It’s been six weeks since Heidi died. I have spent innumerable hours thinking about her in heaven. I like Revelation 7:9-17 best for a descriptive image of what she does with all her time. Without any cancer, suffering, work, eating, sleeping, etc. – just imagine all the time we’ll have for praising God in heaven!
But lately, for some odd reason, I’ve been thinking a lot about what things Heidi smells in heaven. I wonder if she now smells the way God smells – and I don’t mean in the sense as to what scent they give off, but how does God’s almighty and perfect olfactory sense work? What smells does He smell when he takes a whiff?
What is a pleasing aroma to God? What scents does He fill the heavens with? And therefore, what do the inhabitants of heaven smell when they take a whiff?
I have a friend* who has, for as long as I’ve known her, worn the same perfume. She must really like the scent. I think it smells like a hideous combination of mosquito repellent and my grandma’s bathroom spray. Which I find curious.
I have another friend* who has severe haliotosis. I take a (hopefully) subtle small step back whenever we’re in conversation. Not-too-ironically, her husband is somewhat of a close-talker. Not only that, he’s also touchy-feely. He’s always hanging all over her – right up close – smelling that bad breath. Does he not notice? I wonder.
I know some other people* whose home smells like a decomposing animal. (We used to have packs of wild dogs roam our neighborhood in Morocco and they would sometimes fight to the death. I know all too well what a rotting dead animal smells like.) These are decent people who have regular jobs and clean their house and do laundry and such. I don’t think they’re hiding anything (taxidermy? Animal sacrifice???). But do they not notice the abhorrent smell of their home? I wonder.
All these things have made me wonder about our own human olfactory sense. Because, clearly, God has made us all to smell things differently. What seems abhorrent to one, seems decent, even lovely and pleasant to another. It’s incredible!
And so I wonder about God. Since He is GOD and the very CREATOR of the distinctly unique olfactory sense within each one of us, certainly His olfactory sense must be distinctly different from OURS!
And, interestingly, the Bible frequently talks about aromas. It is no secret that some are truly pleasing to God and others are not. Genesis 8:21, Leviticus 2:2, Leviticus 6:15, Ephesians 5:2, Ezekial 20:41, Isaiah 5:24, Ezekial 8:17.
So how do we know when we’re smelling that which perhaps God finds pleasing? Could it be we’re missing the divine in certain smells because we’re tripped up by our own noses?
I recently met a woman new to my neighborhood and she asked where I shop for groceries. I told her whenever I have enough time, I prefer Aldi’s because of the incredible savings. She pulled up her nose and said she refuses to shop there. “It stinks,” she said.
I know what she means. Aldi’s has a distinct smell. It smells like busy, haggard single moms trying to make ends meet. It smells like daycare. It smells like tired and worn out dads working two physically laborious jobs. It smells like people forced to view deodorant, shampoo and soap as luxuries. It smells like families who have chosen to eat over getting the washing machine fixed. It smells like humanity – real live people working hard to make it in this life and that includes shopping at Aldi’s. I wondered: What if the Aldi’s scent is a pleasing aroma to God because of all it represents?
Does God maybe even prefer the smell of Aldi’s to that of the fancy grocery store on the other side of town that pumps a new-baked cookie smell down every aisle to encourage over-spending and over-consumption?
Does God smell those differences and do they represent the differences in humanity to Him?
A few years ago, a dear friend and I traveled to Guatemala together. In awe of returning to the country we both love so much, we walked through the airport terminal in silence. When we reached the lobby, we simultaneously set our bags down. In a totally unplanned moment, we both breathed in deep and let the smells of Guatemala fill our nostrils. I said, “I love this smell.” She said, “Me, too.”
Guatemala smells like one part exhaust, two parts green chilis, three parts burning rubbish, and four parts body odor. I would imagine many human nostrils would not find it pleasant. But to me, it represents the birthplace of my daughter, the multiple service-learning trips we have taken there and also, some of the most poor, hard-working, and forgotten people on the planet. I love their smell, because it reminds me of them.
I wondered – does God love their smell, too? Could it be God loves the smell of Guatemala, Burundi, Haiti, and the Congo (just to name a few) because He is always close to the poor, the broken, the downhearted?
I wonder if God is drawn to the funky smells of this earthly home – simply because that’s where the majority of His hurting people are. Slums of Mumbai. Garbage city of Cairo. La Limonada of Guatemala. Under the highway overpass. Mission for the homeless (in your city and in mine). And millions of other places most of us are unaware exist.
Our family has lost four beloved family members in just a little more than a year. I have been at the bedside for each one in their last few days here on earth. Repeatedly, in those final days, those of us gathered at the bedside would comment that it felt like our loved one had one foot on earth and one foot in heaven. That space – that liminal space between heaven and earth, life and death, old body and new, is probably the most holy space I’ve ever had the privilege to enter. And there is a distinct smell in that holy of holies. I wonder if that is because they start to smell like heaven.
I do not believe heaven will smell like lilacs, Estee Lauder Cinnabar, or lavender fields. Some people might like those things (me), but certainly, there are those who do not!
I think heaven has a smell all it’s own and just like most things in heaven – it will surprise us.
Cindy,
I too have lost a sister to cancer at a young age…she was my best friend and we loved to share about our faith. When her cancer became at it’s worst and I was by her bed, I told her ” what will I do without you , and that she better let me know she was ok “? I was kind of kidding on the last part but kind of not …The day she passed in my arms I had a long drive home by myself. She and my mother were the only people who ever called me “Patty” and then while driving I heard her say to me very clearly “Patty, I ‘m Ok and it’s more then you can imagine. ” I know this was God’s grace as she was the last of my family, and it has gotten me through some very hard times. A time will come that we both will have so much time to sit and share once again with our sisters. Count on it …I am .
I’ve wondered what it would be like to smell perfectly. I’ve had sinus problems for a long time. Hugs
Ah Cindy, God gives you such a unique perspective that you are so adept at sharing. Thank you for this latest one. Dear ones close to me are in the valley of the shadow of death, but I was reminded that there can only be a shadow when light is present. Some days that’s all we have to hold on to. The Light! He’s enough! Thanks for sharing little bits of your heart! I pray your health is strong! Shirley ❤️🙏🏼
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Hi Shirley! For some reason, I completely missed your comment on this blog post. I was going over past e-mails tonight and the notification of your comment was still there from a month ago – I had just missed it! Anyway, thank-you for comments. You, especially, have great personal empathy for those going through the valley of the shadow of death. And I love your point of how the shadow can only exist because of LIGHT!!! Of course – that’s exactly IT!!! We must keep our eyes on the LIGHT – because He shows us the WAY! I tend to forget and take my eyes off Him, and then falter, of course…. But we are slowly finding our way since the passing of Heidi and learning that new normal. I’d love to have a four hour coffee with you somehow and hear how you worked through the passing of Dennis. If not in this life, we will CERTAINLY catch up in the next! My health is okay – I wish it were better, but it could be so much worse. I am learning to find gratitude for the good days, and to choose positivity on the bad days. No wants to hang around an old grouch…. and I desperately need and want LOTS of people around!!!! Blessings to you and Ivan! Grace and peace, Cindy