Letter for Noël on Her Birthday

From Gospel Translations

Jump to:navigation, search

Related resources
More By
Author Index
More About
Topic Index
About this resource

©

Share this
Our Mission
This resource is published by Gospel Translations, an online ministry that exists to make gospel-centered books and articles available for free in every nation and language.

Learn more (English).

By About

December 27 is Noël Piper’s birthday. In this open letter, her husband John celebrates the gift of her support. 

Dear Noël,

Happy birthday, Noël. Your name bears your time. You were born two days after Christmas. When your father got the telegram halfway around the world in the Navy in 1947 that Noël Frances Henry had been born, he telegrammed back: “Boy or girl?”

From the first time I saw you in the summer of 1966, I never had that question. Everything in me said, Girl! Now, having just celebrated 38 years of marriage (December 21), I am deeply thankful that you were and are wonderfully female.

That was the first criterion I had for a wife—female. The second was: She treasures Jesus Christ. The third was that she like me. The fourth was that she be willing to go wherever God calls us. (Remember the conversation on the couch in your apartment that first summer when I named the hardest places I could think of, and you said, Yes? I had not even asked you to marry me yet.)

In fact one of the things I love about you to this day is your commitment to go anywhere and do anything under any circumstances, as long as Christ is in the lead. One of your most famous lines around Bethlehem is from the time I was so discouraged, I put my face in my hands and said after church one Sunday afternoon, “I think we should move to Africa.” You said, without hesitation, from the bedroom, “Tell me when to pack.” Awesome!

What a gift you are to me! I hope you don’t mind my glorying in getting gifts on your birthday. All Christian Hedonists know that when I exult in you as a gift on your birthday you get the honor! I am happy to have it so.

So today I celebrate the blessings of your rock solid support, layer upon layer.

  • You have supported me in my faith. When I have wavered in discouragement, you have never sunk, but stood. You have directed me to our sovereign King again and again.
  • You have supported me in theology, pushing on the unclear places and standing, in the end, where I stand, glad to glory with me in the good news for us sinners of God’s great God-centeredness. O, that all could see how precious it is! Faithful to us for his sake, not finally ours. Nothing more solid and sure!
  • You have supported me in the work and in the truth but not in flattery or ego-puffery. You are singularly unimpressed with John Piper. Just rock solid and there for him.
  • You have supported me in managing a home with four small sons, now grown, and one late-arriving daughter, now growing. Only a mother can know what it costs the heart and body to be there for children all the time. But I know some of the cost. And I do not take it for granted. It shall not go unpraised. The price was high. Our sons are not perfect, but they are strong with your strength, and I am glad. May Talitha bring such strength to her man.
  • You have supported me as a Song of Solomon bride—bringing me more pleasures than I could ever deserve, and wakening in me hopes that heaven, which must be better, though there is no marriage there, will be indescribably good.
  • You have supported me in the unusual calling God has given me—private (because I write), public (because I preach), and controversial (because I take some unpopular stands). In private you protect me, in public you stand with me, in controversy you help me keep my bearings.

When we were together in Red Wing on our anniversary a few days ago, I said to you, and meant it (a statement you have always trusted): In all our years together and now, I only have eyes for you—even in my head. You said, “That’s a good anniversary gift.” I have turned it into a poem. It is a renewed pledge: Only you, Noël. Only you, till death do us part. I love you.

Johnny

              For None But You
               December, 2006   
  Before his boils made him unable to
           Feel anything but pain,
  Job made a covenant: “I will be true,”
       He pledged. “If I should gain  
 Or lose the world, I will not use my eyes
             To look upon a maid,
  Nor let my mind spy or pursue a prize
        By which you are betrayed.”
And thus he loved his wife with all his heart.
         And I have done the same,
    But not to imitate, as though the art
         Of such obsession came  
  By wanting more, and saying No to this.
            It has not been that way,
Though tearing out the eye is good, the bliss
       Of eyes that will not stray Is best.
    Nor do I mean such bliss that breaks
           Beneath the weight of pain,
 But ever holds like steel and never shakes
            Beneath a world of strain.  
This is the deep allegiance of my eyes
          And of my mind and heart.
 It is not wrought by pow’r of will that tries
             With effort to depart      
     From foreign fire. It is a gift to me
             And you. I will be true,
So help me God. These eyes will never be
              For anyone but you.
Navigation
Volunteer Tools
Other Wikis
Toolbox