Year One: Puppy Love

Our puppy has now been with us for nearly one year.* His passion for life is just what our home needs since my husband’s idea of excitement is watching T.V. with a cold Dr. Pepper in his hand and my preference is a cozy mystery. Our action-packed evenings amaze even us.

We have not been back for more training despite my best intentions. The dog grew exponentially which could affect my bone health. To wit: To get to the door of the trainer requires descending some stairs, making a turn, and descending some more. That, or rolling down a steep hill. The thought of my holding the leash as he excitedly pulls me to where the action is gives me chills. Back in the early days, in our effort to be early one evening in order to calmly watch the others arrive, the two of us knocked some chairs – well a whole row of chairs, actually – cattywampus. He was a good 40 lbs lighter then. (And, no, we didn’t really calmly watch the others arrive, in case you’re wondering.) Oh my word. I’m not sure we have adequate insurance for the chaos that could result in just getting down the aforementioned stairs.

We have, however, made some progress on our own. He gives an admirable nose-bump (being without a working fist), can shake hands, and remembers what he first learned: sitting and lying down. He even stays if you don’t expect it to last beyond 30 seconds. He sits by my chair while I’m at the computer (as long as I have some snacks to bribe him with from time to time). He understands quite a few words and expressions, including “something to eat” and “drop it”, although he responds much better to one phrase than the other. He (mostly) comes when he’s called. We did have one little episode in Minneapolis, but it’s better left undiscussed, and my stress at a tolerable level.

His love of tennis balls is without compare. And the chase! If he was an orator I imagine he would expound on the thrill, ending with the words, “It makes my life complete”.

He often accompanies me in the car, the McDonald’s drive-up window staff experiencing his love on a regular basis. And I’ll add here, that never was there, in my experience, a dog more social than this guy. All I have to say is, “Rocky’s outside,” and he bounds for the back door to visit the dog across the fence. I’m not altogether sure the feeling is mutual (Rocky is up in years and might think to himself the yard was more peaceful before an energetic puppy arrived), but some friendships take time, and our dog is in it for the long haul. He’s making in-roads with the tiny little dog kitty-corner to us, two dogs another yard over, and the rest of the walking public (including the high school track team). The expression “never met a stranger” is true of him. And while these days we are becoming doubtful of others’ good intentions, he is not.

His world, the world of dogs everywhere, is God’s way of reminding us to enjoy the small things in life sometimes and to be still at others. So when evening rolls around and he climbs up on the couch next to me, lays his head in my lap, and surreptitiously chews on the edge of my sleeve, I remember, too.

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We Have A Puppy!

Image: Pexels.com

Would the Real Captain America Please Stand Up

Charmed

“You here for the speaker?” he asked as he offered his hand and she shook it. She nodded, then glanced down at his hand. “Whaaat? I have one just like that!” She held up her wrist for him to see. “Nice. Where did you get yours?” “College. They were handing them out to whoever wanted one. You?” “Mine was passed down from my dad and he got it from my grandpa.” She nodded. “Wow.” “Yea,” his voice quavered. “It holds a lot of meaning for me.” “Oh for sure,” she replied. “Shhh. It’s starting.” They both sank down in nearby chairs and listened to the speaker. He wasn’t from around there, but there had been flyers and posters and curiosity simmered quietly in the crowd. An hour passed quickly by, as one by one their charms had fallen from their bracelets. “Do you buy what he said about stomping on the rights of the people we claim to care about?” “I think he was just hung up on the phrase ‘right to choose’. “Right. But the ‘stage or age’ thing he said about abortion being murder?” “The thing that got me was that phrase he kept using.” “Your silence is your signature on the death certificate,” the two new friends chimed together. He looked down as his PP charm fell to the floor. “And the thing about loving someone enough to tell them the truth about God’s laws.” He shuddered, “Creepy, right? As though people don’t have enough to deal with without someone telling them their sex partner’s all wrong.” “I agree! But what if he’s right?” “You mean that our silence is . . .” “Our signature on their ticket to hell? Our signature on their death certificate?” “Yeaa,” he answered slowly. “But who am I to tell anyone . . .” “What’s right and wrong? I don’t like it either.” “It’s their choice, right?” “But hell . . .” He pressed his lips together. “I know.” She looked at the LGBTQ charm on the floor. “I thought there was going to be a riot when he started in on immigration.” “Illegal. He kept pressing that point,” she added. He lowered his voice. “What do you think about the trafficking?” “I know! And the little kids he talked about.” “And the millions of dollars in drugs brought and sold. My best friend’s brother died of an overdose last year.” She brushed his arm with her hand. The two looked down at the floor as some more charms fell. “I just can’t get that phrase out of my head!” He put his hands over his ears. “Your silence is your signature . . .” “Stop!” He calmed himself and gave her an apologetic smile. “Do you think killing trafficked kids for organs actually happens?” She shook her head quickly and shut her eyes. “Whatever happened to just loving everybody? Can’t we just love everyone? Let whoever wants come and go?” “Legally, remember?” he laughed. “It should be more simple than he’s making it,” she said, biting her lip. “But the worst part was his next point. How silence allows unthinkable things you shut your eyes to. Child sacrifice has made it’s way from the abortion room to secret rooms and rituals.” He shook his head. “I don’t believe it,” he whispered. She sighed imperceptibly. She wondered if her hoping something wasn’t true would make it so. The two new friends made their way over to a table stocked with information and charms.. She looked at her new friend. “It couldn’t hurt. I don’t have anything left, do you?” He shook his head as he rubbed his empty bracelet between his fingers, and they sorted through the charms, marveling they were free.         Images: Pexels.com; Scripture sources: Romans 1:22-26; Leviticus 18:22, 20:13; I Cor. 6:9-11; Jude 1:7; I Cor. 6:9-10; Romans 1:18-22; I Timothy 1:9-10; Acts 17:26;John 3:16

