Showing posts with label legacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legacy. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Legacy of a Praying Grandma by Jenna Vick Silliman

My Grandma Gerry Vick delighted in the Lord and He delighted in giving her the desires of her heart. (See Psalm 37:4.) She was given the name Lois Geraldine Squires at birth. Therefore Timothy in the Bible and I have something in common—praying grandmothers named Lois. She has been with Jesus for over twenty years now, but she lived to be almost ninety years old and she was sharp and active and praying right up until the end of her life. 

I have many family pictures from Grandma and a set of bowls from her in my kitchen. I have part of her teacup collection, and in my cabinet I have the old family Bible from her side of the family which she passed down to me. It will go to our oldest son, Daniel. I also have her hope chest, which I have given to my daughter, Valerie.

I have her wedding portrait framed next to mine and my husband’s grandma—all in our wedding dresses. Both my husband’s grandmother and my grandma were thirteenth children in their families. In our family it gives us a funny feeling when we realize none of us would be here if our great-grandparents didn’t have thirteen children!

My whole life has been changed by a simple prayer my Grandma said daily. She developed a habit of reading God’s Word every day, but before she opened the good book, she prayed, “Dear Heavenly Father, please speak to me through Your Word.” Then she opened it up and read until something spoke to her heart. Now this is what I do—just about every day without fail.

Grandma prayed for me every day of my life. Grandma was a prayer warrior and she never, ever gave up. When she made up her mind to pray for something or someone she kept on praying every day. I wouldn’t be surprised if she was still praying up in heaven!

To live out Grandma’s legacy, I pray and pray and never, ever give up. I too delight myself in the Lord and know that He delights to grant me the desires of my heart. This morning, while still in bed, my husband, Cliff, and I took hands at 6 am and prayed for each of our children and their spouses. We also prayed for our “twinkles”. Our grandchildren are twinkles in our children’s eyes. Hahaha! We prayed about our lives, our needs, our dreams. Jesus said, “You have not because you ask not.” (See Luke 11:9.) Why not ask Him for our heart’s desires?

Thank you God for the legacy of a praying grandma!

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The Irish Grandmother


She waved her hand over the jewelry pieces. “Choose something.” We sat across from one another, at my mom’s oval table. Between us, lay necklaces, earrings, and pins. Remnants of a 84 year-old life brought 3,000 miles from a green island to a Connecticut kitchen.

My grandmother died twelve years ago today in Athenry, County Galway, Ireland (February 5, 2001). I know where I was when I heard the news (digging out our van from a blizzard in the early dark of winter). I can still see my eight-year old daughter, leaning out the door, phone in hand. It was the day before my mother’s birthday, Mary Curran’s third child of eleven, second daughter of eight girls. February is filled with the birthdays of Mary Curran’s daughters.

On February 8, my sisters and I joined my mother, her siblings and most of our cousins in the house where Mary Curran bore her children, and in the kitchen where all of her grandchildren, even the American ones, had shared meals, boiled water for tea, and been subjected to the humiliation of having a grandmother iron our underwear.

Mary Curran was a force of nature. She was elegant, tough, educated, demanding, generous, well-traveled, doted on by her children, feared and respected by us all. Make no mistake about it: she was a matriarch. She was the center of the family. She knew comfort, and she knew hardship. She loved God, her family and her country (which, despite a U.S. birth certificate, was Ireland).

When I was a child, she sometimes would refer to our family in the States as "Yanks" (which irked us) or would chide me about some nonsense I said or did, but then a day later, slip me some money to buy something nice for myself: “Don’t tell anyone.” Only many years later, did we cousins discover she did that with all of us: made us feel special, in on a secret with Grandma.

As a young adult, I was once sitting next to Grandma in church. I can’t remember if it was in Connecticut or County Galway. But I do remember my grandmother’s fervent worship in prayer. I could hear her telling the Lord how much she loved him. I was embarrassed, but I was moved. I knew then that my beloved, intimidating grandmother had a personal relationship with God.

My grandmother left behind a huge legacy of Irish, Irish-American and English relatives who enjoy (mostly) one another’s company. I did wonder if the deep ties she had established with extended family would sever in her absence. Her absence is still felt, but the family ties remain.

The jewelry on the table was not expensive or glamorous. But it was my grandmother’s, and I did want something that had belonged to her. It would be an ongoing tie to her life, our family history.  A silver pin caught my eye: it was an Irish coin made into a piece of elegant art. I caught my breath at the coin’s date: it was my birth year.

I pinned it on my jacket.