After Ward Weaver was arrested, I felt a strong need to write him
a letter. I thought that the purpose of that letter was to let him know that
there was another family, another mother, that was morning Miranda's death. I
wanted him to know of our pain. But more importantly, I wanted to know WHY he
had killed her.
Yet I DIDNOT want to communicate with him in any way. The pull to
write this letter was strong, but my disdain was equally strong. I struggled
with this for a long time. As time went on, I began to realize that it was not
me, but God, who wanted me to write to Weaver. Why would he want me to
write? I really began to balk. I was no longer arguing with myself, but with
GOD.
I began to feel like a Jonah. I even joked about being afraid to
go near large bodies of water for fear of being swallowed by a big fish.
I knew God wanted me to write for some reason, but I was adamant that I was NOT
GOING TO DO IT! I knew that I was refusing to obey but yet I was not willing to
sit down and do what I knew He wanted me to do. What was the purpose? Who cares
if Weaver knows I exist. He would not be moved to confess or to give me answers
about WHY he had killed her. Writing to him would only feed is perverted ego.
Finally, I decided to obey. The letter did begin by my telling him
who I was, and I intended to write about our pain and ask for answers. However,
the letter very quickly changed tone. Before I realized it, I was writing about
God's love and forgiveness. I told him how much God loved him and how God's
forgiveness was available to him.
Now, I am not saying that I no longer felt disgusted by what he
had done or that I felt any warm and fuzzy feelings for him. I did however
realize that God loved him and that if Jesus had died for me, he had also died
for Weaver. I was flooded with all sorts of conflicting emotions.
I told him about the most impactful conversation I had ever had
with anyone. I will relate that to you in the next post “Would you still die
for me?” This conversation with Miranda the Christmas before her death will
stick with me forever. After her death it was the key thing that helped me
better understand the love of God. While writing the letter to Weaver, I was
suddenly overcome with the fact that if Christ had died for me, He had died for
Weaver also. If that was true, how could I withhold that information from him.
As I relayed how much God loved him and how much He wanted Weaver to accept him
as personal savior, my heart melted. I was able to forgive him.
If I am forgiven, I must also forgive.
I never sent that letter. I printed it and had planned on sending
it, but that day he got his ugly mug on TV again. Remember, forgiveness does
not mean I like him! I did not want him to think that I was writing in response
to his news appearance. So I waited. A few weeks later, I started to send it
and, AGAIN, he was a top news story.
This is when I knew. The letter was not about him. It was about
me. It was to allow me release my anger. It was about knowing that revenge is
not mine.
Interestingly, I have very little feelings toward him. I do hold
him responsible for Miranda’s death, but I do not harbor any anger, hate, or
really any emotions toward him. His fate is between him and God.
#MirandaGaddis
#StevenCurtisChapman
#throughthecloudoftears
#wardweaver
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