You Just Need Know

The God who created this beautiful world, the heavens, the water and sky, 
Will surely hold you in the palm of His hand to protect and direct and supply
Your needs and your dreams and will comfort your cares,

And knowing you just as He does,
Give mercy abundantly, strength for the day, and you just need know that He loves.

Dressing Up

When we want to make a good impression on someone, what’s one of the first things we do? Oh sure, maybe we clean the house if they’re coming over. Some people might even read up on the news of the day in order to be able to converse about current events. And if you’re on a first date, you dress up in something that is attractive. Culturally acceptable. Maybe hides your flaws and enhances your good points.

Hides your flaws. That’s what we do, all of us. Best foot forward and all that. Let’s take a look, not at ourselves (thank heavens! January 8 hasn’t given us enough time on that diet.), but at our country; a country founded on the bedrock of freedom and morals taken from Moses, himself. If I told you the truth and said the Bible some of you would check out, so we’ll just say Moses for now. Everybody likes Charlton Heston. Or did at one time.

Is there anything here and now that we dress up? Are any flaws hidden? So what is the truth these days? Who do we hear it from? Who. Do. We. Listen. To.

Let’s look at a few items that just might be wearing a new outfit to cover up something else. There are a lot of us here in the country who care very much about women. And little children. Just look at the videos on the news about immigrants and you will see how much we care. Or watch women’s marches. Yep. Lots of caring about women.

Here’s a report that you might or might not agree with. Snopes certainly doesn’t, although I can’t imagine why they’re disagreeing with their friends from WHO. Worldometers reports there are 43 million abortions world-wide annually. The World Health Organizaiton puts the figure at 56 million. The United States is party to many of them. According to CNS News, from Oct. 1, 2012 to Sept. 30, 2013, Planned Parenthood performed 327,653 abortions. Over the course of those 365 days (or 8,760 hours), that averages out to 898 abortions per day and 37 abortions per hour.
Let’s count, shall we? 1, 2, 3 – maybe #3 would’ve struggled in school so who cares, right?, 4, 5 . . . want to stop yet? Those are tiny babies we’re talking about. 6 – #6 would have had an absent father and the mother doesn’t have much money, 7 – maybe #7 was going to be a great violinist, 8 – #8 might have had a hard life. Who wants that?, 9 -perhaps #9 would have been one of those nurses who go above and beyond the call of duty, 10. I’m tired, aren’t you? Tired of . . . counting? Abortion is now the largest cause of death in the United States. Not cancer. Not heart attacks. Not guns. Not climate change. Abortion. But don’t tell us we don’t care about women and children.

Side note: The Moabites sacrificed children to their god, Molech. Baal is another god that we usually associate with the Old Testament to whom his adherents made sacrifices. “Baal or Moloch or Chemosh—the name may change, but their bloodthirsty appetite for the most acceptable offering of infants does not. We have ample and melancholy evidence on this subject from the records of antiquity. It was believed that human sacrifice to Baal held the key to prosperity.” And we wonder why God has withheld what could be amazing blessing from our land.

