school! I'm never going back!" This was so out of character. First of all, Audrey isn't one for overly-dramatic emotional outbursts, and second, she LOVES school. After some consoling and wiping tears and taking deep breaths we got to the bottom of it: Her beloved Mrs. K. had taken maternity leave and the brand new Miss B. was doing everything differently. The kids were noisy and disrespectful, the regular, comfortable routine was shifted, everything felt strange and messed up and she just wanted things to go back to how they used to be. She's a girl after my own change-resistant heart. The next morning when I went in to wake her for school, she looked up at me with her wild bed hair and barely awake eyes. "Mom, I've been thinking about it and decided that I'm just going to keep reminding myself that today's going to be a good day, today's going to be a good day, today's going to be a good day." Positive self-talk is important and valuable and I'm not here to dismiss it. Keeping those words in her mind all day would surely help her look for the good instead of focusing on what was going terribly wrong. So I smiled back and told her that was a great idea. But I couldn't leave it there. On the way to school, a song popped into mind from my childhood. Perhaps you know it too? 🎶This is the day (this is the day), that the Lord has made (that the Lord has made) I will rejoice (I will rejoice) and be glad in it (and be glad in it) 🎶 I sang it to her and she giggled and for a brief moment in the school drop-off line, the Lord reminded me of something so simple, but so profound: It's not actually about having good or bad days. Surely there will be both and more often than not, good and bad will show up on the exact same day. No, we can't put our hope in having day after day of good days. I can't set my daughter up for that. Instead, that little song taken from an ancient song reminds us that whether life is smooth and comfortable and the way things "should" be or whether it has turned upside-down and feels strange and disorienting, it is still a day the Lord made and we are wise to rejoice in it. BUT ALSO, the psalmist in 118 is referring to one particular day that changed every day after ... the day when Jesus died and defeated death and made a way for us to be healed and set free and no longer bound by our own efforts to save ourselves. THIS is the day we celebrate because that one day changed every day going forward. It points to the greatest act of God on our behalf and this is worth rejoicing and being glad about. So whether a day is good or bad or a mix of both, we can live and breathe and move confidently in the truth that Jesus has and will and is continuing to redeem what is broken, restore what is lost, and renew all things. This is the truth I hope sinks down deep into my daughter's heart. Mine too.