Nevertheless, I kicked and beat the wall with all my
strength. I cursed it and insulted it and hurled my body against it. Knowing
somehow that there was nothing to find, I nonetheless walked the entire
circumference of the citadel searching for a symptom of its fragility and at
last, when I had no more strength to carry on and no more tears to cry, I sat
down on the dusty ground, dotted with golden desert flowers to whimper quietly
and rub my swollen eyes.
There was no weakness. The Fortress of God’s Goodness was as
solid as something could be. It was unyielding to my protests in any way. I
found that, despite my suffering, I could make no accusation against it. And I
came to the final conclusion that if it would be so completely unyielding to
me, I, then, must be yielded to it.
So I admitted it. The Fortress of God’s Goodness was
stronger than I. My experiences were not, as I so wanted to believe, indicative
of its legitimacy. I had to embrace that God was resolutely and entirely good and
that I was made to suffer at the same time. In fact, I was forced to conclude
that my suffering did not detract from His goodness in any way.
I got up then, dusted myself off, and walked home. My
spirits were higher at this time, believing then that I had passed the test
and, since I had passed it and surrendered to His nature, my sufferings would
certainly be ended. I was surprised to find then that the storm blazed on. My
sufferings neither halted nor subsided in any way, rather—they increased. I cried
out for them to be stopped, but they were not. I commanded the storm to be
calm, but it was not. And in the middle of the desert tempest of pain and
disappointment by which I felt mercilessly scorched and choked, I heard a small
voice call to me. “Testify,” it said. Everything in me wanted again to cry and
to kick and to scream and to fight the powerlessness that overcame me, but I
remembered again that it was the Fortress of God’s Goodness that would be
unyielding to my circumstances, not my circumstances to the Fortress. So I tore
out my broken will and surrendered it.
“You are perfectly good,” I said, through sobs. “I can make
no accusation against You.”
I peered back up at the Fortress, expecting an answer of
sorts, expecting the small voice to speak to me again. But for that time, the
Fortress of God’s Goodness simply remained and did so silently.
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