Who did we listen to that told us abortion was a good thing? Who dressed it up?

What else do the voices tell us? Or, perhaps more to the point, don’t tell us? What flaws are the voices hiding? My two cents? I think, my friends, that we do not in the least have a real grip of the child sex trafficking happening even among the rich and powerful. And drugs? Nancy Reagan said, “Just say no”. But we still have a problem. A very, very big problem. Even now something alarming is being revealed: Government corruption and lies. For years. There are oh so many issues I could include, but you’re getting tired of reading and I’m getting tired of writing. If we could stem the tide of some of these issues it would be great, wouldn’t it?

Are the voices telling us the truth about all of it? Are they giving bits and pieces and leaving other things out? Are they misleading? While we’d like to think our choice of information is best, frankly, I don’t know what to think anymore.

What voices are we listening to? I’d like to say God’s, but I’d be fooling myself. Click this link that shows one of those flaws, those big problems, one of those wearing – oh let’s just say new clothes like the Emperor of the old fable – and get back to me.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1080541527166894081

Movie The Ten Commandments directed by Cecil B. Demille, starring Charlton Heston, Released 10/5/1956; https://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/melanie-hunter/planned-parenthood-we-did-327653-abortions-one-year; https://sapphirethroneministries.wordpress.com/tag/baal-or-moloch-or-chemosh-or-santa-claus/ ; Nancy Reagan’s Just Say No campaign during Ronald Reagan’s presidency; “The Emperor’s New Clothes” by Hans Christian Andersen.

Doorkeeper: Peering Into A New Year

I signed up for a conference for church leaders to be held April 13 and 14, a time of year when gentle rains massage the ground and new buds break forth from winter’s sleep. The scent of warm earth, sweet lilacs, and new grass lend a kind of peace as if to say, “Sure, it was bone-chilling cold just awhile ago. Sure, you trudged through snow up to your knees and broke your snow shovel from sheer weight. But no fear, spring is here! Lay your heavy flannel burdens down. Life is new again. (And for pete’s sake stash away the pile of Sorel boots before we all trip over them and break our collective necks.)” The conference was aptly named Flourish, and attendees and leaders looked forward to a time of talking about ways to help our churches not only survive, but, yes, flourish. Our speakers were flying in from out east and attendees were coming from all parts of the state.

As the conference drew near, some weather forecasts suggested the possibility of snow which, considering a winter with enough snow to keep us all satisfied for a decade or more, wasn’t out of the question. By the time the weekend had rolled around, meteorologists were solemnly predicting snow and a lot of it, but conference organizers remained firm. The conference would not be cancelled.

It was inspiring, really. If they could stand immovable, winter-like winds whipping their hair every which way and snow pelting their chapped faces, then so could I. I pulled my winter coat from the back of the closet where I had bid it farewell a couple of weeks before, filled up the gas tank, and attended a great conference. I had to drive a mere thirty minutes there (piece of cake) and thirty minutes back. Then the snow fell.

Let me tell you about thirty minutes. Thirty minutes on clear roads is thirty minutes. Thirty minutes in whiteout conditions is a year and a half. As my car plowed home through streets similar to the landscape around them – in other words unplowed and deep – I strained to see where the edge of the road might be, where any possible medians might be, and, yes, where the road, itself, might be. I congratulated myself as I made it to the highway without driving into a ditch unawares until it was too late. Then something occurred to me. I was on the highway with more cars where accidents happen in greater numbers at greater speeds.

I made up my mind. No one was going to rush me. I drove down the center lane averaging 30 mph. Except for a few obnoxious trucks, everyone else, anxious to avoid joining the multitudes in the ditch, seemed content to do the same. It’s possible we were all humming the same song: Cars to the left of me, Pick-ups to the right, Here I am, Stuck in the middle with you . . .[1] (my apologies to Stuck in the Middle With You, Stealers Wheels). And then I exited from the highway onto the Interstate. Good times.

It was reminiscent of another time when my husband and I drove south to Orange City, Iowa with our daughter. We’d gotten an early start since we had an appointment for a tour; a talk about cost and financing from someone with a calm, silky smooth voice; and everything else they offer on college visits. We’d driven about three and a half hours when the fog descended. I’ve never seen anything like it. We drove as though in a dream and heaven help anything or anyone in front of us. On the return trip home, we all agreed that it was interesting to see whole towns we’d passed without knowing they were there. Hats off to those of you who drive mountain roads with sheer drops from non-existent shoulders. WHAT ARE YOU THINKING?!

