The universe aligned itself last Friday night and I found myself in the house alone.
My mother-in-law had offered to take the girls over night. At 4pm she showed up and collected them with a sleeping bag under each arm. They were off to watch movies, do crafts and eat hot dogs.
Chad had a late night project to complete for work so he wasn’t expected home until near midnight.
Friday night: kids gone and husband gone.
What should I do?
Watch a friend’s baby, of course. I’d offered earlier in the week when I figured out that I’d be on my own for the evening.
Five month old Jessie showed up at my door at 5pm with her parents in tow. A stroller, bottles, diaper bag, toys and bibs reminded me that it’s been nearly 4 years since I’d been alone with a baby. Me and a baby. Alone for 3 hours.
I can TOTALLY do this. It hasn’t been so long since I juggled a baby on my hip as I made dinner, folded clothes and sent an email.
After Jessie’s bottle, we spent most of the evening in the rocking chair that has seen little use since I used to rock a fussy 12 month old Naomi to sleep 3 and a half years ago. I watched Netflix documentaries and Jessie chewed on a toy.
Then she grabbed my finger in true infant style: whole hand around my whole finger. She wrapped it tightly and held on as she nearly gnawed a hole in the corner of a toddler board book.
She didn’t know me. We’d only met an hour earlier. Yet here she sat, completely happy and completely trusting me.I could have been a bad person or at the least a neglectful babysitter. But she held my hand and relaxed her little body into mine.
Complete trust. Complete unawareness of the the evil world of possible danger in her future.
She trusted me because her parents trusted me. Her whole world of safety was based on her parents wisdom and their assessment of my capability as a babysitter. They assumed that I would be careful, loving and watchful {which I was} and that Jessie would be safe with me. Because of the trust of her parents, Jessie felt safe.
She wrapped her baby-girl fingers around my finger and cooed so loud our dog followed suit.
The same is true with God.
He has our days {and our evenings} planned. He knows, with wisdom, our current circumstances and our futures. He is a careful parent who plans for our care-taking and places us in situations that are under His control. Our trust is based on Him and His love for us.
And we, like an infant grasping the hand of an adult, can rest in that.
Do you have trouble resting in Him?



