Some people are very good at noticing details. They not only notice features of someone’s appearance, but what he’s wearing and how he walks. Other people are good at noticing background: the sights and sounds others might miss. Still others notice more of what a person says, how he says it, and maybe even what’s left unsaid. We think we know the people we greet and even the people we’ve known for years, but there is always – let me repeat – there is always something we don’t see. Even if that person is a talker. Even if we see him every day. Even if, oh yes, even if he is us.

Think of everything going on in our world and then portion little personalized pieces of it out to each individual. Understand that two people can encounter the very same thing and walk away with very different perceptions of it. Take into account personalities, temperaments, and childhood backgrounds, and soon you see that it is impossible to see people as clearly as we might think we do.

Confucius said, Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it. Knowing there’s all kinds of trouble we don’t see, it’s good to remember that there’s all kinds of good we don’t see, as well. Perhaps it’s even more important to remember that. We have a couple at our church who are both in wheelchairs. They are more active than some of the rest of us who have no trouble walking. They go places. They do things. They are the friendliest people! And their love for each other is wonderful. She has trouble with her hands, so he helps her with a straw when she’s thirsty, for instance. If you put a picture of them next to a picture of a perfect bride and groom I’ll tell you right now who’s love is more beautiful.

Do you know who I don’t want to stand beside at judgment because the comparison would be so absolutely breathtakingly pitiful? Besides Moses, I mean. Abraham. Are you ready to leave a comfortable situation; everything and everyone familiar; and set out on a trip to finish your dad’s idea of moving to Canaan. That might be something you’d do, right? Aside from the dangers on the way. Oh, and believing a promise that looks totally insane since it’s scientifically impossible. And then there’s the whole being willing to sacrifice your child, believing God will provide some, oh, something. Thinking to yourself, “This is one big ask, but here goes – ah. Last minute reprieve!” His favorite way to do things. I’m telling you, that’s the kind of don’t know where this is going, but trust the Leader faith we rarely see. (It is at this point I’d like to wish you a Happy New Year!)

Hebrews 11:8 reminds us that By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going. Abraham is a solid example of following God’s direction even though he couldn’t see it, didn’t understand it even though he tried, and at some point knew he’d never see it as long as he lived.

No, we don’t see everything that’s happening in someone’s life nor in their thinking. We don’t see the seemingly innocuous incidents nor the things that seem insurmountable to them. We don’t understand that the clerk who is short with us is going through a divorce or the drummer in the worship band is worried about making rent. We don’t see past a smile to the exhaustion or past a nod to crisis of character. We’ve had plenty examples of late in people in positions of leadership who surely knew better and fell off the proverbial cliff anyway. No, there’s plenty, believe you me, that we don’t see. There are times we might as well be in a record-breaking blizzard or heavy fog for all we see. And do you know what else we don’t see? We don’t see the hand of God quietly, but surely working in every life that’s even slightly open to His touch.

[1] Stuck In The Middle With You; Composers: Gerald Rafferty, Joe Egan C. MBG Rights Management US, LLC

In The Palm Of His Hand

She’d seen it hundreds of times as she passed it on the street. It was a little storefront with a sign saying simply Chiromancy. This time, though,her steps slowed as she approached the window. What would be the harm in seeking out a fortune-teller; more to the point, a palm-reader?

There was enough of the unknown in her life that she wished to peer into tomorrow. Perhaps it would relieve some of her stress or give her a new lease on life! Heaven knew she needed something; something to steer her in the right direction. But with the way everything was going, that would take a miracle. Even at Christmas, the season of miracles, she doubted one would appear to her, of all people. God, if He did exist, had more important things to do.

Clink. A little round piece of something rolled up against her boot. It was funny she even felt it. She bent down and retrieved it. It was a token, something like you would get at a carnival or party. She turn the gold piece over in her hand. One side was gold and the other held the image of a manger scene. A manger scene? She peered more closely, trying to imagine what sort of person or gathering it came from; then looked around to see if someone had dropped it. There wasn’t a pedestrian to be seen, but a scraggly dog trotted near her; abandoned from the looks of him.

She called to him with a click of her tongue and he came near enough for her to reach out and pet him. Her palm would be dirty now, and she wondered what the palm-reader would think. The dog nuzzled closer and licked her hand. Then he trotted a few steps down the street, looking back, as if inviting her to follow him. Her gaze alternated between the storefront and the dog. She really wished for direction; direction a fortune-teller might be able to give her! But the dog came back and nudged her knee for a pet. She absently reached down and gave him one. He nudged her again, and she patted him. He rolled onto his back and she gave him a good tummy rub. Her hand slowed as she felt his heartbeat.

And it was that heartbeat that spoke to her. If God had created even the heart of a scraggly dog and kept it beating day in and day out, did he care for small things as well as big, important things? And she was more than a dog, wasn’t she? She turned the coin over in her hand and studied the manger scene. How in the world had it rolled to hit her boot? Where did it come from? Did God know her heartbeat?

A new thought occurred to her as she followed her new friend down the street. She still wanted to know what her future held. But maybe it wasn’t to be found in the palm of her hand.

The Two Blind Men

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The snow fell like little diamonds on the two as they walked, deep in conversation. Oblivious to the scenes around them, they reminded the company president of two ants as he glanced down from the window of his top floor office before returning to his work. As the friends made their way past the large window of a corner café, a patron looked out and saw that in the intensity of their conversation, they did not notice the woolen scarf of the one closest to the window had caught on the window ledge, was pulled from where it had carelessly rested on his coat and now lay in the gathering snow beneath. An old woman in a thread-bare coat turned the corner they had just rounded, found the scarf and, crossing herself, bent to retrieve it, wrapping it around her neck to gain its precious warmth. The stars began to come out, winking here and there in the dark velvet sky and casting pinprick lights from their million miles away in the heavens. The two increased their pace, as they trudged up a slight hill in their walk.

The voice of one rose, “I’m telling you, all of us want a miracle,”

“If such things exist,” the other interrupted.

“If such things exist,” the one acknowledged, “but no one wants to be in the place it would take to get one. Nobody wants to be in the place where a miracle is their only option. Who wants to have everything taken away with nothing to fall back on? Who wants to feel so desperate they think they’ll go crazy?”

His companion nodded his head.

“At any rate,” the companion replied, “if someone did witness a miracle,”

“If such things exist,” the one reminded him.

“If such things exist,” the companion agreed,” he would have had to wish for it or ask for it for a very long time, I would think.”

“Oh, no doubt about it,” the one remarked, as they unwittingly passed the life-size crèche in the yard of a local church, “a person would absolutely need to know they needed it before they witnessed a miracle.”

The Church Bell

The bell had last rung in 1945 on Christmas Day, its peal joyful and jubilant. The bell was twenty years old then, and the one who rang it was strong and sinewy. He could still remember the sweater he’d worn that day. It was of heavy knitted wool, handmade by his girl, Betty. He planned to ask her to marry him the next evening and knew she’d say yes.

He knew, because that’s the way life was for him. It was almost as if he could make what he wanted appear before his eyes. If he wanted a job, he got it. If he wanted a girl, she loved him. When he wanted a house, he’d be moving in the next month.

They’d had a small wedding in the church where he was bell-ringer, but the bell didn’t ring on his wedding day. It didn’t ring on any Sunday or holy day afterward, either. He’d checked to see what the problem was. The clapper seemed fine. There were no noticeable cracks and the bolts were tight. He’d climbed up to examine the mechanism of ropes and pulleys. Nothing. So there it remained, in its ordained place high above the church, looking for all the world like a working bell, but in reality doing only that and nothing more.

He and Betty had raised a family. Five strong boys and a daughter whose life had been cut short by a high fever and misdiagnosis. Betty, his Betty, couldn’t stand the loss and she had died within a year. Neighbors were puzzled. She’d seemed in good health. But he knew it wasn’t her health. It was her heart.

He’d soldiered on, looking up at what he called “his bell” each time he crossed the church threshold. He hadn’t been able to fix the bell just as he hadn’t been able to fix Betty’s grief. It bothered him, not being able to make things right. But the bell was the first to teach him that life can clobber even the luckiest man.

It was Christmas Eve, and the years had marked time as they do in everyone’s life. He was tired and the church was, too. And he thought, as he listened to sweet carols sung by weary voices, that what he needed was what the church needed. And what the church needed was what the world needed.

He slipped out of his pew before the last song and climbed the tower stairs to stare once again at the bell. And he did something he hadn’t done when trying to fix it nor in all the trials in his life that he’d found to be unfixable.

The good Lord had more important things to do than listen to an old man make a needless request. But this time, well this time, he’d approach the throne. After all, even Kings give presents to their servants.

“Father,” he whispered, his breath making puffs in front of him. “I’m so tired, and this here church is world-weary. And who are we, anyway? We aren’t any of us impressive or even good. I’ve tried, Lord, how I’ve tried to get this bell to ring. It was my job, and I failed. I couldn’t figure it out. I couldn’t fix it. And it won’t matter, I guess, if you don’t do this. But it’d mean a lot if this old bell could ring again; If it would do what it’s meant to do, and on Christmas Eve, no less. Let it ring, Father. Let it fill the night with the voice of the angels.”

And the old man, full of years, grabbed the rope and pulled with all his might. And clarion rings called from the church tower, echoing through the town and fields. Its peals were taken up by bells across the town: big, booming bells; choir-like bells that rang in harmony; even tiny bells hanging from Christmas trees in homes of the townsfolk. The church people rose from their pews and ran outside to look up in wonder. And the old man pulled and pulled with tears streaming down his face, while voices of the angels sang.

Shadow and Light

Three days. That’s how long it had been since the power went out. At first it had been kind of fun, and after she and her cat watched white snowflakes in their persistent descent against a storm-gray sky, she’d gone to bed under cozy covers and dreamed she was at the North Pole.

Morning had brought the chill of winter indoors and realization flashlight games with Simba would hold little amusement in a room cold enough to see her breath. She’d slipped long johns on under her clothes, and pulled on two pair of socks, a hat, and gloves. Simba slipped under the comforter.

She called the power company again and got the same recorded message she’d heard the day before. It would be at least a week before everyone’s service was restored. Her small house on a little-traveled road was at the bottom of the priority list, which meant power to her house would come in seven more days at the earliest! Tonight was Christmas Eve and Christmas would essentially be blacked out. Typical. Okay. Okay. She preferred soft shadows to glaring light anyway, didn’t she?

She’d bought it – the house – with money from her grandfather’s inheritance, for solitude she’d wished for during ten years of living in the concrete jungle where she’d found comfort only in the shadows. At the time of purchase, she hadn’t thought of emergencies; only of getting away from too many people, too much light, too much everything.

Getting away from it all was good, right? The shadows of tall pines secreted her from the world. She admitted, though, that as the years passed, she’d begun to wonder if, by leaving behind some things she’d pegged as needless, she had shut out something else. Something important, perhaps.

She wrapped a blanket around herself more snugly and stared at the Christmas tree she’d set up in the corner. It seemed somehow ridiculous with all light stripped from its branches. Little ornaments hung listlessly. Suddenly, a glass ballerina she’d had since childhood broke from the cold. Was it a sign? She shook her head to clear it. The cold must be doing things to her mind. She began to wonder if the shadows that had weaved in and out of her life were of her own making. Did no one love her or had she simply shut love out? Humph. Nonsense. She laughed mirthlessly as she swept up the pieces.

And as a nearly invisible weak winter sun sank below the horizon, the shadows began to change from cozy to ominous. Warmth and light suddenly seemed unattainable. Her life wasn’t one to which good things came, something she’d repeated for years like a mantra. And miracles (for that’s what it would take)? That was just a charming word, more fiction than fact. Two days had passed and she was already quite miserable. It hung over her like an unlit candle: that sense of dread that night would stretch on forever and light would disappear.

She stretched out on the couch, Simba next to her, and wished for the week to be over, the week the power company claimed it would take to turn the power back on. Wind from the storm rattled the windows and drafted through minute crevices.

She closed her eyes and allowed herself something she’d always strictly forbidden: She thought of Christmases past; of people from long ago; of out-of-key church choirs and imperfect cookies and snow-trampled sidewalks. And she began to remember stories told by long-silenced voices she had dismissed as out-of-touch. A baby born in a shadowy cave and placed in a manger. Of a God so loving He sent His own Son and called Him Light. If only it were true. If only light filtered into sad, sightless, cold shadow and brought warmth. Please. Please send light. Please, she thought. Or was it a prayer? She drifted in and out through the night, the unforgiving cold disallowing sleep. Then sometime near the dawn of the third day it happened. She saw it first, then felt it. Light! Warmth! And Christmas Day – the day God sent Light into the shadows of the world – broke through. After all, light casts no shadow.

The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world. John 1:9; Images: Pexels.com